Mirror, Mirror, 2022
Oil on Canvas, Diptych
60 x 96 inches




























Heat, 2022
Oil on Canvas, Diptych
60 x 96 inches









Pending, 2022
Oil on Canvas
36 x 48 inches









Bait (Timelapse), 2022
Oil on Canvas
36 x 48 inches








Mutual Touching, 2022
Oil on Canvas
6 x 8 inches








Hold Fast, 2022
Oil on Canvas 
12 x 16 inches 








Under Impression, 2021
Oil on Canvas 
12 x 16 inches



































































And So On, 2020
Stop Motion Animation
00:46 seconds










Welcome, 2018
Collaboration with Lauren Carey of Ballet Florida
Fritz Gallery, West Palm Beach, FL
Choreography: Lauren Carey
Visual & Creative Design: Amber Tutwiler
Performance Duration: 45 minutes
Video Time: 04:00 minutes

WELCOME is a collaborative dance and performance that belongs in a whole new category, incorporating dance, poetry, installation, and sound to create an immersive environment for guests to enter. Transforming the gallery into a stage, this performance reflects on intimacy, tension, ritual, and psychological release – all within the parameters of what we call home. 







Fractures, 2021-22
Collaboration with Christa St. John, Assistant Professor of Dance at Utah Valley University
Noorda Center for the Performing Arts, Jones Theatre
Orem, UT

Choreography: Christa St. John
Visual & Costume Design: Amber Tutwiler
Performance Duration: 10 minutes 44 seconds
Video Time: 05:16 minutes

Based on music by Arvo Pärt, Fratres, the scene of this production is set in a small apartment. Exploring themes of compulsive perfectionism and hybrid-dream personalities, the narrative ambiguously meanders through confrontations between nightmarish “fractured” personas and the persistence of a dripping sink.






Pulse, 2019
Collaboration with Lauren Carey of Ballet Florida Kravis Center, Persson Hall
West Palm Beach, FL

Creative Designer: Amber Tutwiler
Cheorgraphy: Lauren Carey
Performance Time: 20 minutes
Video Time: 00:28 minutes

Responding to the notion of duplicated identities within internet spaces, PULSE utilized mirrors, transparent fabric, video, and sound. Each dancer responded to a series of writing and meditations, creating movement that flirts with narcissism, the pantopticon, and the eventual return to a singular place: here and now.




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