My drawing Untitled (layered meditation) is included in an online group exhibition hosted by Jen Tough Gallery called A World of Its Own. It’s viewable on Artsy through August 15, 2023 and was curated by John Yoyogi Fortes.
Inquiries may be directed to the gallery via Artsy.
I’ve added a bunch of work from the past few years (plus new greeting cards) to my Etsy shop for an end of year studio sale. Many pieces are marked down, and it’s a great time to bring some original artwork home. Check it out here!
Pleased to share that one of my early layered, colorful meditation drawings will be included in the 2022 Bemis Benefit exhibition and auction in Omaha, NE taking place October 14-28, 2022.
As pictured, many of the small works available this year will ship in 8×10″ mats – which makes them easy to display (this is a standard frame size) or gift once you receive.
I am again partnering with ISCP in support of their mission of developing the careers and opportunities for artists and curators from around the world. $10 from each artwork sale ($5 from each postcard bundle) will be directly donated to their work.
Members of my email list have already received a 25% off discount code good through the end of the year; if you’d like to receive this code,subscribe hereand I’ll share it with you as well!
Untitled (layered meditation), 18×24 inches, colored pencil on paper, 2020 photo: Jared Baker
For the third year in a row, one of my artworks was included in the Bemis Center’s annual benefit auction. It’s always a pleasure to see my work in its new home – and what a lovely setting this one ended up in, with a lively green houseplant to keep it company!
This drawing is one of a series of my meditation drawings made about a year ago, in the first autumn of the pandemic – back home to New York, numbers rising again, the uncertainties of winter lying ahead. After time away from my studio, and away from the normal routines of life, I returned with a sense of urgency to these drawings – some in ink, some (like this one) in colored pencil. Looking at them now reminds me of feeling a bit desperate to get marks onto paper. The layered lines remind me of the warp and weft of the weaving made by my grandmother that hangs on the wall of our apartment, and of the way you can obscure a line of text best by writing something else right on top of it.
You can view more of the drawings in this series here, and bring one to your own home – here.