Work samples

  • Paper Palazzo

    PAPER PALAZZO
    Projection Mapping
    2022
    MoCA L.I.ghts Festival
    Patchogue, Long Island, New York
    October 14 – 17

    Paper Palazzo transforms the stately facade of the historic Carnegie Library into a bustling collage of texts, illustrations, endpapers and covers. This musical mashup of manuscripts celebrates New York Libraries, the books that they house and preserve, and the New Yorkers that write them. The patterns and textures are collected from the Patchogue-Medford Library itself, as well as from the digital collections of the New York Public Library and the artist's own collection of ephemera and printed matter.

    This work was presented as part of the 2022 MOCA L.I.ghts festival in Patchogue, NY. It was projected on the historic Carnegie Library. 

  • BABEL

    BABEL
    Animation
    2017

    The dome is an architectural feature that is common to a wide variety of social spaces. Its strength derives from the natural forces of gravity and tension, with each tier held in place by force exerted from above while supported by the one below. Though this mutual support, these hemispheres of stone, brick and iron are capable of enclosing vast amounts of open space, unoccluded by columns or other supports. One of the first achievements of architectural engineering, domes appear in almost every culture, across every age, and serving a diversity of functions.

  • Carnival Love Wall
    Carnival Love Wall

    CARNIVAL LOVE WALL
    Modular Projection Mapping
    Sites / Dates varied
    Ongoing

    Carnival Love Wall is a modular projection mapping work consisting of dozens of small animated elements that can be assembled, much like toy blocks or Legos, to create a complete animated surface that can be remodeled and shaped to accommodate almost any architecture and/or structure.

    Carnival Love Wall celebrates the resulting complexity of deceptively simplistic systems, like a molecule, a living organism or an entire community. Taken singly, each element’s motions are simplistic and repetitive. But when joined by many others and contained within an architectural form, they are much greater than their constituent parts, creating a monumental, dynamic, and playful mosaic of motion and color.

    Carnival Love Wall has appeared in different configurations at festivals in Detroit, MI, Alys Beach, FL, Patchogue, NY, and Zagreb, Croatia.

    Pictured: Top Left: MoCA L.I.ghts Festival, Patchogue, NY
    Top Right: Digital Graffiti Festival,  Alys Beach,  FL
    Bottom Left: Dlectricity Festival, Detroit, MI
    Bottom Right: Animafest International Animation Festival, Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb, Croatia,

     

  • The Herd
    The Herd

    THE HERD
    Inflatables Installation

    2018
    Light City International Light Festival
    Baltimore, MD
    April 13 - 22

    2019
    MOMENTUM Light Festival
    Toledo, OH
    September 19 – 21

    The Herd was an installation in Baltimore City’s Inner Harbor about water health and the Harbor’s role in Baltimore’s urban ecosystem. It is a cluster of 321 luminous inflatable swim rings—designed by the artist to resemble floats used by swimmers at the seaside—laced together to form a glowing multitude of creatures calmly bobbing in the nighttime harbor.

    The Herd amused, confounded and delighted visitors to the Light City International Festival in 2018. The installation took three days to complete with a dedicated crew of artists and volunteers, and using over 6000 feet of rope to position and secure all of the inflatables in a 120' by 340' foot area.

    Aware of the fact that vinyl pool toys are a significant polluter in landfills, our oceans and other water resources, the artist sold, gifted, and recycled the inflatables to ensure minimal environmental impact.The inflatables were sold during the festival, raising over $4000.00 for Baltimore non-profits championing healthy water ecosystems for all Maryland citizens.

    The Herd made its inaugural debut at Light City 2018, and appeared in the 2019 MOMENTUM Festival in Toledo, Ohio.

