


DAHMER: Fragments of a Life Unlived
A rare 7-piece graphite and color pencil portrait set — strictly limited to 50 signed packs.
From the desk of my current criminal psychology research into Jeffrey Dahmer comes this: a quiet confrontation with the part of his life that could have been.
Moments captured in graphite and color pencil — tender, unsettling, human.
This is not the Dahmer you know.
These portraits question the boundaries of judgment, the absence of love, and what it means to be broken before the breaking begins.
There’s a boy in these drawings. Not just a name. Not just a case file.
A boy who once held a bird and nursed it back to life. A boy who, in another time and place, might have lived an ordinary life.
Printed on museum-grade archival card (A4), each large-format set is signed and numbered by me. Only 50 packs exist — and because this work is tied to my ongoing research, it will never be recreated in this form again.
For collectors, psychologists, artists, and those who refuse simple answers.
More than an art set — it is a document, a question, a conversation you can hold in your hands.
A rare 7-piece graphite and color pencil portrait set — strictly limited to 50 signed packs.
From the desk of my current criminal psychology research into Jeffrey Dahmer comes this: a quiet confrontation with the part of his life that could have been.
Moments captured in graphite and color pencil — tender, unsettling, human.
This is not the Dahmer you know.
These portraits question the boundaries of judgment, the absence of love, and what it means to be broken before the breaking begins.
There’s a boy in these drawings. Not just a name. Not just a case file.
A boy who once held a bird and nursed it back to life. A boy who, in another time and place, might have lived an ordinary life.
Printed on museum-grade archival card (A4), each large-format set is signed and numbered by me. Only 50 packs exist — and because this work is tied to my ongoing research, it will never be recreated in this form again.
For collectors, psychologists, artists, and those who refuse simple answers.
More than an art set — it is a document, a question, a conversation you can hold in your hands.