Share:
About Laura
Baltimore County
In 2006, Laura Amussen received her MFA from Rinehart School of Sculpture at the Maryland Institute College of Art where she was awarded a Jack Kent Cooke Scholarship and Jacob K. Javits Fellowship. Since graduating she has been an active participant in Baltimore’s local art scene. She is an adjunct III faculty member at Towson University and the Maryland Institute College of Art, as well as an independent curator. She was the director of exhibitions and curator at Goucher College for over ten years, where she programmed and mounted over 100 exhibitions. Since 2012, she has been applying a… more
Jump to a project:
Nourish
"There are days I drop words of comfort on myself like falling leaves and remember that it is enough to be taken care of by myself." -Brian Andreas
Our current cultural and political climate is fraught with tension, our lives increasingly more stressful, and the world more hectic. These truths demand our constant effort and attention. Thus, it’s important - and difficult – to take time to replenish our mental, physical, and emotional reservoirs. Nature offers humanity reprieve and provides pictorial and poetic narratives: a moss blanket comforts a broken soul; a nest bursts from and engulfs a birdcage; a large-scale, site-specific, wall mounted mandala comprised of a thousand golden lotus seedpods begs the viewers to find stillness in contemplation; a wall of multicolored baskets symbolize our need to constantly hold and care for ourselves, especially when difficult life experiences arise; and, two smaller mandalas – one made of seeds, the other of Bodhi (ficus religiosa) leaf skeletons – speak of ritual and meditation. Transformed into visual expressions, materials become metaphor for these psychological associations. Each work relies on the repetition and expansion of a fundamental unit to explore the relationship of the physical to the psychological. In all the works, less is more. Spare forms and conceptual innuendo swiftly carry each work into the bio-philosophic. They establish connections between the inside and outside of the body and mind to consider our larger relationship to the natural world. The organic matter featured in this body of work metaphorically symbolize our collective human fragility; our need to be cared for and healed.
Our current cultural and political climate is fraught with tension, our lives increasingly more stressful, and the world more hectic. These truths demand our constant effort and attention. Thus, it’s important - and difficult – to take time to replenish our mental, physical, and emotional reservoirs. Nature offers humanity reprieve and provides pictorial and poetic narratives: a moss blanket comforts a broken soul; a nest bursts from and engulfs a birdcage; a large-scale, site-specific, wall mounted mandala comprised of a thousand golden lotus seedpods begs the viewers to find stillness in contemplation; a wall of multicolored baskets symbolize our need to constantly hold and care for ourselves, especially when difficult life experiences arise; and, two smaller mandalas – one made of seeds, the other of Bodhi (ficus religiosa) leaf skeletons – speak of ritual and meditation. Transformed into visual expressions, materials become metaphor for these psychological associations. Each work relies on the repetition and expansion of a fundamental unit to explore the relationship of the physical to the psychological. In all the works, less is more. Spare forms and conceptual innuendo swiftly carry each work into the bio-philosophic. They establish connections between the inside and outside of the body and mind to consider our larger relationship to the natural world. The organic matter featured in this body of work metaphorically symbolize our collective human fragility; our need to be cared for and healed.
