About Jonathan

Baltimore City
Originally a violinist, Jonathan Zwi discovered a passion for the Classical Guitar during his undergraduate studies at Indiana University.  In addition to his degree in music, Jonathan also received degrees in Cognitive Science and Philosophy.  He was the recipient of several research fellowships at both Indiana and Yale University and presented his work at research conferences across the United States.  During his undergraduate, he won a grant from the NIH to conduct research on the structural… more

Tatuamunha • Residency 2017

Please click here for a full description with embedded images
Click here for detailed images.



Jonathan spent the month of August as an artist-in-residence in the village of Tatuamunha, Brazil, along the country’s Coral Coast. 
Through his painting, Jonathan sought to evoke some of the natural and social experiences of daily life in this rural part of the country.

By straining the sand from his beachside residence, Jonathan filtered out everything but the finest-grained black sands to be used as raw materials in his paintings.  With a limited palette of black, white, ochre and gray, these sands were used to create a textural and aesthetic reference to the black-washed beaches that result from the receding tides.

In addition to the use of sand, Jonathan incorporated mud, clay and cement in his work in order to allude to the humble mud-brick houses that can still be found in these rural areas of the country.  These works - which are not only visually textured but also tactile in their nature - serve as a metaphor for the simplicity and humility that underlies the daily experience of so much of the local population.

Despite the persistence of what might be labeled as the area's ‘underdeveloped existence,’ Jonathan did not create these works to serve as a moral or political statement. Instead, he sees these paintings more as a poetic reference to the individuals who - with hope and humility - continue to find beauty and dignity in the simplicity of their lives.

Attempting to move beyond merely aestheticized references to simple homes, Jonathan sought to tie his work more directly to the immediate realities of the local population.  To this effort, Jonathan created a painting that would be completed by the house staff at the residence where he lived.

The locals who worked on the property were responsible for cooking, cleaning and gardening - typical minimum-wage labor that is characteristic of the area's quickly growing tourism industry.  The 'painting' that Jonathan prepared was a nearly-completed work which could have stood alone as a final version.  However, this 'completed work' was merely intended to serve as the basis for the remainder of the work that would be carried out by the staff.

Jonathan recruited the gardener to spend some time scrubbing the 'completed painting' in an attempt to remove some of the dried paint.  The objective was to make the canvas 'clean' again with the basic tools that the gardener or maid would use for daily work: a hose, dish soap, sponges, laundry detergent, scrubbing brushes, etc.

The involvement of the gardener in the process of creation immediately brings to the fore certain underlying questions.  For one, it calls into question the definition of a completed painting - it requires us to grapple with an underlying teleological definition of art-making that presupposes a particular finished product whose development is intended and prescribed by an artist.


The intervention of the gardener on an already 'completed' painting begs the notion of what it means for the work to have been complete in the first place.  Under standard definitions, we might be inclined to say that either the painting wasn't finished when the gardener got to it, or he was the one to actually complete it.  It is rare that we allow ourselves to think about an artwork as having numerous states of 'finality' that are equally valid.

While the end result of the gardener's intervention might be visually similar in style to the painting's previous state, there is an undeniable shift in the relation of the visual elements that comprise the painting with the actions that created them.  As a result of the intervention, the physical canvas becomes more of a dialectical tool than an aestheticized object.

The 'post-dialectic' painting literally embeds the intentions and realities of a person who (by the restrictions of his social and economic status) is likely to live in a home and neighborhood that resembles the fracture and decay that is present in the aesthetic elements of the painting.

As such, the aesthetic elements (which result from the actions of a man who lives in a community that resembles the painting) call into question certain basic relationships that drive and sustain the world we live in.  These visual elements begin to unravel relationships such as the value of an artwork vs. the value of a human being (i.e., the value of their time, their labor, their energy, etc.) - especially in light of the fact that the market value of such a painting greatly exceeds the economic power of a low-wage worker.

Despite the fact that the service rendered by the gardener was neither difficult nor time consuming, the basic premise of the social context problematizes the issue of what the appropriate compensation might be for the gardener's assistance.  This painting (and the socio-economic dynamics that it intentionally embodies) strives to explicitly highlight this tension - a tension which is often present in works of art, but which is typically overlooked (or ignored) when the art is being admired above a fancy living room sofa, in a board room, or on a gallery wall.

