bricks
I have been examining the brick as a subject in my work on and off since early 2015. For the most recent pieces in this body of work, I revisited the beginning of my study of the brick form, dozens of watercolor paintings of bricks that I created as an exercise in giving individuality and nuance to a mass-produced object. I reworked photographs of the paintings, editing sections and adjusting the color palettes. I also manipulated the perspective of the image, splitting it into planes that would allow me to turn the two-dimensional brick images into three-dimensional brick objects. The final images were printed on a soft and fluffy minky fabric that I wrapped around and mounted to a block of wood which was carefully cut to match the dimensions of the image. This process resulted in a fully dimensional object that looks like an intact brick when viewed at a specific vantage point, but, if viewed from any other angle, the object reveals the less-than-true trickery of the image. I left the bottom, back, and right side of the bricks white and vacant, so the skewed falseness of the brick image overwhelms the actual dimensionality of the brick object.
As I worked on the watercolor paintings that became the foundation of this body of work, I thought about the multitude of things a brick can represent, the connotations of different types of labor, the nuances of industry as an idea, and the different levels of value assigned to objects based on how they are produced. As I considered these themes, I began to create bricks as cross-stitched embroideries which I mounted to thin panels that I had cut to the contour shape of the brick. These embroidered bricks appear to hover when hung on the wall, and they cast a bit of a shadow, hinting at their status as objects as well as images. As the work continued to become more and more three-dimensional, and the images began to take the role of skin, I also considered the tenuousness of appearances and facades.
The more I engaged with this subject matter, the more I realized how both basic and complex a brick can be. Bricks represent both simplicity and multiplicity. They hold both history and possibility. And when depicted with bright washes of color that fade into oblivion, my bricks evoke ideas concerning awareness, solidity, and lasting presence.
three-dimensional Bricks - dye sublimation print on fabric mounted to wood block (2021)
Brick 170
Brick 171
Brick 172
Brick 173
Brick 174
Brick 175
Brick 176
Brick 177
Brick 178
Brick 179
three-dimensional Bricks - embroidery or screen print mounted to wood block (2018)
Brick 157
Brick 159
Brick 158
Brick 165
Brick 163
two-dimensional Bricks - embroidery mounted to cut panel (2016-2017)
Brick 156
Brick 155
Brick 154
Brick 153
Brick 151
Brick 150
Brick 149
Brick 147
Brick 146
Brick 145
Brick 144Brick 157
Brick 143
Brick 142
two-dimensional Bricks - watercolors and dye screenprints (2015-2018)
Brick 169
Brick 168
Brick 167
Brick 141
Brick 140
Brick 139
Brick 138
Brick 137
Brick 136
Brick 135
Brick 132
Brick 131
Brick 130
Brick 129
Brick 128
Brick 127
Brick 126
Brick 125
Brick 124
Brick 123
Brick 122
Brick 121
Brick 120
Brick 119
Brick 118
Brick 117
Brick 116
Brick 115
Brick 114
Brick 113
Brick 112
Brick 111
Brick 110
Brick 109
Brick 108
Brick 107
Brick 106
Brick 105
Brick 104
Brick 103
Brick 102