About Mandy

My life has been shaped by constant movement—growing up with multiple relocations across the U.S., from the East Coast to the Midwest to the West. Each place was a new beginning, where I had to navigate the feeling of being "new" all over again. Art became a kind of refuge and a language I could carry with me from one place to the next. It was always there as a default home, and it allowed me to process the world I was experiencing. For me, every place I've lived in or visited holds its own… more

Housekeeping

2018
Single-Channel Video Installation with Audio, TRT: 1:43 (Looped Video)
12' x  26'
Performers: Mandy Morrison, Tiara Francis, Sammantha Siegle
Director of Photography: Aimi Bouillion

Password: clean

This project was made with the cooperation and the participation of students in the Dance Department at University of Maryland, Baltimore County.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • Housekeeping

    In Housekeeping, I reference the slapstick comedy of silent films. In them, the protagonists are often working people, encountering circumstances that challenge their human limitations or undermine their efforts at keeping up with expectations. In Charlie Chaplin’s Modern Times, the assembly-line pace far outstrips the character’s ability to keep-up and adhere to what is required. In Housekeeping the protagonist is a middle-aged professional woman who is being challenged by youth, class and time itself. Seated placidly and alone in a hotel room, she is, at alternate moments, in situ with a pair of young hotel maids who are straightening her bedspread, beating her with brooms or mopping her naked body on a bathroom floor. The background audio plays an ad for anti-aging products, along with the sounds of running water.

    Available for Purchase
  • Housekeeping, 2018 (Video Still)
    Housekeeping, 2018 (Video Still)
    Video still from "Housekeeping"
  • Practice/Process gestures; The head as a mop
    Practice/Process gestures; The head as a mop

    UMBC dance student, Samatha Siegel exploring perforative gestures with inanimate objects (a mop and table) in preparation for eventual project shoot

  • Practice/Process Gestures; stare-down
    Practice/Process Gestures; stare-down

    Process exercises (staring contest) with dance students Samantha Siegal and Tiara Francis at UMBC that fed into the Hotel (Housekeeping) performance-shoot.

  • Housekeeping, 2018 (Video Still)
    Housekeeping, 2018 (Video Still)
    Still from Video Installation "Housekeeping"
  • Practice/Process Gestures; performing the table
    Practice/Process Gestures; performing the table

    Working with UMBC Dance Department students Samantha Siegal and Tiara Francis, using the table as a locus for performative movement and gestures.

  • Housekeeping, 2018 (Video Still)
    Housekeeping, 2018 (Video Still)
    Still from Video Installation "Housekeeping" with Tiara Francis.
  • Practice/Process Gestures; performing the table
    Practice/Process Gestures; performing the table

    UMBC Dance Department students Samantha Siegel and Tiara Francis, using the table to explore power dynamics as a locus for conceptual performative gestures.

  • Housekeeping, 2018 (Video Still)
    Housekeeping, 2018 (Video Still)
  • Housekeeping, 2018 (Video Still)
    Housekeeping, 2018 (Video Still)
    The Hotel Maids trying to "Clean" and smooth out the aging "Guest".

Journey of the Invader Spirit

2020-2023, Duration: 15:37, Single channel video installation

Producer/Writer/Director: Mandy Morrison
Animation: Tori Porter
Music and Sound Design: Jason Charney
Participants: Jose Carlos Conceicao, Mandy Morrison, Raimundo da Silva, Charles Silva, Dete Vieira
Grupo de Capoeira Uniao, Itaparica, Bahia, Brazil, Escola Criança Feliz, Itaparica, Bahia, Brazil

Made with the support from the Tree of Life Foundation, The Maryland State Council on the Arts, Peat and Repeat, and many others.

 

  • Journey of the Invader Spirit

    This 15-minute video installation, Journey of the Invader Spirit  exhibited at the Peale Center, in 2023, weaves an invented creation myth with harsh environmental realities and metaphors for sustainable possibility.
     