We live in an age where a great number of contemporary artworks are made by assistants - as opposed to the artists who otherwise claim authorship of the work; an age in which an artist often serves more as a director or manager and whose hands may never sculpt a single aspect of a final product.

Who, then, should be named the author of this work?

Many may reply (as did the gardener himself) that the artist bears such rights - in virtue of having created and developed the idea - and that the participation of the of the gardener was merely a mechanical intervention; a basic execution of menial tasks.

However, one might rebut that the artwork could not contain its dialectical significance and value without the participation of the gardener; that the interaction of the gardener is intrinsic to the meaning of the work - regardless of the task that he may have been recruited to carryout.

Although these views may be rooted in competing conceptions of power and authority, the intention of this painting and, more importantly, the context it creates, was not intended to answer this question.

The goal was merely to make visible certain questions that are often suppressed, but which must be addressed.  This painting makes these questions undeniable by making the central significance and function of the work to be that of a catalyst and tool for deconstructing itself and the circumstances that produced it - regardless of whether or not it turned out to be aesthetically pleasing.

Similarly, Jonathan sought to explore beyond the two-dimensional confines of paint-on-canvas in a work that represents the old and weathered wooden doors and gates that are common to the area. Historically, entryways have not only been used to block or admit access, but as symbols of social status.  In this way, doors and gates are often socially loaded objects that represent the status of the people or authorities that reign behind them.

In the case of Tatuamunha, and throughout the entire country, there is a plethora of gates and doors that represent corroded socio-economic dynamics in an aesthetically beautiful way - analogous to the beautifully decaying homes.

However, despite our ability to view the aesthetic beauty of the physical structures, they remain manifestations of dark cultural realities that economically imprison and psychologically undermine those individuals who are constrained to experience such structures as a quotidian reality; Individuals who are not fortunate enough to have the socially-endowed luxury of perceiving them as artistically beautiful.

In order to tie this cultural reality more deeply into his work, Jonathan again requested the help of the gardener, as well as the assistance of a maid on the staff - a woman who’s typical responsibilities were sweeping and changing bedding, but who did sewing and alteration work on the side as a source of additional income.

Similar to the first of the ‘gardener’s paintings,’ this canvas was prepared as if to become a standard painting.  Early in the process, however, the canvas was torn into vertical strips meant to evoke the wooden paneling of gates.

Using paint, mud, cement and sand, the canvas was continually elaborated and washed.  Once fully dry, the maid was asked to sew the strips back together, resulting in a piece that contains a sculptural form and clear reference to a three-dimensional object, despite clearly being made of otherwise two-dimensional canvas and paint.

It is not simply the fact that the semi three-dimensional canvas refers directly to a real-world object that makes the painting relevant.  Most importantly, it refers more generally to the idea of a wooden gate that could very likely be visually similar to the entrance of the gardener or maid’s home - a gate that, in turn, stands as a testament to endemic social and political inequalities of access, wealth and power.



Perhaps most significant are the last three works that were produced. In the previous works, aestheticized markings stood in as references to larger cultural contexts.  Even when the hand of the gardener or the maid was directly responsible for a final result, the visual display was still somehow mediated by some form of distance - the visual traces of the gardener/maid’s interaction was the result of a specific request for them to engage in the artistic process.  Despite an attempt to refer beyond the context of making the artwork, the entire exercise was explicitly established within that context.

In the final three works, Jonathan prepared canvases as if to become regular paintings but then used them as if they were blank canvases.  He lathered them with glue and pasted the canvases on the walls of a crumbling building.  Once dry, Jonathan peeled away the canvases thereby pulling with them pieces of the walls on which they had been hung

Of significance is the nature and history of the building: it was once a home to a man who had recently passed away - an alcoholic who literally drank himself to death.  The house stood abandoned and crumbling at the top of a hill in a humble neighborhood.  There was not a single person in the community - neither child nor adult - who did not know the basic outline of
the owner’s demise.  Moreover, the fact that the house’s owner had suffered a painful death through alcohol abuse was always stated as a matter of fact (by children and adults).