-
"The translucent alabaster of our memories." -Marcel Proust"The translucent alabaster of our memories." -Marcel Proust, 2020 - Lunaria Annua (Honesty/Money Plant) Membranes on Painted Wood Panel - 36” x 36”
-
"The translucent alabaster of our memories." - Marcel Proust (study)"The translucent alabaster of our memories." -Marcel Proust, (study) 2018 - Lunaria Annua (Honesty/Money Plant) Membranes on Painted Wood Panel - 12" x 12"
-
ProtectorProtector, 2020 - Lunaria Annua (Honesty/Money Plant) Husks on Painted Wood Panel - 36” x 36”
-
Dark Night of the SoulDark Night of the Soul, 2018 - Approximately 600 silk cocoons hand sewn on canvas. 24" x 24" x 3"
-
Awakening to Pure ConsciousnessAwakening to Pure Consciousness, 2017 Bodhi (Ficus religiosa) leaf skeletons on painted panel 36” x 36”
-
Awakening to Pure Consciousness (detail)Awakening to Pure Consciousness (detail), 2017 Bodhi (Ficus religiosa) leaf skeletons on painted panel 36” x 36”
-
The Essence of the EssenceThe Essence of the Essence, 2017 Lunaria annua seeds on painted panel 36” x 36”
-
The Essence of the Essence (detail)The Essence of the Essence, 2017 Lunaria annua seeds on painted panel 36” x 36”
-
Rising from a Dark PlaceRising from a Dark Place, 2017 Gold lotus seed pods and metal rods Site-specific installation: dimensions variable (This iteration: 96” diameter x 4” deep)
-
Rising from a Dark Place (detail)
AFLOAT I
"The voice of the sea is seductive; never ceasing, whispering, clamoring, murmuring, inviting the soul to wander for a spell in abysses of solitude; to lose itself in mazes of inward contemplation. The voice of the sea speaks to the soul. The touch of the sea is sensuous, enfolding the body in its soft, close embrace" -Kate Chopin, The Awakening
As the former director of exhibitions and curator at Goucher College, I gained invaluable experience and insight pertinent to artistic and curatorial practice. As an artist, I brought that knowledge with me to the cavernous main gallery space of Baltimore's Creative Alliance. By applying a curatorial approach to my artwork, I used the gallery as a laboratory through which to experiment with process and work through ideas. This work came from an honest, tender and vulnerable place. AFLOAT is the culmination of my personal experiences over a 75 month period, including the end of a 17 year marriage, coming to terms with my sexuality, and the death of my mother. By way of sculpture, site-specific installation, photography, projection, video, and performance AFLOAT gives physical expression to what it means to carry mental and emotional baggage--the psychological jumble we accumulate, the worries, the burdens, the weight. Using water and a wide variety of elements associated with water, the works symbolize struggle and survival; they speak to being saved and saving oneself.
As the former director of exhibitions and curator at Goucher College, I gained invaluable experience and insight pertinent to artistic and curatorial practice. As an artist, I brought that knowledge with me to the cavernous main gallery space of Baltimore's Creative Alliance. By applying a curatorial approach to my artwork, I used the gallery as a laboratory through which to experiment with process and work through ideas. This work came from an honest, tender and vulnerable place. AFLOAT is the culmination of my personal experiences over a 75 month period, including the end of a 17 year marriage, coming to terms with my sexuality, and the death of my mother. By way of sculpture, site-specific installation, photography, projection, video, and performance AFLOAT gives physical expression to what it means to carry mental and emotional baggage--the psychological jumble we accumulate, the worries, the burdens, the weight. Using water and a wide variety of elements associated with water, the works symbolize struggle and survival; they speak to being saved and saving oneself.
-
AFLOAT at The Creative AllianceGallery installation view of AFLOAT, a solo exhibition at The Creative Alliance.
-
CAUGHTDrift wood, netting, Seventy-five 5" x 7" canvases. Dimensions variable.
-
CAUGHTDrift wood, netting, Seventy-five 5" x 7" canvases. Dimensions variable
-
CAUGHT (detail)Drift wood, netting, Seventy-five 5" x 7" canvases. Dimensions variable
-
SHIFTTen canvases, each 8" x 24" x 1.5", tissue paper, natural materials. Dimensions variable
-
VAST and DRYLANDVAST, Large scale photograph, approx: 6000 metal rim tags, and nails. 5.75' x 16’ x 1” DRYLAND, Sand and wood. 4” x 16' x 6' A large scale photograph of the ocean was punched into nearly 6000 circles, adhered to metal rimmed tags, then hung on individual nails. At a distance, VAST is a wall of water that alludes to glints of sun reflecting off the surface of the ocean. Each image hangs loosely on a nail; the slightest breeze creates a moving and shimmering effect.
-
VAST (detail)VAST, Photograph, approx: 6000 metal rim tags, and nails. 5.75' x 16’ x 1” A large scale photograph of the ocean was punched into nearly 6000 circles, adhered to metal rimmed tags, then hung on individual nails. At a distance, VAST is a wall of water that alludes to glints of sun reflecting off the surface of the ocean. Each image hangs loosely on a nail, the slightest breeze creates a moving and shimmering effect.
-
BRINK (footprints)Footprint remnants from seventy-five minute performance.
