
As a paleoartist specializing in the reconstruction of prehistoric life, I collaborate with scientific institutions, museums, educational centers, and publishers to create illustrations that combine up-to-date paleontological knowledge with a high standard of artistic quality.
My goal is to visualize extinct organisms in a manner that is scientifically accurate, evidence-based, and engaging for a broad audience.
This section showcases selected commissioned works—both pieces exhibited publicly in museum spaces and illustrations created for popular science books, articles, temporary exhibitions, and educational projects.
Each artwork was produced in close collaboration with researchers and reflects current paleontological interpretations, including ecological and taxonomic contexts.

the dragon of billesholm
Discover the Dragon of Billesholm – a giant dinosaur from Skåne! My first reconstruction displayed at Malmö Museer.
Incredible footprints, a mysterious predator, and a fascinating discovery story.

polish coprolites reveal evidence of diverse vertebrate diets during the triassic–jurassic transition.
The cover of Nature (December 12, 2024), illustrating a groundbreaking article on coprolites and the evolutionary rise of dinosaurs in Poland, was created under unusual circumstances—on an iPad at an airport, while waiting for a flight. It depicts two prosauropods in a Jurassic landscape: one feeding on ferns, the other regurgitating—referencing the fossilized vomit (regurgitalites) described in the study.

alternate evolutions
A commissioned piece exploring speculative evolution — what if tiny Cretaceous mammals gave rise to predatory whales?
This artwork imagines a member of Dagontheriidae, a hypothetical lineage descended from kogaionids, once insectivores of ancient Hateg Island. Now reimagined as apex marine predators.

earliest reptile footprints
The commission involved reconstructing the earliest known amniote - a creature that left its footprints in Australia 356 million years ago, potentially pushing back the evolution of reptiles, birds, and mammals by 40 million years. My illustration, based on these tracks, has been featured by media around the world.