As with the life of any human being, there are infinitely many details that cannot be fully accounted for, contextualized, explained and understood.  But the fact that his home stood as a crumbling-but-permanent monument to his death and was consistently recounted as simple matter of fact, reflects a reality in which the community takes such a situation to be an ordinary part of life.  The crumbing house does not simply represent the history and experience of a lonely and troubled man, but it contains within it the lives and realities of everyone in the community. 

Certainly there is no way to shield a community and its children from all the perils of living, but it is a more than unfortunate circumstance when young children are confronted by the
relentless decay of a decrepit building that so immediately represents a morbid death that is extremely near to them.  It is unfair that they should be forced to consider (even if subconsciously) this gruesome reality as a possible part of their future - either through a similar fate of a relative or, perhaps, their own.

By incorporating actual remnants of this crumbling home into his canvases, Jonathan sought to conflate the aesthetic of the paintings (i.e., the look of crumbling walls) with the actual objects to which they visually referred.  These final paintings do not simply look like crumbling structures from the surrounding neighborhood.  They simultaneously look like and contain those crumbling structures.

And with those structures, comes not just a conceptual or metaphorical reference to the larger social and political inadequacies of the community and nation, but the actual weight of human loss and suffering that results from those inadequacies.

Despite the heavy nature of the paintings, the goal was not to politicize the work.  Ultimately, the paintings are still meant to elicit an experience of beauty - however complex that may be - but they also help to serve as a reminder that art can help us restore a sense of balance and dignity to people who deserve it.

Mostly, they serve to remind us that, despite the injustice they often suffer, children deserve the luxury of being able perceive their lives and surroundings as beautiful.



  • 1A
    1A
    Mixed media on canvas • 63x63in • 160x160cm
  • 1B
    1B
    Images of washed sand beaches.
  • 2A
    2A
    Mixed media on canvas • 63x63in • 160x160cm
  • 2B
    2B
    Painting Details
  • House 1
    House 1
    A woman stands in the window of her simple mud-brick home, next to her carefully maintained garden.
  • House 2
    House 2
    A proud couple stands in front of the underlying strcuture of their nearly completed mud-brick home, which they are building themselves.
  • 3
    3
    Mixed media on canvas • 63x63in • 160x160cm
  • House 3
    House 3
    A simple home, showing sigs of decay.
  • 4
    4
    Painting Details
  • Wooden Gates
    Wooden Gates

Immacualte Decay • Flawless Imperfection


With a slave history similar to that of the United States, Brazilians of African descent have suffered violent discrimination. Although much progress has been made, the scars of a painful history and unspeakable inequality are still present in Brazil. They are present in the streets of Salvador, Bahia and ingrained in its walls.  It is this ongoing cultural story that I have captured in these two collections photography.

When I arrived at my new home in the historic district of the city, I was completely struck - if not bewildered - by the fact that the aesthetic I had developed (or, rather, that had emerged) in my silkscreen paintings was alive in the city in a completely organic and uninhibited way.  I couldn't believe it.

Countless dilapidated and abandoned buildings peppered the city in various stages of decay.  Although they represented a dysfunctional social and political system, I found incredible beauty in them. So much so, that even after a year of living there I could still be silenced by grace and beauty of an old dying building.

The buildings of the historic district, so beautifully multi-colored, are the result of a social process - not an aesthetic choice.  Bahians are famous for their exuberance and flamboyant nature and it is shown in their rich and flavorful food, eclectic musical styles and their selection of colors.  However, limited access to resources and the need to use low quality paint is not a choice. The result - after many seasons of chipped and weathered walls that have been colorfully painted several times over - is a strikingly beautiful display of light, color and texture that looks as if it were carefully crafted by the hand of an abstract expressionist.

Although overlooked by most, these buildings were treasures to me - they were unintended works of art that inspired me to put together these two collections of photography - one of decaying buildings, the other of an abandoned train yard.

