~ Artwork ~ > Moving Through | 2020 - 2021

Vitreous Humor
acrylic on wood
h 8 3/4" w 18"
2022
Spume
Acrylic on canvas
h 30" x 24"
2021
In the Mountains
acrylic on Canvas
h 20" x w 16"
2021
In the Forest
Acrylic on canvas
h 29" x w 26"
2021
This Place
Acrylic on Canvas
h 12" x w 12"
2020
Collecting
Mixed media
2021
Collecting
Mixed media
2021
Reflection
scratch paper
h 8" x w 8"
2021
Untitled
acrylic and fur
h3in x w27in x 32in
2021
Untitled (detail)
acrylic and fur
h 3" x w 27" x d 32"
2021
Untitled (blue and green yoni)
acrylic on Canvas
h 20" x w 16"
2021
Untitled
acrylic paint on paper with crystals
h 36" x w 24"
2021
Untitled (detail)
acrylic paint on paper with crystals
h 36" x w 24"
2021
Flower
acrylic on Canvas
h 20" x w 16"
2021
White
Watercolor on paper and yupo
h 32" x w 36"
2021
White
Watercolor on paper and yupo
h 32" x w 36"
2021
Yoni
mixed media collage drawing
8" x 8"
2021
Yoni (detail)
mixed media collage drawing
8" x 8"
2021
Here
color pencil on paper
h 12" x w 9"
2021
Here (detail)
color pencil on paper
h 12" x w 9"
2021

Moving Through:
This body of work was inspired by imagining places that exist in in-between states of decay and new life. My process begins with imagining mysterious life forms that, like a virus or reproductive cells, are both living and nonliving. I imagine microorganisms that grow in a dark cave, or a force that creeps through the forest floor and lives on detritus. I think of outer space, the depths of the ocean, and how these vast spaces relate back to our experiences of birth and death. This exploration often leads back to the body, its vulnerability to illness and design to reproduce. Thus the imagery often points to reproductive organs, the vulva and male reproductive cells, and the bodyscape itself.

The works blend abstraction and representation, depicting amorphic organic forms with suggestions of the body. The landscapes appear interchangeable with bodyscapes and are interrupted by floaters, or micro-organisms, and blobs or depths that can seem both ominous and comforting. I use bright whites, dark blacks, earth and flesh tones with occasional flashes of bright greens, purples and blues. The colors connect to the earth, body and magic.

These works seek to find the specific and uneasy beauty that only loss can create. I’ve found a morbid magic in imagining what is created, or what is left, after a loved one is gone. I imagine the regeneration that can come from my loved ones’ bodies and visualize how their spirits might live on. My work functions as a metaphor for hope and magic in the darkness of loss.