Food Art

Growing up, my father hunted deer, antelope, duck, goose, and pheasant. We foraged for wild asparagus, mushrooms, dandelions, pine nuts, plums and apples. These experiences taught me to see food as something deeply connected to nature and labor, far removed from the sanitized versions often found in stores. My grandfather worked at the Sacher Hotel in Vienna as a young man, and my father spent his career in the restaurant and hotel industry, and advising NASA on their food in space program. He constantly gave us dehydrated foods to test for edibility. The early versions were abominable. I was immersed not only in a family culture of food but also in a broader societal one.

Food has been a central theme in art for centuries, from still life paintings and depictions of feasts to iconic moments like The Last Supper. For me, food represents a unique and sometimes conflicting intersection of human emotions—desire, guilt, nostalgia, and indulgence. By transforming food into unexpected forms, I want to highlight its complexity, juxtaposing its comforting familiarity with deeper, sometimes darker, narratives. Food becomes a lens through which to examine human behavior, culture, and the emotional weight we attach to what we consume.

Baby Cakes

Layers of lushly painted colors provoke both visual and sensual appetites in these small cast cake sculptures.

Sausages

While Sausages may initially appear humorous, playfully mimicking the look of an ordinary food item, there is a darker undercurrent hidden within this seemingly ordinary food.

In Schindler’s List, a family swallows diamonds to protect their wealth from the Nazis and to conceal them from being confiscated. These desperate measures were a means of preserving both wealth and their way of life. Similarly, sausage casings—and later, condoms—have been used by drug traffickers to smuggle illegal substances, such as heroin and cocaine carried by drug mules. This method frequently led to illness or even death as a result of ingesting these dangerous packages. 1998-Ongoing

Baking Sheet Quilts

Quilts are constructed of baking sheets made by anonymous home cooks, in their preparations of meals, sweets and cookies, for family and loved ones. The stained metal trays are globally present in kitchens. Their surfaces capture acts of making and sustenance with marks of spatulas, ghosts of cookies and other preparations.