About Kelley

Baltimore City

Enjoyment is a functional necessity of my artwork. Whether in the intimate setting of a gallery or on a grand scale through public projection mapping works, these encounters offer a release from the context of the everyday—a temporary spontaneous carnival fostering a sense of community and belonging. The collective experience of joy can instigate open and earnest interactions between people, opening up a shared space for happy contemplation and/or… more

Paper Palazzo

PAPER PALAZZO
Projection Mapping
2022
MoCA L.I.ghts Festival
Patchogue, Long Island, New York
October 14 – 17

Paper Palazzo transforms the stately facade of the historic Carnegie Library into a bustling collage of texts, illustrations, endpapers and covers. This musical mashup of manuscripts celebrates New York Libraries, the books that they house and preserve, and the New Yorkers that write them. The patterns and textures are collected from the Patchogue-Medford Library itself, as well as from the digital collections of the New York Public Library and the artist's own collection of ephemera and printed matter.

This work was presented as part of the 2022 MOCA L.I.ghts festival in Patchogue, NY. It was projected on the historic Carnegie Library. Thanks to Danielle Paisley, Laura Accardi, Gary Lutz, and The Entire Library Staff of The Patchogue-Medford Library for their contribution of images from the library stacks, and to the Friends of the Patchogue-Medford Library as well. An extra special thanks to the Hungry March Band for their permission to use their song "Underground" as the score for this piece.

 

  • Paper Palazzo - Documentation

    Documentation footage of the Paper Palazzo projection mapping piece as presented at the 2022 MoCA L.I.ghts festival in Patchogue, NY. It was projected on the historic Carnegie Library.

    Thanks to Danielle Paisley, Laura Accardi, Gary Lutz, and The Entire Library Staff of The Patchogue-Medford Library for their contribution of images from the library stacks, and to the Friends of the Patchogue-Medford Library as well. An extra special thanks to the Hungry March Band for their permission to use their song "Underground" as the score for this piece.

  • Paper Palazzo - Detail
    Paper Palazzo - Detail

    Documentation still from Paper Palazzo, a projection mapping work presented at the 2022 MoCA L.I.ghts festival in Patchogue, NY. The artist collaborated with librarians from the Patchogue-Medford Library to assemble a collection of illustrations, textures and texts to use as material for the animation.

    MoCA L.I.ghts Festival
    Patchogue, Long Island, New York
    October 14 – 17 2022

  • Paper Palazzo - Detail
    Paper Palazzo - Detail

    Documentation still from Paper Palazzo, a projection mapping work presented at the 2022 MoCA L.I.ghts festival in Patchogue, NY. The artist collaborated with librarians from the Patchogue-Medford Library to assemble a collection of illustrations, textures and texts to use as material for the animation.

    MoCA L.I.ghts Festival
    Patchogue, Long Island, New York
    October 14 – 17 2022

  • Paper Palazzo - Detail
    Paper Palazzo - Detail

    Documentation still from Paper Palazzo, a projection mapping work presented at the 2022 MoCA L.I.ghts festival in Patchogue, NY. The artist collaborated with librarians from the Patchogue-Medford Library to assemble a collection of illustrations, textures and texts to use as material for the animation. Portraits of renown New York authors were included in the material as a tribute to New York's amazing wordsmiths.

    Patchogue, Long Island, New York
    October 14 – 17 2022

  • Paper Palazzo - Detail
    Paper Palazzo - Detail

    Documentation still from Paper Palazzo, a projection mapping work presented at the 2022 MoCA L.I.ghts festival in Patchogue, NY. The artist collaborated with librarians from the Patchogue-Medford Library to assemble a collection of illustrations, textures and texts to use as material for the animation.

    MoCA L.I.ghts Festival
    Patchogue, Long Island, New York
    October 14 – 17 2022

  • Paper Palazzo - Detail
    Paper Palazzo - Detail

    Documentation still from Paper Palazzo, a projection mapping work presented at the 2022 MoCA L.I.ghts festival in Patchogue, NY. The artist collaborated with librarians from the Patchogue-Medford Library to assemble a collection of illustrations, textures and texts to use as material for the animation.

    MoCA L.I.ghts Festival
    Patchogue, Long Island, New York
    October 14 – 17 2022

  • Paper Palazzo - Detail
    Paper Palazzo - Detail

    Documentation still from Paper Palazzo, a projection mapping work presented at the 2022 MoCA L.I.ghts festival in Patchogue, NY. The artist collaborated with librarians from the Patchogue-Medford Library to assemble a collection of illustrations, textures and texts to use as material for the animation.