While visually alluring, the aesthetic beauty of these photographs helps to communicate the larger cultural and historical reality that these visually stunning display are more than mere physical beauty.  These images help us to understand those manifestations for what they are: an emergent complex social and political phenomenon.
  • Immaculate Decay 1
    Immaculate Decay 1
    Immaculate Decay 1
  • Immaculate Decay 2
    Immaculate Decay 2
    Immaculate Decay 2
  • Immaculate Decay 3
    Immaculate Decay 3
    Immaculate Decay 3
  • Immaculate Decay 4
    Immaculate Decay 4
    Immaculate Decay 4
  • Immaculate Decay 5
    Immaculate Decay 5
    Immaculate Decay 5
  • Flawless Imperfection 1
    Flawless Imperfection 1
    Flawless Imperfection 1
  • Flawless Imperfection 2
    Flawless Imperfection 2
    Flawless Imperfection 2
  • Flawless Imperfection 3
    Flawless Imperfection 3
    Flawless Imperfection 3
  • Flawless Imperfection 4
    Flawless Imperfection 4
    Flawless Imperfection 4
  • Flawless Imperfection 5
    Flawless Imperfection 5
    Flawless Imperfection 5

Atlantic Guitar Quartet • Debut Album

As a co-founder of the Atlantic Guitar Quartet, I was deeply involved in the production and release of the group's debut album.  In addition to performing on all tracks, I commissioned several of the compositions and designed all of the physical contents of the album (packaging, disc, booklet,etc.).  Additionally, I created a stage-set of silkscreened lightboxes, which were used during as part of a live performance at the release of the debut album.  Images of the lightboxes are featured throughout the album's jacket and booklet.

More information about album and the group can be found at our site.



In the Spring of 2011, I was awarded the Presser Foundation Award by the Peabody Conservatory in order to develop a project which can best be described as a multitude of smaller projects combining various artistic disciplines – all of which sought to address (knowingly or not) concepts of meaning and beauty in art.

Through these individual projects, I was fortunate enough to have collaborated with incredibly diverse and talented people, all of whom contributed a great deal to the development of the larger project by helping – in their own unique ways – to unravel questions that were the undercurrent for my project as a whole.  More precisely, it is not that I see each contribution as having provided a different answer for the underlying questions or even that I see each artist as having provided unique questions.  Rather than thinking of each smaller project as representative of individual (and seemingly concrete) questions, I conceive of the projects as being part of a larger and multiply-constitutive process of questioning.  The way I see it, every contribution to the project as a whole offered a uniqueway of questioning: a way of re-examining our personal and institutional concepts of art, beauty and meaning.

The project as a whole resulted in a performance at the Engineer’s Club in the Spring of 2012 by the Atlantic Guitar Quartet, which presented the world premieres of two musical compositions, two choreographies and a video installation amidst a stage-set of lightbox paintings that I created specifically for the performance.  The culmination of these many projects is reflected in the quartet’s debut album, which not only represents the process of questioning that is at the heart of each individual project, but actively embodies and extends such questioning in the same spirit.

More personally, I am fascinated by the idea of musical meaning and how drastically different such ‘meaning’ can be, depending on how a piece of music is construed, presented and ultimately re-interpreted.  As a result, we got a lot of mileage out of out of Eclosion, the second movement of Olivier Bensa’s La Grande Terre.  It is an extraordinary piece and one that also served as the basis for a video I commissioned from Caleb Freese.  The two choreographies I commissioned were also set to the same music – one of which was choreographed and performed by Junichi Fukuda and the other was developed by the late Carol Bartlett, for a duo of female dancers.  These three drastically different interpretations of the same sounds bring our attention to the fact that musical meaning is not something that is fixed but, instead, something that is actively defined in the process through which – and during which – it is experienced.

The front cover of the CD case is a cutout of what would otherwise be “Atlantic Guitar Quartet” spelled in braille.  The colors that show through the die-cut are from the booklet (held in a pocket behind the front cover) and allow for the main cover to be different, depending on how the booklet is inserted behind it.  The booklet can also be folded ‘inside out’ with the centerfold image acting as new booklet covers – again, allowing for the main album cover to be different.  The way in which the otherwise straightforward text is presented changes one’s experience of the cover and allows for a more fluid presentation of meaning.