-
BRINK (performance documentation)Video of performance during opening reception of AFLOAT. Duration 75 minutes. Performers: Laura Amussen and Jes Contro. Looking out over the vast ocean, two lovers stand hand in hand on the brink of something new. Video: Ben Andrew. https://vimeo.com/80073397
AFLOAT II
"The voice of the sea is seductive; never ceasing, whispering, clamoring, murmuring, inviting the soul to wander for a spell in abysses of solitude; to lose itself in mazes of inward contemplation. The voice of the sea speaks to the soul. The touch of the sea is sensuous, enfolding the body in its soft, close embrace" -Kate Chopin, The Awakening
As the former director of exhibitions and curator at Goucher College, I gained invaluable experience and insight pertinent to artistic and curatorial practice. As an artist, I brought that knowledge with me to the cavernous main gallery space of Baltimore's Creative Alliance. By applying a curatorial approach to my artwork, I used the gallery as a laboratory through which to experiment with process and work through ideas. This work came from an honest, tender and vulnerable place. AFLOAT is the culmination of my personal experiences over a 75 month period, including the end of a 17 year marriage, coming to terms with my sexuality, and the death of my mother. By way of sculpture, site-specific installation, photography, projection, video, and performance AFLOAT gives physical expression to what it means to carry mental and emotional baggage--the psychological jumble we accumulate, the worries, the burdens, the weight. Using water and a wide variety of elements associated with water, the works symbolize struggle and survival; they speak to being saved and saving oneself.
As the former director of exhibitions and curator at Goucher College, I gained invaluable experience and insight pertinent to artistic and curatorial practice. As an artist, I brought that knowledge with me to the cavernous main gallery space of Baltimore's Creative Alliance. By applying a curatorial approach to my artwork, I used the gallery as a laboratory through which to experiment with process and work through ideas. This work came from an honest, tender and vulnerable place. AFLOAT is the culmination of my personal experiences over a 75 month period, including the end of a 17 year marriage, coming to terms with my sexuality, and the death of my mother. By way of sculpture, site-specific installation, photography, projection, video, and performance AFLOAT gives physical expression to what it means to carry mental and emotional baggage--the psychological jumble we accumulate, the worries, the burdens, the weight. Using water and a wide variety of elements associated with water, the works symbolize struggle and survival; they speak to being saved and saving oneself.
-
AFLOATWood, 75 life jackets. 18” x 8’ x 8’ Sculpture used to shoot video ADRIFT at Rocky Point Park.
-
ADRIFT (video/performance still)ADRIFT (video/performance still)
-
ADRIFTVideo: Floating on a raft at Rocky Point Park. (Video: Jes Contro, Editing: Travis Levasseur)
-
UNTITLED 1-14"...deceptively revealing. They show a nude woman in what appears to be a swimming pool, but there’s nothing about the imagery that feels like a playful summer frolic. In one, the woman floats face down, a life jacket nearby. Slowly, you notice that, though it’s clear the photos were taken at a pool, they’re composed in such a way that the water swallows the frame: There is no visible avenue of escape. These are images of a human lost at sea with no safe harbor in sight." Bret McCabe Photographed by: Jes Contro
-
WEIGHT"...a mixed-media sculpture of rust-covered floats, ropes, and pulleys, is an iceberg of dread. A single rope extends up the wall, like a vine crawling upward. Toward the floor the rope runs into a knot of other lines which are connected to rusted floats that sit in a pile on the floor. It looks like something reclaimed from a naval graveyard and it conveys an overwhelming heaviness, and not merely as a pun: the rust indicative of something that has endured what life has tossed at the cost of how it looks, the puddle of flotation devices on the floor implying a tarnished buoyancy." Bret McCabe
-
WEIGHT (pulley detail)"...a mixed-media sculpture of rust-covered floats, ropes, and pulleys, is an iceberg of dread. A single rope extends up the wall, like a vine crawling upward. Toward the floor the rope runs into a knot of other lines which are connected to rusted floats that sit in a pile on the floor. It looks like something reclaimed from a naval graveyard and it conveys an overwhelming heaviness, and not merely as a pun: the rust indicative of something that has endured what life has tossed at the cost of how it looks, the puddle of flotation devices on the floor implying a tarnished buoyancy." Bret McCabe
-
TANDEM-ANCHOR"a rectangle of salt on the floor creates a white beach screen, onto which a pair of ceiling mounted projectors stream images of water’s surface. Embedded in the salt sand is an anchor, a single line tethers it to a pair of life jackets sewn together. The untitled photos and the videos present a single character involved in the world Amussen creates for this exhibition; this piece is the only one where the suggestion of another person enters the picture. And it’s not quite clear how that other figures into the struggle: Is that other the person keeping you from drowning or the one pulling you down? “TANDEM/ANCHOR” doesn't say, but what it implies about relationships is pretty obvious to anybody who has spent any time in an unhealthy one. At some point you’re going to have to decide: hold on for dear life or save yourself and cut the rope." Bret McCabe
-
TANDEM ANCHOR (Detail)Tandem Anchor (Detail) - "a rectangle of salt on the floor creates a white beach screen, onto which a pair of ceiling mounted projectors stream images of water’s surface. Embedded in the salt sand is an anchor, a single line tethers it to a pair of life jackets sewn together. The untitled photos and the videos present a single character involved in the world Amussen creates for this exhibition; this piece is the only one where the suggestion of another person enters the picture.
