Living Wood

Encaustic and beads on wood panel
24 inches

2024

Living Wood is an encaustic piece inspired by Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh, and was part of a second 100 Women Artists in Art History show. The show was comprised of one hundred contemporary female artists, each of whom interpreted in their own style a historical female artist’s work. 

Living Wood reflects on the interconnectedness of humans and trees.

Sleeping Princess

Encaustic and beads on wood panel
24 inches

2023

Sleeping Princess is an encaustic piece inspired by Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh. It was part of the 100 Women Artists in Art History show, organized by the indomitable Alicia Campos. Many women in art history have been overlooked and have not received the attention of their male counterparts. Alicia has gathered 100 contemporary female artists, each of whom interpreted in their own style a historical female artist’s work. 

Margaret Macdonald was a gifted and successful artist in Scotland at the turn of the century. She was born in 1864 in England and moved to Glasgow, Scotland with her family in 1890. She and her sister, Frances Macdonald, enrolled at the Glasgow School of Art.
Margaret was active in the 1890’s and early 1900’s and was a member of “The Glasgow Four”, which included her sister Frances, her future husband Charles Rennie Mackintosh, and her future bother-in-law, Herbert MacNair, both of whom the sisters met at the Glasgow School of Arts.

Margaret used a unique combination of techniques. She piped gesso lines and patterns into the canvas and embedded beads, threads, fabric and other materials in her pieces. She also worked in metalwork, embroidery, and watercolors. Much of her work was collaborative, primarily with her sister and her husband. At the time, Margaret’s process was a well-guarded secret. She made her own gesso and used materials in unusual and creative ways. While her husband’s career often overshadowed hers during their lifetime, Margaret’s innovative and creative style became one of the defining features of the Glasgow Style during the 1890s - 1900s and her work has been increasingly appreciated in recent years.

The Character Vine

Encaustic mixed media
18 x 36 inches

2021

I created this piece (pictured above) to celebrate the 100th year anniversary of my high school alma mater, The Stony Brook School, located in Stony Brook, NY.

The piece is made from SBS yearbooks, one from each decade of the school's inception. The "teddy bear vine" is a nod to Stony Brook's current mascot (the Bears) and symbolizes the growth and transformational power of the Stony Brook School's Christian formation. The nesting birds are shrikes, a previous mascot of the school. The shape of the vine is inspired by the school's centennial logo - instead of the cupola of the chapel in the center, images of Stony Brook students, faculty and staff experiencing SBS life take center stage. In addition to featuring yearbooks from each decade of the school's history, it also has parts of Bruce Lockerbie's book "The Way They Should Go", written in 1972 about the school's history and mission for its 50th anniversary.

The back of the piece features a torn/glazed collage of yearbook photos of teachers and students from over the school's 100 years (pictured right). 

Project G.O.A.T.

Oil and metal on sculpture

2020

Project G.O.A.T. (Global Offensive Against Trafficking) is a Tampa-based public art campaign that uses painted goat sculptures to raise awareness and funds for combating human trafficking. The project features 55 life-sized, decorated goats by local artists, which were displayed in the Tampa Bay area and auctioned off during Super Bowl LV in 2021, with all proceeds going to organizations fighting human trafficking.  My piece was inspired by a quote by John Webster, a contemporary of Shakespeare: "We think caged birds sing, when indeed they cry."

Exquisite Corpse Games

Encaustic mixed media on wood panel
28 x 17 inches

2019

This piece is part of the 2019 Exquisite Corpse Games http://exquisitecorpsegames.com, a blind artistic collaboration, in which each artist was randomly assigned the creation of a head, torso, or legs. The assembled pieces were unveiled on Nov 14, 2019 and are part of a traveling art show. 

This encaustic piece, Fairy Tales, was inspired by a quote from C.S. Lewis: 
Some day you will be old enough to start reading fairy tales again.

Valley of Shadow

Oil and paper on canvas

2018

This piece was created for Pastor Craig Nelson, who lead a group of 30 people on a multi-city tour of Israel. The background of the piece is made with pages of thank you notes and individual reflections of the group, and the desert scene depicted is one of Craig's "side tours", in an out-of-the-way mountainous pastoral scene west of Jericho. It was one of the groups' favorite stops. Thank you Craig!    

The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. He makes me lie down in green pastures. He leads me beside still waters. He restores my soul. He leads me in paths of righteousness for his name's sake. Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me. You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies; you anoint my head with oil; my cup overflows. Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life, and I shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever.

​​-Psalm 23

Exquisite Corpse Games

Encaustic mixed media on wood panel
28 x 17 inches

2018

This piece is part of the 2018 Exquisite Corpse Games http://exquisitecorpsegames.com, a blind artistic collaboration, in which each artist was randomly assigned the creation of a head, torso, or legs. The assembled pieces were unveiled at the Museum of Fine Arts in St. Pete, FL on Nov 1, 2018. 

This encaustic piece, Choices, was inspired by a quote from C.S. Lewis:

Every time you make a choice you are turning the central part of you, the part of you that chooses, into something a little different than it was before.

Exquisite Corpse Games

Encaustic mixed media on wood panel
28 x 17 inches

2017

This piece is part of the 2017 Exquisite Corpse Games http://exquisitecorpsegames.com, a blind artistic collaboration, in which each artist was randomly assigned the creation of a head, torso, or legs. The assembled pieces were unveiled at the Museum of Fine Arts in St. Pete, FL on Nov 2, 2018. 

My piece, True Self, is the torso portion of the completed work. It was inspired by a quote by C.S. Lewis:

What I call my ‘self’ now is hardly a person at all. It’s mainly a meeting place for various natural forces, desires and fears, etc., some of which come from my ancestors, and some from my education, some perhaps from devils. The self you were really intended to be is something that lives not from nature but from God.

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