    In the video, a pernicious illegitimate ‘Invader Spirit’ travels the land blithely wreaking havoc on the local population by way of boundless forms of consumer lust, then later, punishing with detritus and waste. Eventually, the Spirit’s malevolence gets challenged a by a team of artful Capoeira (Afro-Brazilian) martial arts practitioners working with the aid of angelic oceanic agents. The video -filmed while an artist-in-residence at the Sacatar Institute in Brazil,  was populated with local staff, and residents as participants.
     

    Available for Purchase
  • Storm Delivery Video Still from Journey of the Invader Spirit
    "Storm Delivery" Video Still from Journey of the Invader Spirit

    Video still of the  'Invader Spirit' creating a cyclone of detritus and waste.

  • Primordial Earth
    Primordial Earth

    An animated still of 'Primordial Earth' from Journey of the Invader Spirit

  • Video Still from Journey of the Invader Spirit
    Video Still from "Journey of the Invader Spirit"

    Video Still from "Journey of the Invader Spirit"

    'Offering', with performers from Sacatar staff.

  • Invader_weather.png
    Invader_weather.png

    Video Still from, "Journey of the Invader Spirit",  Weather.

  • Rehearsal with local Itaparica Capoeira Group
    Rehearsal with local Itaparica Capoeira Group

    Rehearsal with local Itaparica Capoeira Group. They enthusiastically lent their talents and support for the project, and reached out to the residency artists to include us in their events.

  • Finding her superpower
    Finding her superpower

    One of the staffers of Sacatar, Dete Vieira, who volunteered to be a performer in the project.

  • Journey of the Invader Spirit, Video Still
    Journey of the Invader Spirit, Video Still

    Along with Capoeira practitioners, the 'spirits' are the faces of local school children from Itaparica, who volunteered to participate in the film.

  • 'Studio view following beach-clean-up and assembling Invader' costume.png
    'Studio view following beach-clean-up and assembling Invader' costume.png

    The costume for the "Invader Spirit", was the result of a collective beach-trash effort with the local community on Itaparica.  I used the collected waste  in its creation. This is an interior view of the studio in Brazil during the work-in-progress.

  • Capoeira Workshop at the Peale by taught by Justin West
    Capoeira Workshop at the Peale by taught by Justin West

    In Baltimore, 2023, at the Peale Center, I organized an open Capoeira workshop  taught by Justin West, during the run of the exhibit.

Arcosanti

2012-2016
TRT: 11:00
4-channel Video Installation with Sound
9'x 23'

A reflective performative work, filmed at the sustainable community of the same name located in Arizona. In it I use physical (bodily) aural and textual expression as a conduit for exploration of the architect’s creative and personal attempt to integrate natural systems with intentional communal living.
In considering an alternative to the frenetic/wired pace of urban existence, I ventured to this community attracted by its premise, unique building structures, immersion in nature, and isolation from other communities.
The site is something of a relic of the ‘60’s and early 70’s, in which counter-cultural experiments in agriculture and urban living had gained currency. Embedded in counter- cultural idealism, the reality –as well as resistance– to seeing such ideas made manifest in the Western world is continually evolving. Yet it is emergent, and as all structures are built on thoughts, such concepts are continually being re-imagined.
While historically iconic and architecturally influential, Arcosanti’s initial premise –to be a self-sustaining community for up to five thousand people– remains largely theoretical. 
In my time there, a bodily reverence for the site and its playful architecture, coupled with poetic observations about the community experience set against the scenic natural backdrop, inform the textual overlays in the piece.