AFLOAT III
"The voice of the sea is seductive; never ceasing, whispering, clamoring, murmuring, inviting the soul to wander for a spell in abysses of solitude; to lose itself in mazes of inward contemplation. The voice of the sea speaks to the soul. The touch of the sea is sensuous, enfolding the body in its soft, close embrace" -Kate Chopin,The Awakening
As the former director of exhibitions and curator at Goucher College, I gained invaluable experience and insight pertinent to artistic and curatorial practice. As an artist, I brought that knowledge with me to the cavernous main gallery space of Baltimore's Creative Alliance. By applying a curatorial approach to my artwork, I used the gallery as a laboratory through which to experiment with process and work through ideas. This work came from an honest, tender and vulnerable place. AFLOAT is the culmination of my personal experiences over a 75 month period, including the end of a 17 year marriage, coming to terms with my sexuality, and the death of my mother. By way of sculpture, site-specific installation, photography, projection, video, and performance AFLOAT gives physical expression to what it means to carry mental and emotional baggage--the psychological jumble we accumulate, the worries, the burdens, the weight. Using water and a wide variety of elements associated with water, the works symbolize struggle and survival; they speak to being saved and saving oneself.
As the former director of exhibitions and curator at Goucher College, I gained invaluable experience and insight pertinent to artistic and curatorial practice. As an artist, I brought that knowledge with me to the cavernous main gallery space of Baltimore's Creative Alliance. By applying a curatorial approach to my artwork, I used the gallery as a laboratory through which to experiment with process and work through ideas. This work came from an honest, tender and vulnerable place. AFLOAT is the culmination of my personal experiences over a 75 month period, including the end of a 17 year marriage, coming to terms with my sexuality, and the death of my mother. By way of sculpture, site-specific installation, photography, projection, video, and performance AFLOAT gives physical expression to what it means to carry mental and emotional baggage--the psychological jumble we accumulate, the worries, the burdens, the weight. Using water and a wide variety of elements associated with water, the works symbolize struggle and survival; they speak to being saved and saving oneself.
-
UNTITLED 1"...deceptively revealing. They show a nude woman in what appears to be a swimming pool, but there’s nothing about the imagery that feels like a playful summer frolic. In one, the woman floats face down, a life jacket nearby. Slowly, you notice that, though it’s clear the photos were taken at a pool, they’re composed in such a way that the water swallows the frame: There is no visible avenue of escape. These are images of a human lost at sea with no safe harbor in sight." Bret McCabe Photographed by: Jes Contro
-
UNTITLED 2"...deceptively revealing. They show a nude woman in what appears to be a swimming pool, but there’s nothing about the imagery that feels like a playful summer frolic. In one, the woman floats face down, a life jacket nearby. Slowly, you notice that, though it’s clear the photos were taken at a pool, they’re composed in such a way that the water swallows the frame: There is no visible avenue of escape. These are images of a human lost at sea with no safe harbor in sight." Bret McCabe Photographed by: Jes Contro
-
UNTITLED 3"...deceptively revealing. They show a nude woman in what appears to be a swimming pool, but there’s nothing about the imagery that feels like a playful summer frolic. In one, the woman floats face down, a life jacket nearby. Slowly, you notice that, though it’s clear the photos were taken at a pool, they’re composed in such a way that the water swallows the frame: There is no visible avenue of escape. These are images of a human lost at sea with no safe harbor in sight." Bret McCabe Photographed by: Jes Contro
-
UNTITLED 4"...deceptively revealing. They show a nude woman in what appears to be a swimming pool, but there’s nothing about the imagery that feels like a playful summer frolic. In one, the woman floats face down, a life jacket nearby. Slowly, you notice that, though it’s clear the photos were taken at a pool, they’re composed in such a way that the water swallows the frame: There is no visible avenue of escape. These are images of a human lost at sea with no safe harbor in sight." Bret McCabe Photographed by: Jes Contro