    MoCA L.I.ghts Festival
    Patchogue, Long Island, New York
    October 14 – 17 2022

  • Paper Palazzo - Detail
    Paper Palazzo - Detail

    Documentation still from Paper Palazzo, a projection mapping work presented at the 2022 MoCA L.I.ghts festival in Patchogue, NY. The artist collaborated with librarians from the Patchogue-Medford Library to assemble a collection of illustrations, textures and texts to use as material for the animation.

    MoCA L.I.ghts Festival
    Patchogue, Long Island, New York
    October 14 – 17 2022

The Oracle

The Oracle is an interactive animation installation that invites users to ask questions and encourages users to consider the relationship between intimacy, personal privacy, and trust in technology. It is a fantastic spectacle that provides answers to the user's fears and anxieties through the miracle of modern machinery.

The installation combines animation, light sensors and a projector to create a fortune-telling machine that responds to queries submitted to it on small pieces of paper by the viewer. It consists of the projected animation of the Oracle, the projector itself, and a "petition box" containing a light sensor that triggers the answers to the solicited questions The answers the Oracle grants are chosen at random, and it almost never offers a direct answer--in fact it behaves quite badly. The Oracle will get angry, break in a number of humous ways, and even get embarrassed for the user and simply leave. Only rarely does it provide a "yes" or "no" reply.

The ostensible miracle of The Oracle is one of smoke and mirrors: it is a stacked deck operating on chance. It is a microcomputer responding from external input to play animations that offer nonsensical answers. Even knowing that--and also knowing that their questions will be displayed publicly, the questions that people submit can be deeply personal. Amidst the typical queries into potential romantic interests and verification of the existence of extraterrestrial life are questions brimming with pathos and uncertainty: Does my father love me? Am I on the right path? Will X come home from the hospital?

The true miracle of The Oracle one of trust, intimacy, and our innate desire to know. We might have looked behind the curtain and know that it only conceals a box of ones and zeros, but we still find solace in answers. The answers we receive may be nonsense but still offer themselves up for our own interpretation. As the Delphic Oracle perched on her tripod and muttered spaced-out gibberish to the Ancient Greeks we still find meaning, guidance and even hope in the arbitrary and nonsensical.

  • The Oracle - Install View
    The Oracle - Install View

    Exhibit view of The Oracle petition table and wall. Petitioners write anonymous questions on slips of paper for submission to The Oracle. The petition slips are collected and displayed on exhibit walls to share with other visitors. 

    Port Discovery Children’s Museum
    Baltimore, Maryland 2023

  • The Oracle - Full View
    The Oracle - Full View

    Petitioners of The Oracle write anonymous questions on the light table to the left. They then approach the projected animation the right, and drop their question into a petition box. The Oracle awakes and answers the petitioner's query by playing an animated answer at random.

    Port Discovery Children’s Museum
    Baltimore, Maryland 2023

  • The Oracle - Submission Table
    The Oracle - Submission Table

    Users approach the light table and write out their queries on a light table. Queries submitted to The Oracle are collected and then displayed on the wall to share with others.

    Port Discovery Children’s Museum
    Baltimore, Maryland 2023

  • The Oracle - Detail of Petition Slips
    The Oracle - Detail of Petition Slips

    Detail of The Oracle installation. Users submit questions to the Oracle on slips of paper and receive answers via randomly chosen animations. People's queries range from the humorous to the deeply personal.

    Port Discovery Children’s Museum
    Baltimore, Maryland 2023

  • The Oracle - Submission Box
    The Oracle - Submission Box

    Users of The Oracle submit questions on slips of by dropping them into the submission box. The falling slips of paper wake the Oracle, triggering an animated answer chosen at random. 

    Port Discovery Children’s Museum
    Baltimore, Maryland 2023

  • The Oracle - Demonstration

    Documentation and demonstration of The Oracle installation. This footage is from the original install of The Oracle at the artist's solo show, Heavy Light Machinery at the Creative Alliance at the Patterson in 2012.