Made with support from the Wexner Center’s Artist Video Program, Columbus, OH

  • Arcosanti
    2016, 4:00 excerpt, TRT 11:00, 4-channel Video Installation, Dimensions variable Arcosanti is a projected experimental town with a molten bronze bell casting business in Yavapai County, central Arizona, 70 mi (110 km) north of Phoenix, at an elevation of 3,732 feet (1,130 meters). Its "arcology" concept was posited by the Italian-American architect, Paolo Soleri (1919–2013). He began construction in 1970, to demonstrate how urban conditions could be improved while minimizing the destructive impact on the earth. He taught and influenced generations of architects and urban designers who studied and worked with him there to build the proposed 'town.' In considering an alternative to the frenetic/wired pace of urban existence, I ventured to this intentional community attracted by its premise, unique building structures, immersion in nature, and isolation from other communities.
  • Arcosanti (4-channel Video Still)
    Arcosanti (4-channel Video Still)
    Still of 4-channel sequence focusing on aspects of the architectural environment
  • Arcosanti (4-channel Video Still)
    Arcosanti (4-channel Video Still)
    4-channel sequence with performative actions taking place in the community theater
  • Arcosanti (Video Still)
    Arcosanti (Video Still)
    Performative action taking place on the site's steps.
  • Arcosanti (Video Still)
    Arcosanti (Video Still)
    Performative action taking place on steps that form a portion of the roof for the theater (on the other side of the structure)
  • Arcosanti (Video Still)
    Arcosanti (Video Still)
    I found myself feeling awe at the sense of possibility present in this environment. It both inspires and suggests varying types of ideas about physicality.
  • Arcosanti (Video Still)
    Arcosanti (Video Still)
    Crouching

Padded Room / Desperado

Padded Room (1999) 3-Channel Video Installation
and
Desperado, (1998) Single- channel video, TRT: 04:45


With footage I shot in 1997, I created these two pieces; one was a stand-alone single channel video (Desperado); the other was a gallery installation (Padded Room) shown at Courtroom Gallery in Brooklyn, NY.

Padded Room is all about what is hidden. I sought to create an internal womb-like space to enclose a group of people into a coddling, yet isolated interior space. Looped video images of this sexually ambiguous 'John Wayne-ish' figure could be viewed while playing on 3- oval  'windows' cut into the interior walls.

Desperado, which plays like a music video and edited to the tune of  Don Henley's famous hit of the same name, was included in a number of Gay/Lesbian Film and Video Festivals and was also shown in the 2000 Whitney Biennial and a number of other academic venues. It still gets shown (albeit with parental warnings and often behind a black curtain). 

The inspiration for this group of work is John Wayne and what HE means, as a man, icon and name.
Naming is a ploy used in constructing an image. Early in his film career, American icon John Wayne swapped his effeminate name –Marion Morrison– for the tough-sounding trade name that would lend credence to his gun-toting taming of the American West. Wayne’s persona was one that enhanced the proviso of Manifest Destiny-enabling the actual and cinematic distortion of other narratives.

Working the piece as a music video, with edited clips of country western music, I as the artist become a pseudo -Wayne and entertain the terrain of power and duo sexuality.

Made with the support of grants from:
Artist's Space, New York City
and the Chicago Community  Access Program

  • Padded Room, 1999 Installation (Courtroom Gallery, Brooklyn, NY)
    Padded Room, 1999 Installation (Courtroom Gallery, Brooklyn, NY)
    You had to put on silver booties, then crawl up the velveteen ramp to get into the installation.
  • Padded Room, Video Instllation (Interior View) 1999
    Padded Room, Video Instllation (Interior View) 1999
    Inside the installation with a video 'window'
  • Desperado
    Desperado, 1997 4:20 (single channel) Naming is a ploy used in constructing an image. Early in his film career, American icon John Wayne swapped his effeminate name –Marion Morrison– for the tough-sounding trade name that would lend credence to his gun-toting taming of the American West. Wayne’s persona was one that enhanced the proviso of Manifest Destiny-enabling the actual and cinematic distortion of other narratives. Working the piece as a music video, with edited clips of country western music, the artist becomes a pseudo -Wayne and entertains the terrain of power and duo sexuality. Screened in the 2000 Whitney Biennial

All the White I Am (Photo Series)

2013-16
During the winter of 2013-16, I worked at a remote recreation facility for the City of New York. We had a number of youth groups who used our digital facility  to surf the web, and print images of themselves  taken with  cell-phones as well as images of celebrities, downloaded from the web.

