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Work done during the pandemic (2020-2021). The feeling of the ground crumbling beneath your feet, the uncertainty, and the desire to heal. These works portray rockfall/fissure/breakage and an urge to make whole/mend/pull back together again.

2020, falling, hand-woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint, 43”x 32”x 73.” photo: Martin Seck

2020, falling, hand-woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint, 43”x 32”x 73.” photo: Martin Seck

2020, falling, hand-woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint, 43”x 32”x 73.” photo: Martin Seck

2020, falling, hand-woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint, 43”x 32”x 73.” photo: Martin Seck

Wave, 2020, 64’ x 36”x 24,” hand-woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint. photo: Martin Seck

Wave, 2020, 64’ x 36”x 24,” hand-woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint. photo: Martin Seck

river (small), 2020, 60” x 30” x 18,” hand-woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint. photo:Martin Seck

river (small), 2020, 60” x 30” x 18,” hand-woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint. photo:Martin Seck

river (small), 2020, 60” x 30” x 18,” hand-woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint. photo:Martin Seck

2019, Dorian, Hand woven stainless steel wire, fabric, acrylic paint, 27” x 34” x 47”
Dorian was made in response to the hurricane that devastated the Bahamas in the fall of 2019. It is part of a group called “aftermath”

55” x 36” x 36,” hand woven stainless steel wire, hardware cloth, acrylic, 2017. Photo: Thomas Barratt and Mark Waldhauser

55” x 36” x 36,” hand woven stainless steel wire, hardware cloth, acrylic, 2017. Photo: Thomas Barratt and Mark Waldhauser

148” x 14” x 21,” hand woven stainless steel wire, acrylic, 2016. Photo: Thomas Barratt and Mark Waldhauser

25” x 19” x 10,” hand woven stainless steel wire, hardware cloth, acrylic paint, 2017. Photo: Thomas Barratt and Mark Waldhauser

24” x 11” x 11,” hand woven stainless steel wire, hardware cloth, acrylic paint, 2017. Photo: Thomas Barratt and Mark Waldhauser

27” x 14” x 14,” hand woven stainless steel wire, hardware cloth, acrylic paint, 2017. Photo: Thomas Barratt and Mark Waldhauser

72” x 32” x 4,” hand woven stainless steel wire, acrylic, 2016. Photo: Thomas Barratt and Mark Waldhauser

72” x 32” x 4,” hand woven stainless steel wire, acrylic, 2016. Photo: Thomas Barratt and Mark Waldhauser

50” x 12” x 18,” hand woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint, 2018. Photo: Thomas Barratt and Mark Waldhauser

50” x 12” x 18,” hand woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint, 2018. Photo: Thomas Barratt and Mark Waldhauser

55” x 16” x 10,” hand woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint, 2018. Photo: Thomas Barratt and Mark Waldhauser

45” x 13” x 16”, hand woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint, 2012. Photo: Thomas Barratt and Mark Waldhauser

Installation view, KEEP OUT exhibition, Leslie Heller Gallery 2015. 180” x 48” x 12”, hand woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint, 2014. Photo: Michael Krondl

180” x 48” x 12”, hand woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint, 2014. Photo: Thomas Barratt and Mark Waldhauser

42” x 16” x 21”, hand woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint, 2012. Photo: Thomas Barratt and Mark Waldhauser

42” x 16” x 21”, hand woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint, 2012. Photo: Thomas Barratt and Mark Waldhauser

64”x 16”x 16”, hand woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint, 2012. Photo: Thomas Barratt and Mark Waldhauser

Installation - work in progress. Homeward Found, Wassaic Project, 2013. 70” x 52” x 2,” makeshift loom for weaving performance, stainless steel and copper wire, steel and copper metal pipe, fishing lures, plexiglass.

120” x 12” x 2,” hand woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint, guitar tuners, 2017

Installation shot, detail. Music To My Eyes, Ridgewood, NY, 2017, 120” x 12” x 2,” hand woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint, guitar tuners, 2017.

parched 7, 2022, 6.5” x 5” x 6,” stainless steel wire, acrylic paint
This series is a companion to the drought works on paper. In both, I am thinking about how to make physical a sense of dehydration in a warming planet. The sculptural pieces here were inspired by observing the drying process of the leaves of the Cercropia tree in Costa Rica. These leaves are dark green, circular and lobed, over a foot in diameter. When they fall, within 24hrs, they become silver grey and dark brown shell-like ruffled forms as small as 4 inches in length. This transformation from the absence of water led me to think about how other forms could be effected and resulted in this series of work.

Harry, 2023, 21” x 37” x 28,” hand woven stainless steel wire, acrylic paint. The name “Harry” comes from Harry Lauder’s walking stick, a contorted filbert.