The back cover of the CD case has a 3-Dimensional stamp of a QR code that scans directly to the quartet’s website.  If you look closely, you can see that the code is composed of tiny repetitions of “Atlantic Guitar Quartet.”  You could call it an AGQ wallpaper, of sorts.  This QR code is the same as the colored image found on the center panel, which is also detailed on the inner left panel (of the booklet pocket).  Aside from an additional dimension of meaning that is embedded into what is normally a 2-Dimensional image, the many repetitions of the group name allude to the fact that music – and any art – is not an object; it is not a single entity that can be touched, contained or even properly defined.  More accurately, art (like the QR code) is an emergent result of the interaction between multiple constitutive elements that are necessarily greater than the sum of their parts.  Furthermore, this interaction occurs not only amongst the compositional and aesthetic elements themselves but on various levels of scale.  The interaction by which meaning is created occurs simultaneously between those elements and the perceiver(s) – who themselves cannot be thought of as single, objectifiable or contained entities, but who are actually amalgamations of chemical, neurological, emotional, physiological and perceptual tendencies that come together in new ways at every moment in time and in every single circumstance of interaction and experience.

The group name on the back cover is printed with a special clear ink that gives the impression of what might be thought of as ‘ghost letters’ and which are properly seen only at certain angles to the light – a clear metaphor for the way in which the construction and interpretation of meaning depends on specific perspectives that inevitably influence the way in which any eventual meaning is constructed and understood.  Similarly, the CD itself was printed with a non-colored and textured ink that has an intentional tactile quality – a dimension of ‘meaning’ beyond the semantic meaning that the text seeks to represent.

The cube on the inside panel is uniquely representative of the entire project in that it speaks directly to ideas about the nature of language, communication, and the construction of meaning – be it linguistic, musical, artistic or otherwise.  In fact, it is not just an image of a cube, but a photo of a real object – all of the photographs in the booklet are of the lightbox paintings I made for this project.

Specifically about the cube, I originally thought of creating a single image that would be distributed across four 20 x 20 inch squares but, after buying four silkscreens, I realized that another pair would allow me to create a three dimensional piece.  I wasn’t sure what the theme/design for the cube would be, but a larger theme running through all of the individual projects of my Presser Award was the multiple-ambiguity of perception and meaning in art.  This became the basis for the cube and the final product was a result of this initial idea.

Human communication is an extremely complex task.  Our brains evolved for hundreds of thousands of years in order to be capable of developing language, yet language itself remains elusive in many ways.  Natural language is a process that ascribes meaning to codified (but otherwise arbitrary) sound, through complex and historically developed cultural conventions.  Furthermore, the lexical definitions of words are usually insufficient to allow for a full understanding of the ideas expressed through spoken language.  We must account for communicative cues such as tone of voice, inflection of speech, physical gestures and social context, which often indicate metaphors, jokes, sarcasm, or other communicative contexts whose meanings reside in places far beyond mere lexical definitions.  These additional layers of communication further complicate an already monumental cognitive and computational task of the pure symbolic thinking considered to be at the root of language.

The six QR codes that make up each facet of the cube represent some of these complexities inherent in any communicative context.  On a more basic level, the QR codes represent codified messages; similar to the way in which written words are codified messages – themselves representations of ideas.  However, the different colors and textures of the cube obscure the codes and prevent a clean reading.  Furthermore, the QR codes are actually printed backwards – as if mirrored.

These QR codes are not decipherable by QR scanners, but if one were to successfully scan and decipher them they would arrive at six different statements – one for each side of the cube:

I hate you

I love you

Hi…

Stop looking at me

Please help me

Leave me alone !!!

There is no conceptual order to the way in which the six sides of the cube are mounted, but the many contradictions embodied in the statements are very important.

On top of the fact that inferring meaning from another human being is a tremendous cognitive task, we are also faced with the fact that humans are notoriously irrational.  People are like buckets of doubts, misunderstandings and contradictions where knowledge, meaning, memory and agency get entangled in unintelligible and intractable ways.

There is a strong argument to be made for the fact that the normal-case-scenario is one in which people walk around with contradictory opinions and conflicting beliefs while considering all to be simultaneously true.  People are rarely (if ever) sure of their own ideas, intentions or desires, and when you put two people together it is near magic that some kind of productive or objective interaction/exchange of meaning and ideas can take place at all.