As they would often leave cast-off images in the printer I would pick-up what was left behind, and  consider the overlap in our worlds.  I would then combine them with a variety of other images; some from the surrounding local area, and some performative actions. These images are a sample of that experience. 

 

  • Marrow
    Marrow

    12 x 56"

    Photo collage

     

  • All the White I Am
    All the White I Am

    12 x 56"

    Photo collage

Videos from the Blue Sky Project (projects resulting from participatory residency)

2008-09

In the summer of 2008, I spent 6 weeks working with rural young people in northern Illinois at an innovative artist's residency, called Blue Sky Project. The residency, which hosted an international consortium of artists,  paired working artists with young people in the creation of new work.

During  my residency we focused our attention on creating  performative pieces that examined 'context'; what  spaces mean, what are the expectations within a space,  how do we feel in these spaces and how could one disrupt these expectations.

We had the use of various commercial spaces and the building and grounds of a local community college.
Young people chose the locations and created their own costumes for certain perfomative experiences.

Blue Sky ran from 2006-2012 and was located initially in Woodstock, Illinois north of Chicago before relocating to Dayton where it was affiliated with the University of Dayton  from  2009-12.


 

  • Flag, 2008
    Flag, 2008-09 Single-channel performative video TRT: 08:58 Participants from the Blue Sky Project Artist Residency, Woodstock Illinois Working with youth from the surrounding community and engaging with ideas about performance and the body-in-context, we chose to work in a college gymnasium as a site for exploration. Examining its competitive and nationalist implications, and through the use of simple props, a series of performative gestures yields subtle political interpretations about the meaning of colors, fabric and space. Made with the support of the Blue Sky Project Residence
  • Play
    2008, 3:20 (Two-Channel Video) Working collaboratively with youth as part of the Blue Sky Project we create handmade costumes that reference native American culture and the Elizabethan stage, and generate a series of intimate performances that flout the restrictions imposed by formal theater protocol.
  • Working in the Crystal Lake Theater
    Working in the Crystal Lake Theater
  • Play (Video Still)
    Play (Video Still)
  • Play (Production Still)
    Play (Production Still)
  • Sleep
    Participants from the Blue Sky Project Artist Residency, Woodstock Illinois Working with youth and engaging with ideas about performance and the body-in-context, we analyze the classroom as a site for physical exploration. Discussion revolves around the classroom as an environment with the potentiality for learning, distraction, boredom, or indoctrination. The site is turned into an impromptu slumber party, with the results recorded in video. An invite is issued for other residency participants to see the video and come to a classroom of overturned desks and chairs.
  • Sleep (Video Still)
    Sleep (Video Still)
  • Sleep (Production Still)
    Sleep (Production Still)

Playing Defense Collaboration with NYCArts Cypher

Playing Defense, (7:00) 2011-2012

 Over the course of several months I worked with the NYCArts Cypher youth working  on how their break-dance practice could be integrated into the architectural setting of Fort Jay on Governor's Island.

In this presentation, we explore and challenge the physical “setting” of a military fortress by pitting the rigor and freedom of break-dance against the discipline and demands of military life. 

The video was shot at Fort Jay on Governor's Island, a national park and a historical landmark. Formerly this was one of several military fortresses that defended New York Harbor's commercial interests, including the export of cotton from the South during the Civil War. The completed video piece was presented as part of a dance performance with NYC Arts Cypher at the Brooklyn Museum (2012) and at the Lumen Festival for Video and Performance on Staten Island.
 
