Bottom of the Wall
For Jeffrey, the emotional investment in his work is most evident in this series. The agony and torment of the creative mind are visually explored. Stone has spent a career seeking very personal answers to universal questions. Why am I here? What is my future? How can I unburden myself from my past? When time is spent looking closely at these images, one discovers more and more depth that can help the viewer explore their own often uneasy feelings about life’s purpose and mortality.

 
The Beginning, 2005, 8” x 11 ½”, Pen and Ink
The Beginning, 2005, 8” x 11 ½”, Pen and Ink
In the Beginning there was The Explosion, 2010, 5 ½” x 8 Ό”, Pen and Ink
A crack at the Bottom of the Ocean, 2003, 4” x 6”, Pen and Ink
Night Lights, 2002, 3 Ό” x 4 Ό”, Pen and Ink and Gouache
I can See the Light, 2002, 3 ½” x 5 ½”, Pen and Ink
The River, 2003, 6” x 9”, Pen and Ink
Into the Woods, 2005, 6” x 9”, Pen and Ink
It’s Just Around the Corner, 2006, 17” x 22”, Pen and Ink and Watercolor
Monolith, 2002, 3 ½” x 5 ½”, Pen and Ink
Dancing on the Stumps of Dreams, 2005, 4” x 5 Ό”, Pen and Ink
Jungle Flowers, 2002, 5” x 7”, Pen and Ink
What’s Underground? 2004, 4 Ό” x 6 Ό”, Pen and Ink
Scarab, 2005, 9 ½” x 12 ½”, Pen and Ink
Fire Flies Into Your Eyes, 2004, 7” x 9 ½”, Pen and Ink
Religious Drawing, 2007, 8 ½” x 11”, Pen and Ink
At the Bottom of the Sea, 2003, 4” x 6”, Pen and Ink
Black is the Scarf for all the Other Colors, 2004, 7” x 10”, Pen and Ink and Watercolor
Entrance to the Temple, 2005, 5” x 7”, Pen and Ink
He Comes, 2003, 5” x 7”, Pen and Ink
The Egg, 2005, 9 ½” x 12 ½” Pen and Ink