  • The Oracle - Sample Answer

    A sample animation showing one possible answer triggered by a question submission for The Oracle installation.

Carnival Love Wall

Carnival Love Wall is a modular projection mapping work consisting of dozens of small animated elements that can be assembled, much like toy blocks or Legos, to create a complete animated surface that can be remodeled and shaped to accommodate almost any architecture and/or structure. 

Carnival Love Wall celebrates the resulting complexity of deceptively simplistic systems, like a molecule, a living organism or an entire community. Taken singly, each element’s motions are simplistic and repetitive. But when joined by many others and contained within an architectural form, they are much greater than their constituent parts, creating a monumental, dynamic, and playful mosaic of motion and color. 

This image is a maquette of the recent install of Carnival Love Wall for Animafest Zagreb World Festival of Animated Film, at the Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb in 2017.

  • Carnival Love Wall - Detroit Video Documentation

    Carnival Love Wall is a modular projection mapping work consisting of dozens of small animated elements that can be assembled, much like toy blocks or Legos, to create a complete animated surface that can be remodeled and shaped to accommodate almost any architecture and/or structure. 

    This video documents Carnival Love Wall - Detroit, which appeared in the Dlectricity Light festival in Detroit, MI in 2017.

  • Carnival Love Wall - Patchogue
    Carnival Love Wall - Patchogue

    Carnival Love Wall is a modular projection mapping work consisting of dozens of small animated elements that can be assembled, much like toy blocks or Legos, to create a complete animated surface that can be remodeled and shaped to accommodate almost any architecture and/or structure. 

    This video documents Carnival Love Wall - Patchogue, which appeared in the 2020 MoCA L.I.ghts Festival in Patchogue, NY.

     

  • Carnival Love Wall - Zagreb
    Carnival Love Wall - Zagreb

    Carnival Love Wall is a modular projection mapping work consisting of dozens of small animated elements that can be assembled, much like toy blocks or Legos, to create a complete animated surface that can be remodeled and shaped to accommodate almost any architecture and/or structure. 

    This image is a maquette of the recent install of Carnival Love Wall for Animafest Zagreb World Festival of Animated Film, at the Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb in 2017.

  • Carnival Love Wall - Alys Beach
    Carnival Love Wall - Alys Beach

    Carnival Love Wall is a modular projection mapping work consisting of dozens of small animated elements that can be assembled, much like toy blocks or Legos, to create a complete animated surface that can be remodeled and shaped to accommodate almost any architecture and/or structure. 

    This video documents Carnival Love Wall - Alys Beach, which appeared in the Digital Graffiti light festival in Alys Beach, FL in 2017.

BABEL

BABEL is a full-dome animation about the temporality of history, culture, and place using imagery pieced together from historic architectural domes.

The dome is an architectural feature that is common to a wide variety of social spaces. Its strength derives from the natural forces of gravity and tension, with each tier held in place by force exerted from above while supported by the one below. Though this mutual support, these hemispheres of stone, brick and iron are capable of enclosing vast amounts of open space, unoccluded by columns or other supports. One of the first achievements of architectural engineering, domes appear in almost every culture, across every age, and serving a diversity of functions.

Utilizing archival imagery and animation, Babel takes advantage of David M. Brown Planetarium’s domed ceiling to present a 5-minute tour of the iconic structures and institutions that boast this architectural feature, placing viewers beneath the oculus at Rome’s Pantheon; gazing up at our nation’s Capitol Building; and amidst the gorgeous lattices of Tilla Kari Madrasa in Uzbekistan, to name a few.

In Babel, the artist stacks the different rings of these domes like children’s toys, aspiring to build a towering edifice, one atop the other. The domes, however, spin in consecutive circles, and each level erodes and supplants the next in a futile architectural battle royale spanning centuries, geography and ideologies.

As the Tower of Babel presents an allegorical origin of cultural difference, Babel suggests that an ideal monument is one that brings together all ideals—faith, pleasure, beauty, industry—that the balance and tension of these paradigmatic forces allows them to coexist while supporting one another naturally, like tiers of stones stacked to form a domed ceiling.

