ARTWORKS
- Nine Rivers Romance – floral landscape paintings (with Sheila Yihua Hu)
- Impressions – floral landscape paintings
- Floral Solargraphs – large-format camera-less photographic prints
- Figural Solargraphs – large-format camera-less photographic prints
- Zodiac Lovers
- Dayglo Roschart Abstract Tests
- Alien Registration
- Excavations – vertical urban archaeology
- Masters in the Round – portraits of senior master artists in 360° at life-size 1:1-scale
- Photo-cubic Tableaux – multi-print photographic assemblies
- United Diversity – hybrid identities
- Collective Reclining Figure – multi-print photographic assembly
- Digital Authorization (after Snow)
- Snow in June [360°, 1:1-scale portrait of Michael Snow]
- Live Collective Photo-cubic Tableau (Fashion Art Toronto)
- Don't Ask, Don't Tell (with Jennifer Osborne, Vancouver)
- Photo-cubic Stoop Punks: Portrait Tableau (Kensington Market)
- Public Private Cubic Couple (Robson Square & Stanley Park)
- Throwup Throwdown 1: Andrew01 vs Cameraman (with Byron Dauncey)
- Just a Façade: Photo Interventions - Hamilton Supercrawl
- Re: Photo: Surfaces; People; Flowers; Garbage COMPLETE SERIES
- Chinese Calligraphy – Korea, Japan, Taiwan
- Chinese Stone Seal Carvings – Taiwan, Republic of China
- Chinese Ink Paintings – Canada, Malaysia, India, Korea, Japan, Taiwan
- Automatic Landscapes – Korea, Japan
- Globanality – Worldwide
- Equator Art Experiment (with Helen Cho) – Indonesia
- Glow in the Dark – Taiwan
- Excavations – India
- Excavations – Korea
- Impressions – Japan, Taiwan
- Water & Electricity Do Mix – Japan
- Assorted Works – Korea, Japan
- Artomatic [Art Produce Vending Machine] (with Jamie Osborne)
- Brush Knife / Stone Scissors Paper - U of T Architecture 92 / 93
- Echoes [Natural vs Synthetic Produce]
- EnvironMental Produce (with Jamie Osborne)
- EnvironMental Re-photographic Painting Sequence (with Jamie Osborne)
- Light on Dark [Metallic Proof Paintings]
- Processpraintings [Process colour dot matrix paintings] (with Jamie Osborne)
- 12 Vegetables (after Jakuchu, 18th Century Japan)