I am a sculptor. I create poetry out of common things, repurposing and repositioning materials to make new meanings. I use firewood, fruit, standard highway signage, basic construction techniques, a commercial awning, or a whistled song. I'm just as likely to drag ideas through time. I'm fascinated by the way we look at our surroundings through invisible cultural and political lenses, and my work attempts to subvert inert objects and signs by remixing them, often employing shards of common language (both literal texts like slogans, lyrics, or exhortations and symbolic language such as flags or "fight" songs). Beyond the immediate symbolic culture I draw on and alter, some of the essential questions of my work are: can we have community? Share language? Or is our communication so contingent that we’re alone? My projects often locate themselves outside the walls of traditional art venues, and confront broad publics with these questions.
A gradual accretion of stolen wooden doorstops is a concrete and compulsive “trophy” collection gathered from institutions.