Exhibitions

 

Reverse Entropy

Artist residency and solo exhibition with R.A.R.O., Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Through research on the origins of life on earth, I identified some of the common elements, as well as some distinguishing ones between earths various life forms. I then drew and hand cut stencils of three varieties—one representing biotic life, one for botanical life, and one for mammalian life—ultimately pulling them together into a unified pattern.
I used the stencils as outlines for the canvas paintings, and as the background for the graffiti mural performed live at the exhibition.

 

Neutrinos passing through solid matter

The Art of Physics group exhibition, Montana State University, Bozeman.
Neutrinos are subatomic particles with enigmatic properties that have captivated physicists for decades. Their weak interaction allows them to pass right through the atomic bonds of the densest materials. Trillions are passing through you at this very moment. I’ve represented this phenomenon with hand-painted beads, wire and glue, on a mirror substrate.
This was part of a collaborative project between the Art and Physics departments at MSU, beginning with a series of physics lectures and collaboration between artists and physicists, and culminating in a group exhibition of the artworks produced.

 

Where we at, D?

My first solo exhibition, Waller Yoblonsky Gallery, Bozeman, MT.
I selected works with emphasis on dissolving boundaries between the internal and external world.
This is represented through the work largely by interference with the surface of the subject figures—by superimposition or disruptive treatment of surfaces.