lulu & leo fund, 2016

CHoose Creativity campaign

 

 

 

LULU & LEO FUND, 2015

BENEfit ARTWORK

These pieces were created as part of an interactive art station at the Museum of the City of New York for the Lulu and Leo Fund Benefit. Participants were invited to add a loop of string to reclaimed wood as the collective work evolved.  

 
 

for more information on choose creativity and the lulu & leo fund, please visit: www.choosecreativity.org and www.luluandleofund.org

 
 

SING FOR HOPE PIANOS INSTALLATION, 2015

TITLE: UNDISCOVERED

ACRYLIC ON PIANO

JUNE 5-24, TRIBECA PARK


At first glance, this piano is stark white, blank.  As the viewer approaches, however, the unexpected texture of the piano is revealed.  The piano is covered in tiny letters, words that compose messages of hope, nearly invisible to the eye, discernible only by touch.

Referencing the tactile nature of the instrument, this piano seeks to engage those who may not ordinarily be able to experience visual art: the blind & visually impaired.  Interspersed with words inscribed in the language of Braille, this piano's hidden message is perceptible only to those who come close enough to feel & discover. 

Broadly, Undiscovered is a reflection on language & translation.  I often think about the simultaneous awe & alienation of experiencing a new language.  Unaware of the meaning of the words -- or even when one word ends and another begins --, the ear is suddenly free to focus on form, rather than substance; to hear abstract sounds in all their beauty & intrigue, rather than processing words.  Braille is a visual representation of that experience.  Patterns come to light, but the words remain elusive.  The key to unlocking their meaning lies with those who, through the loss of one mode of perception, have heightened all others.  In a world built for the sighted, this piano tells the blind & visually impaired, quite literally, "This piano is for you."

 
IMG_5336.JPG
 
 

SING FOR HOPE PIANOS INSTALLATION, 2013

TITLE: YOU

ACRYLIC, CANVAS, & VINYL ON PIANO

JUNE 1-16, SOUTH STREET SEAPORT

 

I began the process of painting this piano with a simple idea:  What if you were the artist?  What if we all were, together?  What if there were a way to connect all of the people who walked by this piano?  What if everyone could leave a mark?

The canvas-covered sides of the piano provide a blank, open surface for visitors to leave their thumbprints.  Just as an artist paints a canvas, visitors will use inkpads placed at the front of the piano to add vibrant color with their fingers, leaving their individual stamps on this evolving work of art. 

The hand-drawn text on the lid, revealing the grain of the wood – the piano’s own imprint – is a reference to the evanescent beauty of handwriting in a digital age.  Like a thumbprint, handwriting is personal and intimate, imperfect and unique, revealing an individuality and humanity that is often lost in digital communication. 

My hope is that, by the end of the installation, this pristine, white piano will be bursting with color, covered in thousands of thumbprints, a joyful record of every person who stopped by.

This piano is an invitation to make a mark.  On the canvas, and wherever you go.  Because maybe what makes everything come alive is the bold act of believing in your own mark, of beginning to discover what it is that only you can give to the world.  And maybe then, the billions of tiny, distinct impressions can come together to form a grand, collective, beautiful whole.

 
 

for more information on sing for hope, please visit: www.singforhope.org.