Rejecting a monolithic, homogenized absolute, Babel represents a unity that does not subsume social and cultural difference, but builds on the strength of all its constituent parts. In Babel the sacred, secular, commercial and political work in concert to realize the best of all possible worlds, all at once.

BABEL was first presented at the David M. Brown Planetarium in Arlington, VA in May 2017. It features the song “Many Horses” from For Stars and Atoms, an album by the excellent yet sadly defunct Baltimore ensemble Yeveto. It has since screened in venues in the U.S., Romania, Spain, Lebanon, India, and the U.K.

  • Paper Palazzo

    BABEL is a full-dome animation about the temporality of history, culture, and place using imagery pieced together from historic architectural domes.

    BABEL was first presented at the David M. Brown Planetarium in Arlington, VA in May 2017. It features the song “Many Horses” from For Stars and Atoms, an album by the excellent yet sadly defunct Baltimore ensemble Yeveto. It has since screened in venues in the U.S., Romania, Spain, Lebanon, India, and the U.K.

  • BABEL - View at David M. Brown Planetarium
    BABEL - View at David M. Brown Planetarium

    Audience view of the inaugural screening of BABEL at the David M. Brown Planetarium in Arlington, VA in 2017.

  • BABEL - View at David M. Brown Planetarium
    BABEL - View at David M. Brown Planetarium

    Audience view of the inaugural screening of BABEL at the David M. Brown Planetarium in Arlington, VA in 2017.

  • BABEL - View at David M. Brown Planetarium
    BABEL - View at David M. Brown Planetarium

    Audience view of the inaugural screening of BABEL at the David M. Brown Planetarium in Arlington, VA in 2017.

  • BABEL - Video Still
    BABEL - Video Still

    Still from the full-dome animation, BABEL, 2017

  • BABEL - Video Still
    BABEL - Video Still

    Still from the full-dome animation, BABEL, 2017

  • BABEL - Video Still Composite
    BABEL - Video Still Composite

    A composite of multiple stills from the full-dome animation BABEL, 2017

The Herd

Baltimore’s Inner harbor is a thriving, active place. It features amazing institutions like the Visionary Art Museum and the Museum of Industry. Harbor East offers diners a great diversity of gastronomic options. And sometimes it’s nice to blend in with the flocks of tourists to stroll the waterside, or take the water taxi to enjoy a panorama unavailable anywhere else in the city.

One thing one does not do, however, is take a refreshing dip.

In 2016, Baltimore's leading Harbor Health nonprofit, Waterfront Partnership’s annual Water Quality Report Card gave the waterways of the inner harbor a failing grade, citing high levels of raw sewage, nitrogen and phosphorus as the culprits. That same year, Facebook featured a video of tourists diving into the harbor, frolicking as Baltimore locals looked on in horror. Sinkholes and sewage leaks were common items in the news. Baltimore City’s waterworks are over 100 years old—once a source of civic pride, decades of neglect and atrophy indicate that Baltimore’s infrastructure and development plan are in need of more thoughtful consideration.

This is already happening, in unique ways that reflect our city’s offbeat and eccentric character.  The Inner Harbor Water Wheel, casually known as “Mr. Trash Wheel” (and later a second wheel, Professor Trash Wheel) offers an innovative solution has removed over 1 million pounds of debris flushed into the Inner Harbor since 2014, and obtained local celebrityhood. Other actions, like the Floating Wetlands program, and the annual Baltimore Flotilla are examples in which the community addresses the ecological and political aspects of water health that are fun and creative.

The Herd is a tribute to all the citizens of Baltimore City who continue to hope for a healthy city and healthy waterways. It is a cluster of 400 luminous inflatable swim rings—designed by the artists to be similar in appearance to the floats used by swimmers at the seaside—laced together in a net to form a glowing multitude of creatures calmly bobbing in the shimmering ripples of the nighttime harbor.

Waterfront Partnership states that its overall goal is to have a swimmable and fishable harbor by 2020. Boston, Los Angeles, Paris and other cities overcame sewer infrastructure problems – similar to those faced by Baltimore – by making large improvements in the health of their waterways. The trash wheel project, initiated here in Baltimore, has set an example that is inspiring other cities to try this innovative solution to keep their home waters clean.

