Two art works on a ledge. On left, a photograph depicts a painting on a ladder in front of a shed, encased in a shiney resin. On the right, a painting features a high heel with a yellow rubber glove, pinks and blues which form abstracted figure + Enlarge
In the Waiting Room of Winooski Health Center 2023 Found shoes, comb, used rubber glove, inkjet printed photo, acrylic on resin 12 in x 12 in x 3 in
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Two figures in close, cropped view with embedded show lean on white two by four. + Enlarge
Behind the Community Center 2023 Found shoe, insulation foam, found metal hexagon, inkjet printed photograph on resin 20 in x 18 in x 3 in
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Two art pieces are displayed on a wall size yellow sheet. On the right, a yellow quilt appears to be draped over a cardboard blue table depicting a two-toned dinner scene. On the left, a predominately blue piece is displayed as five distinct parts, using + Enlarge
She is A Container, A Holder, Ever the Verb 2023 Acrylic on shower curtain, grommets, gifted quilt, and resin; 48 " x 38 "
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A series of paintings on cardboard feature repeated, overlapped photographs of dryer doors and paintings circles in greys, whites, and blues. On the cardboard set are two paintings. Painting on the right features curling figures in greens, oranges, reds a + Enlarge
"Longing is Just Our Word for Knowing," Installation 2022 Acrylic, laser print on paper, caulk on insulation board & panel, resin, adidas flipflop; Acrylic insulation board & panel, gain bottle, basket, wheel 72 in x 48 in x 2.5 in ; 36 in x 24 in x 3 in
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Yonce_1  12 in x 12 in x 3 in, acrylic on panel, plaster, and cardboard, 2022  Yonce_2 Mill Brook Takes Tennis Ball __ Wants Me to Stay (i want to too) the River that Names 2023  each 12 in x 12 in x 3 in, acrylic on panel, plaster, and cardboard, 2022 + Enlarge
Mill Brook Takes Tennis Ball; __ Wants Me to Stay (i want to too) ; the River that Names 2022 acrylic on panel, plaster, and cardboard 12 in x 12 in x 3 in
Statement

“Home,” threads together my art, my community projects, my employment. I am an artist, fair & affordable housing advocate, and documentarian. I combine visual art with ethnographic media, including audio interviews, house-hold objects, and photographs. My figurative paintings and installations dig into the concepts of home and housing from a community and personal perspective.

 

Painting answers the impulse to re-materialize my personal histories lost over time. My work considers the intimacies of home-space and the figures sharing that space. Dislocation often dissolves the physical record of belonging, and paintings allow me to reconstruct my memories of home and the fragments of home shared by the communities I advocate alongside. The paintings reach for domestic reference points both in content and material, hanging like drapes and featuring puddling mops & reflective mirrors. I integrate household objects with a sense of humor, reverence, and shame. The assemblage of fragmented memories and materials form an imperfect narrative of my home experience- at times close, specific , familiar, and just as often disrupted, abstracted, falling apart. Like For myself and those the people whom I work with as a housing advocate, these objects become symbolic of a place we can no longer visit.

 

The instinct to hold on to objects, photographs, and other forms of documentation is deeply embedded in my experience of housing insecurity. In making my work, I am recreating the muscle memory of relocation by holding onto the unwieldy materiality of things signifying home and carrying them bringing it from place to place. My role as a documentarian merges with my role as a painter. Painting acts as a record. The work holds together with a sense of precarity. Home is in what remains -in material and in memorey- rather than the shelter-structure.

Studio Art (Summer Low Residency MFA) Students