Panorama I, 2018. Wood, metal. 18x10x5.5".
home sculptures projects about contact news
Friday, July 20, 2018
Panorama I
I am exploring new works born from intuitions about the fourfold foundations for aesthetics in art (long story...). Here is a first effort. It reflects on my investigations into Japanese garden art. I use the burnt wood method (Shou-Sugi-Ban) and some contemporary touches:
Saturday, December 5, 2015
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Moving studio next Summer
I will be moving my studio back to the Boston area in the summer of 2013. I have updated many of the pages in this site to reflect which of my sculptures are currently available. Please consider acquiring works before then! Thank you in advance.
Happy Prince recently performed
I was glad to learn from Dr. Sunita Mukhi that the Happy Prince project was recently performed again in Stony Brook at the Charles B. Wang Center.
Tuesday, September 6, 2011
Cited in a thoughtful Blog post
Robyn Gordon featured my work on the following blog post. I am fortunate to be in good company:
http://artpropelled.blogspot.com/2011/09/weathered-worn-and-reclaimed.html
Sunday, August 28, 2011
Participating in Silent Auction at Synthetica M
I will have a few pieces in the Silent Obtain show at Synthetic M gallery. Please come by this Saturday from 7pm-11pm.
Synthetica's web site is the following: http://www.synthetica-m.com/
Friday, February 11, 2011
Sketch for Uturn

U·turn Art Space will be hosting a fundraiser. I have submitted this small image for a print catalog. I invite you to attend. It is a great group of young people working hard to make this creative art space available to the public.
March 5th—26th, 2011
Opening reception: Saturday, March 5th, 7:00 – 10:00 pm
Cincinnati, OH—U·turn Art Space is pleased to announce People Who Make Us Smile, a group exhibition featuring Meg Duguid, Charley Friedman, Russell Ihrig, Jonathan Juravich, Cary Leibowitz and a collaborative project by Loraine Wible and Chris Reeves. Through sound pieces, sculpture, photography, video, installation, screen printing and a collaborative project designed especially for and executed by U·turn, these artists present works that are quirky, upbeat and dryly self-deprecating. Certainly contemporary uses of humor in Art have its origins in the history of Pop Art, but these artists use punch lines and visual comedic timing in a direct way that critically asks, What is funny? Is that funny? and much more broadly, How can humor be used effectively in an art gallery to touch upon subjects without frivolity? Often, the answers these artists come up with relate to the iconography of celebrities, shared pop cultural knowledge and eager (or else effacing) means of addressing the viewer directly. People Who Make Us Smile is an exercise in admiration, a blame game that reveals why we see the world the way we do. As a gallery, these are the artists who make us smile. But the artists themselves defer to another cast of characters: family relatives, Liza Minnelli, Bart Simpson and Gandhi are but a few of the depicted, with whom we share our glee.
U·turn Art Space 2159 Central Avenue Cincinnati, OH 45214 e: u.turn.artspace@gmail.com
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)