Stokou is known for transposing swaths of online textual data onto canvas. Boiling her painterly impulse down to an essence, she has said: “What I really try to create is a dialogue, a monologue, if you will. I’m very interested in communication and the way information passes…I look at the text and I want to paint it.” Her engagement with and use of text draws mainly from digital platforms and messages, tracking not only the content of social exchanges but the contemporary infrastructure that bears them as well. Tangled layers of text appear at points legible and illegible beneath abstract smears and swipes of color that together convey a sense of amped up, frenetic energy characteristic of her work. Writing in The New York Times,
Roberta Smith described Stokou's paintings in her 2013 exhibition, “Bulletproof” at Derek Eller Gallery, where “[m]oments of legibility rise to the surface and then sink back into the works’ eccentric, generally monochromatic tactility...Stokou's loquacious, streetwise paintings build on precedents from Cy Twombly,
Jean-Michel Basquiat, Suzanne McClellan and
Sean Landers to conjure an impression of colliding voices, opinions and needs.” ==Exhibitions==