DRY GARDEN

July 9 – August 6, 2022
SFArtsED gallery at Minnesota Street Project
1275 Minnesota Street, San Francisco
Opening Reception: July 9, 4–7 pm

Carved by hydrologic cycles, polished by winds, and shaped by other natural phenomena, land is sculpted by geologic timescales, of which we are witness to for only a moment. Dry Garden is a contemplation of this creative process, and a reflection on a personal perception of time. As water falls onto rock, it finds its way back to the sea, only to be reinvented as cloud formations. Terrestrial forms and elevations are perceived through the lens of topography, always orienting the viewer in relation to sea level.

Among many natural processes that transform our planet, the water cycle has a drastic impact on the equilibrium of life. Even subtle alterations to weather patterns can heave significant climatic changes for any location on earth. As one place sees drought, another is besieged by rising waters. According to the Gaia hypothesis, our planet as a whole is seen as a single living organism. With interconnected systems much like the many systems of a human body, when planetary cycles are thrown out of alignment it becomes a delicate process to regain balance and homeostasis. Dry Garden is inspired by this search for balance, featuring clashing sculptural forms and time-based vignettes in response to nature’s adaptations.

Wave Set Tessallation, 2022

Four-Channel synchronized video installation, loop.

The Ocean is the ultimate reservoir of water on our planet, but salt water is unusable in the many ways in which fresh water sustains life. It is said that waves come in sets of threes or sevens, yet ocean patterns can be unpredictable when typical rhythms of weather give way to unprecedented natural events.

As Dry Garden contemplates terrestrial forms as sculpture though the lens of elevation, “Wave Set Tessallation” sets the sea level for the installation.

Edition of 4+2AP

When There Was Rain, 2022

Plaster and acrylic rock with looping media on LCD screen, Trichocereus Cacti. To view the video which plays inside the rock, you can see an excerpt of it here. This work was inspired by sparse moments of rain, captured as reflection on my deck as video, and processed for this installation.

Unique object

Techtonic Shift (close-up view)

Techtonic Shift is inspired by the collisions of Earth’s tectonic plates, often pushing and contorting strata to unpredictable forms. This sculpture includes an embedded, looping media display and a soundscape.

Sound design by Nicholas Holmes.

Spin Drift, 2022

Plaster, LCD screen and acrylic on panel. (Triptych)
Featuring a rotating, rare “Cactus of the Four Winds” Trichocerus Bridgesii, embedded in a rock formation.

Unique video object