Having grown up in Alaska, my understanding of the land was influenced by both the rugged monumentality of the terrain and the impact of the oil and gas industry upon the land. To this day, I feel a natural affinity for places and things that evoke those memories, such as the mountains and deserts of the southwest, and excavation sites and earthmoving equipment found in the industrial landscape.
I unfurl large rolls of paper on the floor and immerse myself in the painting, much like being in the landscape. Working from the inside out, I disperse a palette of earth-toned inks with distilled water and industrial solvents, and use aggressive tools such as wire brushes, scrap metal, and reclaimed tire shreds to push the ink around. Surrounded on all sides by the expanse of paper, I move through the work as if I am traversing the terrain.
Figure 1: The Discovery of Slowness
2022
Shellac ink, silt from a Garrison stream, Hudson Highlands mica on paper, lead, steel
46 x 122 x 4 inches
Figure 2: Bulbancha (Green Silence)
2019
Shellac ink, Mississippi River mud, Spanish moss on paper
132 x 204 inches