Divine Deviations is a series of self-portraits reimagining traditional depictions of Christ through a contemporary, queer lens. Drawing visual and symbolic inspiration from historical portraits of Jesus found in the collections of the Victoria & Albert Museum and the National Portrait Gallery, this project engages in a dialogue with religious iconography and its enduring cultural weight. Each image is both homage and subversion - rooted in reverence yet reshaped through personal authorship. By placing myself in the role of Christ, I explore themes of identity, divinity, and inherited expectation, questioning who gets to embody holiness in visual culture. Several portraits are digitally manipulated, using modern techniques to distort, echo, or abstract familiar motifs. The result is a body of work that sits between tradition and transgression, reverence and rebellion - inviting reflection on faith, representation, and the possibility of spiritual self-portraiture.