-
UNTITLED 5"...deceptively revealing. They show a nude woman in what appears to be a swimming pool, but there’s nothing about the imagery that feels like a playful summer frolic. In one, the woman floats face down, a life jacket nearby. Slowly, you notice that, though it’s clear the photos were taken at a pool, they’re composed in such a way that the water swallows the frame: There is no visible avenue of escape. These are images of a human lost at sea with no safe harbor in sight." Bret McCabe Photographed by: Jes Contro
-
UNTITLED 6"...deceptively revealing. They show a nude woman in what appears to be a swimming pool, but there’s nothing about the imagery that feels like a playful summer frolic. In one, the woman floats face down, a life jacket nearby. Slowly, you notice that, though it’s clear the photos were taken at a pool, they’re composed in such a way that the water swallows the frame: There is no visible avenue of escape. These are images of a human lost at sea with no safe harbor in sight." Bret McCabe Photographed by: Jes Contro
-
UNTITLED 7"...deceptively revealing. They show a nude woman in what appears to be a swimming pool, but there’s nothing about the imagery that feels like a playful summer frolic. In one, the woman floats face down, a life jacket nearby. Slowly, you notice that, though it’s clear the photos were taken at a pool, they’re composed in such a way that the water swallows the frame: There is no visible avenue of escape. These are images of a human lost at sea with no safe harbor in sight." Bret McCabe Photographed by: Jes Contro
-
UNTITLED 8"...deceptively revealing. They show a nude woman in what appears to be a swimming pool, but there’s nothing about the imagery that feels like a playful summer frolic. In one, the woman floats face down, a life jacket nearby. Slowly, you notice that, though it’s clear the photos were taken at a pool, they’re composed in such a way that the water swallows the frame: There is no visible avenue of escape. These are images of a human lost at sea with no safe harbor in sight." Bret McCabe Photographed by: Jes Contro
-
UNTITLED 9"...deceptively revealing. They show a nude woman in what appears to be a swimming pool, but there’s nothing about the imagery that feels like a playful summer frolic. In one, the woman floats face down, a life jacket nearby. Slowly, you notice that, though it’s clear the photos were taken at a pool, they’re composed in such a way that the water swallows the frame: There is no visible avenue of escape. These are images of a human lost at sea with no safe harbor in sight." Bret McCabe Photographed by: Jes Contro
-
UNTITLED 10"...deceptively revealing. They show a nude woman in what appears to be a swimming pool, but there’s nothing about the imagery that feels like a playful summer frolic. In one, the woman floats face down, a life jacket nearby. Slowly, you notice that, though it’s clear the photos were taken at a pool, they’re composed in such a way that the water swallows the frame: There is no visible avenue of escape. These are images of a human lost at sea with no safe harbor in sight." Bret McCabe Photographed by: Jes Contro
Archiscapes
These fictitious environments blur the boundaries between landscape and architecture and scramble the distinctions between organic and synthetic. Ambiguous in nature they explore the experience of place - the accumulated life experiences of geographical places and psychological spaces.Influenced by environmental concerns as well as the rapaciousness of globalization my work has evolved to encompass aspects of landscape and architecture in order to create metaphors of psychological space. In an increasingly globalized culture, a growing sense of placelessness makes it more and more difficult for us to place our own identity. My new works are studies of geographic dislocation and its attendant complexities, as well as antidotes to the prevailing need to belong somewhere. I create fictitious environments wrought with familiar details from built structures and the natural landscape that are encoded with social and emotional values. In my restructuring of these elements, the familiar becomes unfamiliar, leading us to re-evaluate our sense of place in this energetic, overbuilt, and complex world. Ambiguous in nature they explore the experience of place - the accumulated life experiences of geographical places and psychological spaces.
