Antidote (Photoluminescent)

Antidote is a single photographic image, 8 by 21 feet, constructed of hundreds to form a transformative vision of a magical garden. It is a proposal for a better place, an Eden, something lost then regained. The formation of the image was inspired by Henri Rousseau’s painting of the jungle with a sweeping arc of foliage.

Half-Lives

The photograph is flanked on both sides by living topiary shrubs, with a garden bench for meditation. To accompany the Mural a wall mounted piece suggests a stained glass window, Half-Lives is constructed of multiple antique doilies, dyed to mimic the tones of the photograph. Each floral doily is embedded with layers of photoluminescent silicone. It references the micro/macro botanical structures that occur in a garden.

From the Intimate to the Infinite

From the Intimate to the Infinite was inspired by the Powers of Ten (film, 1977) by Charles and Ray Eames. The Powers of Ten depicts the relative scale of the universe. My version was crafted from thousands of hand-cut photographs of flowers from my garden, meticulously arranged to form an image of the M101 galaxy.