All that being said, the QR codes were never meant to be read or decoded, per se.  Actually, the fact that they cannot be properly deciphered – only interpreted – is integral to the idea of the piece itself and the project as a whole.  In every moment, we are actively (and by necessity) inferring and constructing the ideas we have about the world.  Every single moment of conscious experience is an entire world that we build.

That our perceptions are self-created, and that those perceptual constructs are nothing but subjective appendages with which we attempt to apprehend meaning and structure our notion of world, is at the root level of what it means to be human.  In contexts such as written or even spoken language (where the implicit rule is to communicate ‘objective’ information), the fluid and necessarily subjective nature of meaning can present obstacles that are directly antithetical to the proposed task of ‘clean’ communication.

However, in artistic contexts – free from the expectation of objectively communicating data – this ubiquitous and forever threatening instability of meaning is able to work in service of a power by which we most often declare art to be so necessary and meaningful: the otherwise ineffable and intangible experience of beauty.

  • Album Jacket • Outer Panels.jpg
    Album Jacket • Outer Panels.jpg
  • Album Jacket • Inner Panels.jpg
    Album Jacket • Inner Panels.jpg
  • Booklet • Covers (Front:Back).png
    Booklet • Covers (Front:Back).png
  • Booklet • pgs.1-2.png
    Booklet • pgs.1-2.png
  • Booklet • pgs.3-4.png
    Booklet • pgs.3-4.png
  • Booklet • pgs.5-6.png
    Booklet • pgs.5-6.png
  • Booklet Centerfold (Alternative Covers).png
    Booklet Centerfold (Alternative Covers).png
  • Booklet • pgs.9-10.png
    Booklet • pgs.9-10.png
  • Booklet • pgs.11-12.png
    Booklet • pgs.11-12.png
  • Booklet • pgs.13-14.png
    Booklet • pgs.13-14.png

Silkscreen Lightbox • Development

The images here represent the development of a new technique, using silkscreens as a canvas and final product - as opposed to merely a tool for creating prints.

The iridescent nature of the nylon mesh as well as  the silkscreen emulsion both make for an incredible display of color, texture and light when mixed with other non-standard techniques.

I developed this silkscreen technique/aesthetic in late 2006, just prior to my move to Salvador, Bahia, Brazil - where I encountered the same natural aesthetic growing organically in the walls and streets of the city's historic buildings.

This aesthetic confluence inspired me to put together a project of two photographic collections, which are also displayed here on the site (Immaculate Decay and Flawless Imperfection).
  • Original Silkscreen
    Original Silkscreen
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • 20x24in • 51x61cm
  • Second Silkscreen
    Second Silkscreen
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • 24x24in • 61x61cm
  • Third Silkscreen
    Third Silkscreen
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • 13.5x39in • 34x100cm
  • Lightbox Exhibit 1
    Lightbox Exhibit 1
    Sitar Center for the Arts: Lightboxes on disply, in exhibit with photography collections Immaculate Decay and Flawless Imperfection
  • Lightbox Exhibit 2
    Lightbox Exhibit 2
    Sitar Center for the Arts: Lightboxes on disply, in exhibit with photography collections Immaculate Decay and Flawless Imperfection

Silkscreen Lightbox Stage Set (C)


This silkscreen lightbox was one of nine total lightboxes that comprised a stage set created for a multi-media performance event.  The event took place in May 2012 and was the culmination of my 2011 Presser Foundation Award.

The goal of the event was to present several new works that engaged with the ways we construct concepts of meaning and beauty in art.

In performance with the Atlantic Guitar Quartet, I presented the world premieres of: two musical compositions, two  choreographies and a video installation.  The performances were all set against the backlit stage set of lightboxes, rendering silhouettes of the four musicians.
  • Silkscreen Lightbox
    Silkscreen Lightbox
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • 18x36in • 45x90cm
  • Silkscreen (Detail 2)
    Silkscreen (Detail 2)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 5)
    Silkscreen (Detail 5)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • ​Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 6)
    Silkscreen (Detail 6)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • ​Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 7)
    Silkscreen (Detail 7)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • ​Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 8)
    Silkscreen (Detail 8)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • ​Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 9)
    Silkscreen (Detail 9)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • ​Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 10)
    Silkscreen (Detail 10)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • ​Detail

Silkscreen Lightbox Stage Set (D)


This silkscreen lightbox was one of nine total lightboxes that comprised a stage set created for a multi-media performance event.  The event took place in May 2012 and was the culmination of my 2011 Presser Foundation Award.