The best solution, however, to waste entering the harbor is to not have it go there in the first place. Education, and making Baltimorians aware of the big difference they can make by undertaking small changes is the most effective method of all. Light City is a great platform to spread this message. The Herd is a great way to communicate it. The empty glowing rings of The Herd are a hope and a promise that someday, when we take the responsibility of clean water into our own hands individually, they will indeed be filled by happy bathers enjoying the Inner Harbor in a new, refreshing way.

The Herd amused, confounded and delighted visitors to the Light City International Festival in 2018. The installation took three days to complete with a dedicated crew of artists and volunteers, and using over 6000 feet of rope to position and secure all of the inflatables in a 120' by 340' foot area.

A close-up of the inflatables used in The Herd. The artist created the original design of the inflatables and then worked with a fabrication company to produce a run of 400 inflatables for the project. 

Aware of the fact that vinyl pool toys are a significant polluter in landfills and our oceans and other water resources, the artist worked to sell, gift, and recycle the inflatables to ensure minimal environmental impact.The inflatables were sold during the festival, raising over $4000.00 for Baltimore non-profits championing healthy water ecosystems for all Maryland citizens.

The Herd made its inaugural debut at Light City 2018, and appeared in the 2019 MOMENTUM Festival in Toledo, Ohio.

 

  • The Herd - Nighttime Installation View
    The Herd - Nighttime Installation View

    A nighttime view of The Herd installation at the Light City International Light Festival in Baltimore MD, 2018.

    Photo: Melissa Penley Cormier

  • The Herd - Aerial View
    The Herd - Aerial View

    An aerial view of The Herd installation in Baltimore Harbor at the Light City International Light Festival in 2018. The installation took three days to complete with a dedicated crew of artists and volunteers, and using over 6000 feet of rope to position and secure all 320 of the inflatables in a 120' by 340' foot area. 

    To insure as little waste as possible, the inflatables were sold during the festival, raising over $4000.00 for Baltimore non-profits championing healthy water ecosystems for all Maryland citizens.

    No inflatables were lost during the installation or exhibition of this work.

  • The Herd - Inflatables View
    The Herd - Inflatables View

    A close-up of the inflatables used in The Herd. The artist created the original design of the inflatables and then worked with a fabrication company to produce a run of 400 inflatables for the project. 

    Aware of the fact that vinyl pool toys are a significant polluter in landfills and our oceans and other water resources, the artist worked to sell, gift, and recycle the inflatables to ensure minimal environmental impact.The inflatables were sold during the festival, raising over $4000.00 for Baltimore non-profits championing healthy water ecosystems for all Maryland citizens.

  • The Herd - Launching The Inflatables

    Video documentation of launching and securing the inflatables (called "Herdlings") during installation for the Light City festival. 

    A dedicated team of over 32 artists and volunteers braved the cold, rain, and treacherous harbor waters to make this project a reality. You can see their names and a message of gratitude to them here

    Video footage courtesy of Spoon Popkin.

  • HERD_TOLEDO (26).JPG
    HERD_TOLEDO (26).JPG

    The Herd was also invited to visit Toledo, Ohio for the MOMENTUM festival in 2019. The artist and crew installed 200 of the inflatables at the Maumee river water front to spread the message of maintaining heathy urban water ecosystems. 

  • aerial_OH.jpg
    aerial_OH.jpg

    A drone-assisted aerial photo of The Herd installation at the MOMENTUM Festival in Toledo, OH, 2019.

    Photo courtesy of #toledoaerialmedia

     

  • The Herd - Nighttime Installation Detail, MOMENTUM Festival, Toledo OH
    The Herd - Nighttime Installation Detail, MOMENTUM Festival, Toledo OH

    A detail of The Herd installation at the MOMENTUM festival, 2019.

  • HERD_TOLEDO (18).JPG
    HERD_TOLEDO (18).JPG

    A detail view of The Herd at the MOMENTUM festival in Toledo, OH in 2019. This was a smaller iteration of the installation, with a total of 200 inflatables installed. 