-
Archiscape-WindowO Scale Model Railroad Architectural Windows, and Rust Patina on Styrofoam. 36" x 48" x 5" each
-
Archiscape (window) detailO Scale Model Railroad Architectural Windows, and Rust Patina on Styrofoam. 36" x 148" x 5"
-
Archiscape (door)O Scale Model Railroad Architectural Doors, and Rust Patina on Styrofoam. 27" x 48" x 5" each.
-
Archiscape (door) detailO Scale Model Railroad Architectural Doors, and Rust Patina on Styrofoam. 27" x 48" x 5" each.
-
Between Everywhere and NowhereRust Patina on Styrofoam
-
Between Everywhere and Nowhere, Side ViewRust Patina on Styrofoam
-
Archiscape - Biodome (window)O Scale Model Railroad Architectural Windows, Rust Patina on Styrofoam, Acrylic dome. 48" diameter, 2.5' deep.
-
Archiscape - Biodome (window, detail)O Scale Model Railroad Architectural Windows, Rust Patina on Styrofoam, Acrylic dome. 48" diameter, 2.5' deep.
-
Archiscape -Biodome, (The Grand Staircase)O Scale Model Railroad Architectural Staircases, Rust Patina on Styrofoam, Acrylic dome. 48" diameter, 2.5' deep.
-
Archiscape- Biodome, (The Grand Staircase, detail)O Scale Model Railroad Architectural Staircases, Rust Patina on Styrofoam, Acrylic dome. 48" diameter, 2.5' deep.
Mixed Media Wall Works
-
Void IIRusted tissue paper and embedded grass reeds on stacked, vivisected canvases. Each canvas is 24" x 24" depth varies.
-
Void II, detailRusted tissue paper and embedded grass reeds on stacked, vivisected canvases. Each canvas is 24" x 24" depth varies.
-
VoidRusted tissue paper and tape on 200 vivisected canvases. 3' x 17' x 2" Void initiates a dialogue between emptiness and desire. It consists of hundreds of small canvases layered with tissue paper, gesso, liquid iron and ammonium chloride, giving each canvas the chromatic timbre and visual weight of rusted metal plates. Each canvas has been vivisected creating cavities, which appear to have burst from the inside out, the holes range in size from the size of a golf ball to that of a mans fist. It has a counter part Filler.
-
Void (detail)Rusted tissue paper and tape on 200 vivisected canvases. 3' x 17' x 2" Void initiates a dialogue between emptiness and desire. It consists of hundreds of small canvases layered with tissue paper, gesso, liquid iron and ammonium chloride, giving each canvas the chromatic timbre and visual weight of rusted metal plates. Each canvas has been vivisected creating cavities, which appear to have burst from the inside out, the holes range in size from the size of a golf ball to that of a mans fist. It has a counter part Filler.
Indoor Sculptures and Installations I (Landscape/Architecture)
Influenced by environmental concerns as well as the rapaciousness of globalization these works encompass aspects of landscape and architecture in order to create metaphors of psychological space. In an increasingly globalized culture, a growing sense of placelessness makes it more and more difficult for us to place our own identity. These works are studies of geographic dislocation and its attendant complexities, as well as antidotes to the prevailing need to belong somewhere. In creating fictitious environments wrought with familiar details from built structures and the natural landscape the work is encoded with social and emotional values. In my restructuring of these elements, the familiar becomes unfamiliar, leading us to re-evaluate our sense of place in this energetic, overbuilt, and complex world. These fictitious environments blur the boundaries between landscape and architecture and scramble the distinctions between organic and synthetic. Ambiguous in nature they explore the experience of place - the accumulated life experiences of geographical places and psychological spaces.
-
Isolated ProliferationStyrofoam, Rust, and Artificial Thistle Plants. 36" x 48" x48" Inspired by environmental concerns about our worlds water and the impending water shortage this sculpture references a dried up water well, the interior of which has been overcome by thistle weeds creating a psychological metaphor of isolation and danger.
-
Isolated Proliferation (detail)Styrofoam, Rust, and Artificial Thistle Plants. 36" x 48" x48" Inspired by environmental concerns about our worlds water and the impending water shortage this sculpture references a dried up water well, the interior of which has been overcome by thistle weeds creating a psychological metaphor of isolation and danger.