The goal of the event was to present several new works that engaged with the ways we construct concepts of meaning and beauty in art.

In performance with the Atlantic Guitar Quartet, I presented the world premieres of: two musical compositions, two  choreographies and a video installation.  The performances were all set against the backlit stage set of lightboxes, rendering silhouettes of the four musicians.
  • Silkscreen Lightbox
    Silkscreen Lightbox
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • 24x36in • 61x91cm
  • Silkscreen (Detail 1)
    Silkscreen (Detail 1)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 2)
    Silkscreen (Detail 2)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 3)
    Silkscreen (Detail 3)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 6)
    Silkscreen (Detail 6)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 7)
    Silkscreen (Detail 7)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 8)
    Silkscreen (Detail 8)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 9)
    Silkscreen (Detail 9)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 10)
    Silkscreen (Detail 10)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 11)
    Silkscreen (Detail 11)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • 24x36in • 61x91cm

Silkscreen Lightbox Stage Set (Cube)


This silkscreen lightbox was one of nine total lightboxes that comprised a stage set created for a multi-media performance event.  The event took place in May 2012 and was the culmination of my 2011 Presser Foundation Award.

The goal of the event was to present several new works that engaged with the ways we construct concepts of meaning and beauty in art.

In performance with the Atlantic Guitar Quartet, I presented the world premieres of: two musical compositions, two  choreographies and a video installation.  The performances were all set against the backlit stage set of lightboxes, rendering silhouettes of the four musicians.
  • Silkscreen Lightbox Cube
    Silkscreen Lightbox Cube
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Custom aluminum tri-base stand • 20x20x20n • 51x51x51cm
  • Cube (Detail1)
    Cube (Detail1)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • 20x20x20n • 51x51x51cm • Detail
  • Cube (Detail 2)
    Cube (Detail 2)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • 20x20x20n • 51x51x51cm • Detail
  • Cube (Detail 3)
    Cube (Detail 3)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • 20x20x20n • 51x51x51cm • Detail
  • Cube (Detail 4)
    Cube (Detail 4)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • 20x20x20n • 51x51x51cm • Detail
  • Cube (Detail 5)
    Cube (Detail 5)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • 20x20x20n • 51x51x51cm • Detail
  • Cube (Detail 6)
    Cube (Detail 6)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • 20x20x20n • 51x51x51cm • Detail
  • Cube (Detail 7)
    Cube (Detail 7)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • 20x20x20n • 51x51x51cm • Detail

Silkscreen Lightbox Stage Set (E)


This silkscreen lightbox was one of nine total lightboxes that comprised a stage set created for a multi-media performance event.  The event took place in May 2012 and was the culmination of my 2011 Presser Foundation Award.

The goal of the event was to present several new works that engaged with the ways we construct concepts of meaning and beauty in art.

In performance with the Atlantic Guitar Quartet, I presented the world premieres of: two musical compositions, two  choreographies and a video installation.  The performances were all set against the backlit stage set of lightboxes, rendering silhouettes of the four musicians.
  • Silkscreen Lightbox
    Silkscreen Lightbox
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • 24x36in • 61x91cm
  • Silkscreen (Detail 1)
    Silkscreen (Detail 1)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 2)
    Silkscreen (Detail 2)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 4)
    Silkscreen (Detail 4)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 5)
    Silkscreen (Detail 5)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 6)
    Silkscreen (Detail 6)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 7)
    Silkscreen (Detail 7)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 8)
    Silkscreen (Detail 8)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 10)
    Silkscreen (Detail 10)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail
  • Silkscreen (Detail 9)
    Silkscreen (Detail 9)
    Mixed media on silkscreen with lightbox and fluorescent tubes • Detail