Bay Bingo - Collaboration with Corrie F. Parks

Bay Bingo is a whimsical animation exploring the fragile ecosystem of Maryland’s Chesapeake Bay through exploration and play. In the animation, native species such as the Long-nosed Gar and our local favorite, the Blue Crab, cavort in a busy kaleidoscopic sea bed. While concerned with a specific body of water, Bay Bingo encourages reflection on the importance of natural resources for everyone, landlubbers and shore people alike. 

Bay Bingo began as Projected Aquaculture--a large-scale projection mapping animation created with Kelley Bell and Corrie Francis Parks for Light City Baltimore 2016. This 5-minute looping animation was projected on the 250-foot-wide canopy of the Institute of Marine and Environmental Technology in the Inner Harbor in Baltimore from March 28-April 4, 2016. Through a whimsical approach to animation, the piece presents the underwater ecosystem of the Chesapeake Bay, drawing parallels between the decline and resurgence of the Bay’s health and the similar decline and recent efforts to transform Baltimore into a livable city.

Projected Aquaculture examines and comments on the current health of the Chesapeake Bay through a series of projected animations incorporating imagery from the delicate ecosystem such as menhayden and blue crab. Mapping these projected images in large scale offers an opportunity to create a dialogue around a similarly described ecosystem: Baltimore City.

Viewers were invited to interact with Projected Aquaculture through printed and online resources, including a field guide and a Bay Bingo game and Field Guide where they could learn about the underwater flora and fauna featured in the projection.

The project has expanded to other locations and media, encouraging reflection on the importance of natural resources. It has appeared in Patchogue, NY, Corpus Christie TX, and The Maryland Natural Historical Society. Now viewers can interact with Bay Bingo by playing along on their mobile device. Scanning a QR code near the video loads an online bingo card (no app download needed!) and passers-by can play a short game in which they identify aquatic creatures from the video on their bingo card and learn facts about the species (through limericks!) as they try to get bingo. The game can be played alone or with others and offers a brief moment to pause to delight in a visit to the Chesapeake and appreciate the diversity of life to be found in its waters from hundreds of miles away.

  • Bay Bingo - Light City Festival 2016

     

    Bay Bingo began as Projected Aquaculture--a large-scale projection mapping animation created with Kelley Bell and Corrie Francis Parks for Light City Baltimore 2016. This 5-minute looping animation was projected on the 250-foot-wide canopy of the Institute of Marine and Environmental Technology in the Inner Harbor in Baltimore from March 28-April 4, 2016. Through a whimsical approach to animation, the piece presents the underwater ecosystem of the Chesapeake Bay, drawing parallels between the decline and resurgence of the Bay’s health and the similar decline and recent efforts to transform Baltimore into a livable city.

  • Bay Bingo - Playable Version!

    Viewers can interact with Bay Bingo by playing along on their mobile device. Scanning a QR code near the video loads an online bingo card (no app download needed!) and passers-by can play a short game in which they identify aquatic creatures from the video on their bingo card and learn facts about the species (through limericks!) as they try to get bingo. The game can be played alone or with others and offers a brief moment to pause to delight in a visit to the Chesapeake and appreciate the diversity of life to be found in its waters from hundreds of miles away.

  • Bay Bingo - Corpus Christi Port Authority
    Bay Bingo - Corpus Christi Port Authority

    Long-term installation of Bay Bingo at the Corpus Christi Port Authority Building in Corpus Christi, TX. The artists worked with local marine biologists to identify and include fish found in the Corpus Christi Bay to make the piece site-specific. 

  • Bay Bingo - Patchogue
    Bay Bingo - Patchogue

    A version of Bay Bingo was presented at the MoCA L.I.ghts Fesitval in Patchogue, NY in 2020. The artists worked with marine biologists from Cornell University to identify and include fish found in the Great South Bay to make the piece site-specific. 

     

  • Bay Bingo - Patchogue - Detail
    Bay Bingo - Patchogue - Detail

    Detail of the Bay Bingo at the MoCA L.I.ghts Festival in Patchogue, NY, 2020.