-
Rapacious CultivationPre-fabricated greenhouses, artificial plants and flowers, foam, fake soil, plastic containers. Deconstructed multiple artificial plants and flowers to create different varieties of fictitious carnivorous plants based on real ones. The plants serve as a psychological metaphor for desire and hunger; the greenhouses foster the growth of a ravenous appetite.
-
Rapacious CultivationPre-fabricated greenhouses, artificial plants and flowers, foam, fake soil, plastic containers. Deconstructed multiple artificial plants and flowers to create different varieties of fictitious carnivorous plants based on real ones. The plants serve as a psychological metaphor for desire and hunger; the greenhouses foster the growth of a ravenous appetite.
-
Royal Pine1700+ hand cut pine scented air fresheners. 3’ x 14’ x 2’ Sculpture, referencing a topographical mountain range. Smelly indeed.
-
Royal Pine (detail)1700+ hand cut pine scented air fresheners. 3’ x 14’ x 2’ Sculpture, referencing a topographical mountain range. Smelly indeed.
-
Habitat, (end view)8' x 24' x 7' I created Habitat, a site-specific and site-responsive installation, for the Mezzanine Gallery at Appalachian State Universities Turchin Center for the Visual Arts. For this installation material, environment, form, and local ecology are united, creating an immersive experience within the gallery where sculpture and space appear to merge. Inspired by the endangered spruce-fir moss spider and its habitat, the piece draws on aspects of environmental concern as well as expresses local ecological properties. Found in Watauga County at elevations above five thousand feet on Grandfather Mountain, this tiny spider from the tarantula family lives on rocky outcroppings that are covered with moss. The moss provides essential moisture, food and shade creating a healthy environment for these endangered spiders to flourish. However, the thinning of the spruce-fir tree is adversely affecting the ecosystem due to the diminishing canopy that once protected this fragile habitat. By overwhelming the viewer with this sensual yet artificial landscape, I hope to question and challenge the way in which we perceive the natural world. By using simple materials to convey complex ideas about ecology, landscape and architecture Habitat evokes a sense of fragility while scrambling the distinction between architecture and nature.
-
Habitat, (side view)8' x 24' x 7' I created Habitat, a site-specific and site-responsive installation, for the Mezzanine Gallery at Appalachian State Universities Turchin Center for the Visual Arts. For this installation material, environment, form, and local ecology are united, creating an immersive experience within the gallery where sculpture and space appear to merge. Inspired by the endangered spruce-fir moss spider and its habitat, the piece draws on aspects of environmental concern as well as expresses local ecological properties. Found in Watauga County at elevations above five thousand feet on Grandfather Mountain, this tiny spider from the tarantula family lives on rocky outcroppings that are covered with moss. The moss provides essential moisture, food and shade creating a healthy environment for these endangered spiders to flourish. However, the thinning of the spruce-fir tree is adversely affecting the ecosystem due to the diminishing canopy that once protected this fragile habitat. By overwhelming the viewer with this sensual yet artificial landscape, I hope to question and challenge the way in which we perceive the natural world. By using simple materials to convey complex ideas about ecology, landscape and architecture Habitat evokes a sense of fragility while scrambling the distinction between architecture and nature.
-
The Empty Space Between UsStyrofoam, Rust, and Pipe. 5' x 5' x 4' (x2) Site-responsive installation, a metaphor of psychological space. Here my interest lies in relationships and the tensions that occur within them. This two-part piece resembles rocky outcropping found in the Southwestern United States deserts, while simultaneously referencing balconies, and overlooks. The positioning of the pieces is crucial to an understanding of the title. Here the empty space of the gallery between the two works becomes a metaphor for, "The Empty Space Between Us".
-
The Empty Space Between Us (scale)Styrofoam, Rust, and Pipe. 5' x 5' x 4' (x2) Site-responsive installation, a metaphor of psychological space. Here my interest lies in relationships and the tensions that occur within them. This two-part piece resembles rocky outcropping found in the Southwestern United States deserts, while simultaneously referencing balconies, and overlooks. The positioning of the pieces is crucial to an understanding of the title. Here the empty space of the gallery between the two works becomes a metaphor for, "The Empty Space Between Us".
