Who I am
I’m Ezure Cozmic (he/they). I’m an artist and creator interested in identity, lived experience, and how larger systems show up in everyday life. I work across different mediums to ask questions and make things clearer when they feel confusing, hidden, or taken for granted. I create as a way of holding emotions and questions without forcing resolution.
Projects in Process

Kittos
Some digital drawings of cats I’ve known and loved, with more to come.

Sketches
Random pages and tattoos from my sketch books exploring different mediums, emotions, and topics as they come up.

Other Artwork
A collection of things that don’t have a collection from 2014- current. You never know what you might find here.

Poems and Fragments
Short poems and texts that sit with transition, change, and the strange or absurd.

The Cozmic Wellspring Deck
A gender-neutral card deck for reflection and self-discovery, organized around different facets of a whole.

Heavy Things
Writing and visual work that examines how familiar words shape experience differently across people and contexts.

Solo Quest Podcast
A solo tabletop role-playing podcast focused on narrative, journaling games, and play without a game master.

Atlas of Systems, Access, and Impacts
A long-term project using writing and visual tools to look at how systems affect everyday life, especially around access and constraint.

Cozmic Body: On Being a Planet
Writing and images that explore my own gender, sexuality, and embodiment as something shaped by history, environment, and time, rather than fixed identity.

Portals. Potential. Liminality.
A landing page for The Portal Tree, a landscape of exploration and parallel realities.
What I do
I make art and tools that look at how daily life is shaped by language, systems, bodies, and history. I’m especially interested in places where pressure, access, or limits are felt, but rarely named.
Why I do it
I make this work to understand what I’m living inside. A lot of what shapes our lives works quietly and unevenly, without much explanation. Making art gives me a way to slow those forces down, look at them more closely, and share what comes into focus.
How I do it
I work on several projects at the same time, over long stretches. My projects are fueled by overlapping curiosity. Each one stands on its own, but common questions and themes tend to show up across them.