Urban Allegories
The contemporary city can feel like a bizarre, surreal carnival populated by polarities; construction cranes and circus tents, container ships and shopping carts. The imbalance of appetite and ambition with entropy and atrophy. But behind this cacophony, a meditation on the fractured, performative, and deeply human contemporary condition: defining for ourselves what it is to have enough.
Saturated color, absurd humor, theatrical compositions, and improvisational symbolism create a layered vernacular reframing the chaos of modern city life as an exuberant embrace.
Bread & Circus, 17" x 14"
Feed Me, 14" x 17"
Feeding Time at the Circus, 32" x 40" (Sold)
The Nativity, 14" x 14" (Sold)
Mack and the Boy's Palace, 30" x 30" (Sold)
Concession, 46" x 40"
Par for the Course, 20" x 30"
Rising Tide, 46" x 40"
Fisherman's Terminal, 54" x 45"
3rd Street, 40" x 30"
Provisions unmade, 10" x 12" (sold)
Shipyard, 36" x 36"
Dogpatch Cranes, 24" x 30"
The Red Crane, 30" x 24" (sold)