Made with funding from The Council on the Arts & Humanities of Staten Island
 

  • Playing Defense, 2010
    Playing Defense, 2010 7:29 (Video) a collaborative effort with break-dance collective NYC Arts Cypher. In this presentation, we explore the physical setting of a military fortress by pitting the rigor and freedom of break-dance against the demands of military life. Performed at Fort Jay National Park Governors Island, New York City
  • NYCArts Cypher at Brooklyn Museum for Performance, 2011
    NYCArts Cypher at Brooklyn Museum for Performance, 2011
    NYCArts Cypher at Brooklyn Museum for Performance, in 2011 where they perform with the video.
  • Playing Defense
    Playing Defense
    Rehearsing moves, at Fort Jay, Goverorn's Island
  • Rehearsing and shooting at Fort Jay
    Rehearsing and shooting at Fort Jay
  • Rehearsing and shooting at Fort Jay
    Rehearsing and shooting at Fort Jay
    NYCArts Cypher at Fort Jay on Governor's Island
  • Cypher youth rehearsing for video shoot
    Cypher youth rehearsing for video shoot
    Fortress walls proved to be fertile ground for break-dance physicality.
  • NYCArts Cypher Rehearsing and shooting at Fort Jay
    NYCArts Cypher Rehearsing and shooting at Fort Jay
  • NYCArts Cypher Rehearsing and shooting at Fort Jay
    NYCArts Cypher Rehearsing and shooting at Fort Jay
  • Mandy Morrison with NYCARts Cypher "Playing Defense" (in rehearsal)l)
    In rehearsal with NYC Arts Cypher at their performance space on Staten Island, prior to performance at Brooklyn Museum (2011)

Live Performances: 100 Days (2014), Cake (2004)

2014
100 Days
Duration: 30:00

Performance
Lyons Recreational Site, Staten Island, NY
 
Participants: Angelo, M. Angelas, Terry Bennet, Gabriella Dennery, Rachel Marie Carson, John Foxell, Lori Greene
Artist/Facilitator: Mandy Morrison
Assistant Director/Social Media: Lauren Denitzio
 
 
100 Days, a spoken performance, was conceived to capture a diverse range of perspectives. Ever since Roosevelt pioneered the 100-day concept taking office during the Great Depression, it has been used by the U.S. media,  and scholars as a gauge of political success and activism. In the lives of ordinary people however, 100 days is an arbitrary timeframe that can demarcate either, an incremental changes in the flow of daily life or a dramatic shift in one’s personal landscape through unforeseen events. Through the mining of personal stories, this series of interwoven narratives, illuminates a range of insights taking into account a specific timeframe from each participant’s life, as a point of reference.

The performance was presented on December 7, 2014, and made with the support of the New York State Council on the Arts.

2004
Duration: 10:00 / 
Dixon Place/Chasama Performance Space, New York City
Performers:
Mandy Morrison
Kelly Kivland
Rebecca Davis
Nora Stevens

Text and Audio Design
Mandy Morrison

Set Design: 
Mathias Neumann

Video Effects:
Jeff Morey

Using the construct of Marie Antoinette' s stance (and purported quote) toward her peasant population, "Let them eat cake!",  I worked with collaborators to generate a multi-media performance loosely based on the facts of her life.

Some of the visuals were derived from 1960's pop culture;   which included a vintage album cover of a woman sitting poised in a cake ("Whipped Cream and Other Delights), as well as tracks ("A Taste of Honey") from the album as background audio. We also used a hair styles and matching waitress costumes to reflect the era.

The dancers perform  as angry waitresses who serve up real cake from from a tier of the Antoinette 'Dress" to audience members, as the cake-sitting 'Marie' quips facetiously about her pesky subordinate 'help'.
The  main character derides all who are below her royal  'station' and at the performance's end, the waitresses turn on their 'Mistress' and attack her with knives and destroying  the cake/dress she sits in.