  • Bay Bingo - Zagreb
    Bay Bingo - Zagreb

    Installation of Bay Bingo at the Animafest Zagreb World Festival of Animated Film, at the Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb in 2016.

The Kubler-Ross Device, or Where Ghosts Come From

A video installation presenting an animated “device” explaining the Kubler-Ross Model, based on Elisabeth Kubler Ross’s “Five Stages of Grief” in her book On Death and Dying. This device is a “miraculous modern mechanical marvel that transmutes the painful memory of a lost loved one to a joyful memory, allowing the deceased to shuffle off this mortal coil, and enabling the living to have the courage and intestinal fortitude to carry on.” The animation itself is presented as a sculptural piece within the gallery, as opposed to screened in a theater space before a seated audience.
  • Where Ghosts Come From (The Kubler-Ross Device)
  • The Kubler-Ross Device
    The Kubler-Ross Device
    Promotional poster.
  • The Kubler-Ross Device
    The Kubler-Ross Device
    Install view.
  • The Kubler-Ross Device
    The Kubler-Ross Device
    Video still.

Immersive Ideal

Immersive Ideal was an interactive exhibition of photographs and music documenting the Washington, DC, band Beauty Pill’s summer residency in Artisphere’s Black Box theater.

Immersive re-creates the band’s two week long summer recording session in the Black Box through an all encompassing interactive environment of imagery and sound—a hyperrealistic panorama of the creative process.

A listening space enclosed the viewer within three rear-projection screens. In the center of the space, an array of unmarked buttons on a pedestal controlled an array of photographs from the band’s recording sessions. As the band’s music swelled to fill the space, the user was free to manipulate the ebb and flow of images from the original performance of the work, presenting an “immersive ideal” of the original event.
  • Installation View
    Installation View
    Installation view of Immersive Ideal
  • Installation View
    Installation View
    Installation view of Immersive Ideal
  • Installation View
    Installation View
    Installation view of Immersive Ideal
  • Installation Maquette View
    Installation Maquette View
    Sketch for Immersive Ideal environment
  • Interface
    Interface
    Immersive Ideal Interface

Black Light, White Birds

In my MFA Thesis, Black Light, White Birds, I projected digital animations of the Raven, an archetypal trickster figure and mascot of Baltimore City, on urban landscape. I perform unexpected screenings in the cityâ??s public spaces. These animations highlight issues of a city in transition: disparity caused by gentrification, the artistâ??s role in community growth, and the uncertain future of historic structures in the face of rapid urban re-development.

As an artist I attempt to maintain a balance between creating awareness and moralizing, between entertainment and subversion: animation is a useful medium in this regard: the images are humorous and quickly understood, yet provide serious food for thought in a way that is not patronizing or preachy.

Trickster tactics counter the co-option of visual space by advertising and corporate visuals in urban areas: trickster artists seek to reclaim this space for their imaginations, and in doing so inspire others to imagine what could be possible.

The final project, along with maps, site descriptions and video documentation appeared in the UMBC Imaging and Digital Arts Thesis Exhibition in 2005.
  • Site Documentation - Flag House Courts
    Site Documentation - Flag House Courts
    Public projection in 2004 at the former site of Flag House Courts housing project, now a mixed-income housing development in downtown Baltimore
  • Site Documentation - Silo Point
    Site Documentation - Silo Point
    Public projection in Locust Point at the former ConAgra Grain Silos in 2004.
  • Site Photo - Rochambeau Hotel
    Site Photo - Rochambeau Hotel
    Public projection at the Rochambeau Hotel in downtown Baltimore prior to it's demolition in 2006.
  • Exhibit Photo
    Exhibit Photo
    Photograph of the Thesis Exhibition at University of Maryland Baltimore County, 2005. Documentation at the exhibition consisted of a map of Baltimore City marking the locations where projections took place and corresponding plaques detailing information about each site. The animation and video footage from the projection events were show additionally.
  • raven_exhibit_1
    raven_exhibit_1
  • raven_exhibit_3
    raven_exhibit_3
  • Exhibit Detail
    Exhibit Detail
    A sample plaque, as it appeared in the exhibition.