Artist Registry
The White Columns Curated Artist Registry is an online platform for emerging and under-recognized artists to share images and information about their respective practices. The Registry seeks to create a context for artists who have yet to benefit from wider critical, curatorial or commercial support. To be eligible, artists cannot be affiliated with a commercial gallery in New York City.
To apply to the Registry, click here. Join our mailing list here to receive our open call announcement and other programming updates. For any further questions about the Registry, please contact us at registry@whitecolumns.org.
STATEMENT OF WORK
I work across the boundaries of drawing, printmaking and textiles to make collages and soft sculptures that explore concepts of home, play, reality, and authenticity. Referencing source material suggestive of domestic interiors– vintage wallpapers, textile patterns, ornamental architecture, I use a RISO duplicator to create patterns and symbols that I flip, shift and reconfigure. The resulting compositions, reminiscent of quilts, become artifacts celebrating handicraft traditions while simultaneously destabilizing assumptions about the handmade versus the mechanical.
I use print processes like risograph as a means of blurring the distinction between handmade, digital, and mechanical space, and playing with a sense of material transformation. I hand-draw quilt squares and stitches, print them in hyper-saturated colors on handmade papers and fabric, and then collage and sew them. A textile becomes a drawing, becomes a print, becomes a textile again in an ongoing cycle of media transference.
This tension between the handcrafted and the machine-made is central to my practice. I revel in the moments of “glitch” where the perfect replication of the digital world breaks down, introducing happy accidents and irregularities. Ultimately, I seek to create works that offer playful yet rigorous exploration of materiality and process while challenging traditional hierarchies of art-making.