 

  • 100 Days, a Performance Conceived and Directed by Mandy Morrison, December 7, 2014 (TRT 30:00)
    2014 December 7, 2014 Duration: 30:38 Community Participant Performance Lyons Recreational Facility, Staten Island, NY Participants: Angelo, M. Angelas, Terry Bennet, Gabriella Dennery, Rachel Marie Carson, John Foxell, Lori Greene Artist/Facilitator: Mandy Morrison Assistant Director/Social Media: Lauren Denitzio 100 Days, a spoken performance, was conceived to capture a diverse range of perspectives. Ever since Roosevelt pioneered the 100-day concept taking office during the Great Depression, it has been used by the U.S. media, and scholars as a gauge of political success and activism. In the lives of ordinary people however, 100 days is an arbitrary timeframe that can demarcate either, an incremental changes in the flow of daily life or a dramatic shift in one’s personal landscape through unforeseen events.
  • 100 Days 8.png
    100 Days 8.png
  • 100 Days 6.png
    100 Days 6.png
  • Performance still.png
    Performance still.png
  • Cake: Performers: Mandy Morrison, Kelly Kivland, Rebecca Davis, Nora Stevens
    Cake: Performers: Mandy Morrison, Kelly Kivland, Rebecca Davis, Nora Stevens
    Performers Kelly Kivland, Rebecca Davis, Nora Stevens serve cake to the audiance.
  • Cake: Performers: Mandy Morrison, Kelly Kivland, Rebecca Davis, Nora Stevens
    Cake: Performers: Mandy Morrison, Kelly Kivland, Rebecca Davis, Nora Stevens
    Cake: Performers: Mandy Morrison, Kelly Kivland, Rebecca Davis, Nora Stevens
  • Cake, Mandy Morrison
    Cake, 2004 at Chasama, New York City; A collaborative performance based on the life of Marie Antoinette. With Kelly Kivland. Rebecca Davis, Nora Stephens. Set Design by Mathias Neumann Video Effects: Jeff Morey

Initial Public Offering

2001-04
Durational Performance
3:00 (excerpt, performance documentation)

Participants
Kelly Kivland
Rebecca Davis
Nora Stevens

And with help from
the University of Minnesota's Art Department

Locations
Downtown Minneapolis (2001)
Cuchifritos Gallery, Essex Street Market, NYC (2004)
Outdoor plaza, Metropolitan Museum of Art (2003)

On three separate occasions, I did a performance piece titled “Initial Public Offering” to arouse questions from a public accustomed to seeing lavish corporate promotions of new products targeting them as potential consumers. I distributed promotional buttons with a logo and query: “Who Decides What Matters?”  The product being pitched to consumers­­–The Co-Dependent Suit– which were two connected orange jump-suits  such as those used in the prison system and maintenance industry- had no tangible use.

My interest was to generate dialogue about the relationship between capitalist output, and the values purportedly represented by such products. 

Originally commissioned  in 2001 by the University of Minnesota's Visiting Artist Program

  • Initial Public Offering Mandy Morrison / mandymachine
    At different locations over a 2 year period (Downtown Minneapolis, Cuchifritos Gallery NYC, and Metropolitan Museum, NYC) I created a collaborative performance piece titled Initial Public Offering to arouse questions from a public accustomed to seeing lavish corporate promotions of new products targeting them as potential consumers. The product was the "Co-Dependent Suit" questioning rugged individualism and its premise. The group distributed promotional buttons with a logo and query: Who Decides What Matters?
  • IPO, Performance  2001 in Downtown Minneapolis
    IPO, Performance 2001 in Downtown Minneapolis
    Giving our schtick to passers-by about corporate America and our co-dependant relationship to its value system.
  • IPO, 2004 at Cuchifritos Gallery, Essex St. Market, NYC
    IPO, 2004 at Cuchifritos Gallery, Essex St. Market, NYC
    People go to Essex street market to buy unusual food from local vendors and the gallery provides an interesting contrast to the shopping invironment.
  • IPO, 2004  (Poster and images) at Cuchifritos Gallery, Essex St. Market, NYC
    IPO, 2004 (Poster and images) at Cuchifritos Gallery, Essex St. Market, NYC
    Performance images plus the poster that showed in the gallery advertising the Co-Dependant Suit.
  • IPO, 2004 at Cuchifritos Gallery, Essex St. Market, NYC
    IPO, 2004 at Cuchifritos Gallery, Essex St. Market, NYC
    The performers, Kelly Kivland and Rebecca Davis were terrific at animating the idea of the 'suit'
  • IPO-Metropolitan Museum of Art
    IPO-Metropolitan Museum of Art
    The conversatins and questions from people who were coming out of the Met were quite varied.
  • Orange Jumpsuite (Resource file)
    Orange Jumpsuite (Resource file)
    I was drawn to these suits for this project because of their use in the culture.
  • Initial Public Offering (Give-Away Buttons)
    Initial Public Offering (Give-Away Buttons)
    Buttons were given away to interested audience who watched the peformance who wanted a commemorative keepsake to remember the performance's message: "Who Decides What Matters?"

