2017

S.O.S

2016

Trouble Saying the Simplest Things

Trouble Saying the Simplest Things is a series of embroidered works about how hard it can be to communicate thoughts or feelings after being gaslit.


Public Art

2018, talkPoPc Tent: Philadelphia City Hall

talkPOPc strives to satisfy the natural urge to develop deeper, more intellectual thoughts. As an art project that exists in the interface between art and philosophy, talkPOPc explores particular topics. talkPOPc gives not only the traditional voice of the individual artist, but broadens that discussion to include other individual participants in one-to-one conversations with philosophers, emphasizing not just what we say but how we listen. talkPOPc reconstructs the ever-fluid and enjoyable social process of thought acquisition. 

2010, PARTICIPATE: 333 S. Broad st. Philadelphia

The University of the Arts awarded me the Public Art Initiative Grant to create an interactive diorama. PARTICIPATE was a recreation of a framed 5”X7” family photograph of my sister’s birthday, blown up to 5’X7’X12’. The project had its own Facebook page where participants could upload their photographs with the sculpture. The project was about the intimacy and universal connectedness in sharing memories.


Installations

2017, Is That All There Is?, Installation for Loved to Pieces exhibition, Kitchen Table Gallery, Philadelphia

A moving wall was placed at the back end of the gallery to create a long, narrow hallway. The outside of that hallway featured a 10’ X 4’ mixed media collage entitled Burying the Old Mes. Inside that hallway was a white, translucent rectangle with a step-stool. Viewers were invited to peer into the rectangle to discover a stop-motion animation video entitled, Is That All There Is? after the Peggy Lee song.

2015, Reflecting Pool: Forcefield Project Invitational, Maken Studios, Philadelphia

Reflecting Pool was a collaborative installation made by Jessie Clark (CHER Co-Founder) and myself. The project featured over 400 recycled bottles with hand-written messages in them and videos projected onto a pool of water. The projected videos were portraits of individuals who were all asked to share their first memories on camera. Clark then wrote 400 messages based on the videos. Viewers were invited to take a message from a bottle and place it in the water to watch the ink dissolve within the video projection.

2015, For Crying Out Loud

Installed at the Digital Fringe Festival, CRUX Space Gallery, Philadelphia, PA, and at Assemble Gallery in Pittsburgh, PA

2010, December, 1991: Rosenwald Wolf Gallery, Philadelphia, PA

An interactive installation that featured sculpture and video work about memory.

2009, Killing Time: Rosenwald Wolf Gallery, Philadelphia, PA

A performance, video, and interactive multi-media installation wherein collaborator, Lauren McCarty and I occupied Rosenwald Wolf Gallery for one week. We nested and meticulously recorded every beloved item that we put into the space. We then removed it all, leaving a white seating area. Gallery visitors were invited to watch the video of our installation on a small tv, peruse the absent items in a catalogue wherein we assigned value to each one based on their importance to us, and take pictures with disposable cameras. Projections of the removed objects accumulated on the emptied seating area. The only parts remaining for viewers were our records of what the space had been and the anticipated memory of the human interactions in the photographs.


Older Work

 Drawings and Illustrations

5” X 7” Memory Project, 2015

The Girls Are Waiting Series, 2015-2016

Studio Work, 2010-2014

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2016-2019