Outdoor Sculptures and Installations
-
VerveBamboo, metal armature, and wire. 14' x 16' x 3.5' Site-specific installation, created for Johns Hopkins Universities Evergreen House. In order to bring people together to enjoy and promote the arts former Evergreen matron, Alice Warder Garrett converted the gymnasium into a private theater. Here she entertained friends with her own performances as well as hosted the Musical Art Quartet every spring and fall for nearly two decades. An arch stenciled by Leon Baskt, the celebrated set and costume designer for the Ballet Russes, acts as the facade for Alice's stage and is echoed throughout much of the architecture at Evergreen House. My outdoor theater for Alice reflects her verve and was inspired by the relationship between art and nature. Bamboo, which is known for its abundant growth and astonishing vitality, grows on the grounds at Evergreen House and symbolizes to me Alice's long-standing promotion of the arts in Baltimore and beyond. Performance by dancer Andrea Workman.
-
Verve (performance: dancer, Andrea Workman)Bamboo, metal armature, and wire. 14' x 16' x 3.5' Site-specific installation, created for Johns Hopkins Universities Evergreen House. In order to bring people together to enjoy and promote the arts former Evergreen matron, Alice Warder Garrett converted the gymnasium into a private theater. Here she entertained friends with her own performances as well as hosted the Musical Art Quartet every spring and fall for nearly two decades. An arch stenciled by Leon Baskt, the celebrated set and costume designer for the Ballet Russes, acts as the facade for Alice's stage and is echoed throughout much of the architecture at Evergreen House. My outdoor theater for Alice reflects her verve and was inspired by the relationship between art and nature. Bamboo, which is known for its abundant growth and astonishing vitality, grows on the grounds at Evergreen House and symbolizes to me Alice's long-standing promotion of the arts in Baltimore and beyond. Performance by dancer Andrea Workman.
-
Burst
-
Burst (detail)
-
Seed
-
Seed (side view)
-
The Peterson's, The Enwhistle's, The Winkler's, The FacadePre-fabricated Greenhouse, Artificial Trees, Plants, Flowers, Pots, Fake Soil, and Shelves. 8' x 6' x 8' Inspired by the onslaught of spousal murders which captured the attention of the media. In each of these three cases, the Peterson's, the Entwistle's and the Winkler's, families and friends were shocked by the murders. Each family did a very good job at keeping up appearances in other words, creating a fantastic fake facade which masked the turmoil that grew within.
-
The Peterson's, The Entwhistle's, The Winkler's, (The Facade), detailPre-fabricated Greenhouse, Artificial Trees, Plants, Flowers, Pots, Fake Soil, and Shelves. 8' x 6' x 8' Inspired by the onslaught of spousal murders which captured the attention of the media. In each of these three cases, the Peterson's, the Entwistle's and the Winkler's, families and friends were shocked by the murders. Each family did a very good job at keeping up appearances in other words, creating a fantastic fake facade which masked the turmoil that grew within.
-
TopotectureTopotecture, (aerial view) 2007 Different sized painted bamboo trellises. Dimensions Variable. Site-responsive installation, simultaneously evokes landscape and architecture installed at American University, Katzen Center.
-
Topotecture, aerial viewTopotecture, (aerial view) 2007 Different sized painted bamboo trellises. Dimensions Variable. Site-responsive installation, simultaneously evokes landscape and architecture installed at American University, Katzen Center.
Indoor Sculptures and Installations II (Body)
These sculptures and installations are informed by an awareness of the body; it’s functions, residuals, memories and emotions. Transformed into visual expressions, materials become metaphor for these anatomical and psychological associations. Each work relies on repetition and expansion of a fundamental unit to explore the relationship of the physical to the psychological. In all the works, less is more. Spare forms, and conceptual innuendo swiftly carry each work into the bio-philosophic, investigating the connections between the inside and outside of the body and mind. Content, material, process, and form are united creating sculptures and installations that provoke a strong visceral response.
-
SeepBlack Bamboo, Sand, Wire, Metal Armature 19' x 17' x 3' Site-responsive installation referencing the body. Red sand seeped from the black bamboo during the opening reception.
-
Seep, (detail)Black Bamboo, Sand, Wire, Metal Armature 19' x 17' x 3' Site-responsive installation referencing the body. Red sand seeped from the black bamboo during the opening reception.
-
Cilia
-
Cross Section
-
The Spot
-
Shed
-
Accumulation
-
Seeded (Downstairs)
-
Seeded (Upstairs)