At Fab Factory Studios in Hollywood, California, I created one of the largest murals I’ve ever completed — a 60-foot-wide by 14-foot-high piece designed to feel less like a painting, and more like a moment frozen in time.

The concept was simple, but not easy: two opposing minds, locked in a silent exchange.

Each figure faces the other, their thoughts spilling outward — color, motion, energy — colliding in the space between them. At the center sits a doorway, almost like a threshold between perception and reality.

The entire piece was built using over 50 different colors. I went all in — purchasing nearly every color of spray paint Montana® offered — allowing the gradients and transitions to feel alive rather than controlled.

The mural took 40 days to complete.

My wife, Kate, was there with me throughout the process, helping bring the scale of the project to life.

Murals like this are different from anything done on canvas. At this size, you don’t just paint — you move with the wall. You step back, re-evaluate, and step in again. Over and over, until the piece begins to speak for itself.

This piece, for me, became a conversation about perspective — about artistic collaboration and focus.

Below is a short two-minute video capturing the process.