Spirits of Promise and Loss

2020
(Installation view) Six-channel video installation with audio
Dimensions: 4’ x 40’
Duration: 02:31 (loop)
 
Spirits of Promise and Loss, is an animation that uses photographic images of the Old Town Mall in Baltimore as a backdrop for the behaviors and movements of ghost-like characters that populate a decrepit model of utopian possibility. 
 
Old Town Mall was one of numerous experiments across the U.S. in urban mall development that strove to bring suburban shoppers, back downtown. By creating a thoroughfare developed to maximize pedestrian traffic such malls placed parking and cars on the fringes of the walkway, providing storefronts that faced one another on an open thoroughfare given over to walkers.  
 
It was to be the antidote to suburban strip malls, which drew customers away from urban centers. Enticed by the communal village experience, which featured a welcoming walkway, free of car traffic, the pedestrian mall generated hope for urban revival and long-term sustainability.
 
Initially popular, the Old Town Mall currently is mostly abandoned and many shop storefronts are shuttered. In creating this work, I am worked with dancers as models who generate unique movements that speak to different aspects of the mall’s past history, that are captured in video and translated into the drawn characters. 

Spirits of Promise and Loss was part of a solo exhibition that took place at the Peale Center in Baltimore, Maryland in 2023, and part of the group show Codex, at the Center for Art, Design and Visual Culture, in Baltimore, Maryland in 2021.

Assistance in the creation of this project comes  from students of UMBC's Dance Department who generously donated their time as models, as well from artist Chris Kozjar.

 

 

  • Spirits of Promise and Loss
    2020 (Installation view) Six-channel video installation with audio Dimensions: 4’ x 40’ This piece uses photographic images the Old Town Mall in Baltimore as a backdrop for the behaviors of ghost-like characters that populate a former model of utopian possibility. Old Town Mall was one of numerous experiments across the U.S. in urban mall development that strove to bring mid-century suburban shoppers, back downtown. Initially popular, the Old Town Mall is now mostly abandoned. This free-standing six-channel rear-projected video installation, standing four feet tall and over forty feet long, with panels hinged at an angle from each adjoining panel, references the Asian screen, once a popular decorative device used to separate interior spaces. With China as a competing economic power that has usurped the manufacturing base that was once the economic mainstay of U.S.
  • Spirits of Promise and Loss (Description of Process)

    Descriptive pages that illustrate the process of creating the animated video installation.

  • Six-Channel Documentation Composite_.png
    Six-Channel Documentation Composite_.png
    This documentation composite shows images from each of the six channels displayed in the installation. In viewing the work in situ, the panels appear gradually, so that all are never displayed simultaneously.
  • Gallery_Installation View_1.png
    Gallery_Installation View_1.png
    Installation View (south end of gallery)
  • Gallery_Installation View_2.png
    Gallery_Installation View_2.png
    Installation View (north end of gallery)
  • Panels_1+2.jpg
    Panels_1+2.jpg
    Panels 1+ 2
  • Panel_3+4.jpg
    Panel_3+4.jpg
    Panels 3+4
  • Panels_5+6.jpg
    Panels_5+6.jpg
    Panels_5+6.jpg