Anchor Points



A collection of observations on relationships and significance.

Click to read full artist's statement

As people, we are compelled to attach ourselves to the familiar, be it in the form of objects we choose to keep or images we use to represent ourselves. We keep objects we deem to be significant and that often connote a time of change or growth, like the houses we grew up in or the first books we learned to read. We associate ourselves with sports teams and quote authors to illustrate our personal beliefs.

We perform all these acts of keeping and association because of the sense of security they offer. Objects and symbols serve as anchor points in our relationships, such as heirlooms we inherit from grandparents and gifts from parents or close friends. We keep what people give us to help us remember why and how we are connected.

But the act of keeping is stagnant and therefore contradictory to growth, so we ground ourselves in what has happened instead of mobilizing potential for the future. Having grown up with animals, I find myself very attached to them and through them feel linked to my family; the homing pigeon, specifically, has been a mainstay in my repertoire of images. My dad raised hundreds of them his whole life and I have always been enchanted by a homing pigeon’s instinctive desire to always fly home, a desire that takes precedence over any other attachment to a mate or its community. In my adult life, I live far from my childhood home, the animals I grew up with are all gone, and my father has passed, but these symbols remain embedded in my identity. I illustrate the stories of these symbols in my woodcuts and drawings, in which I capture moments of tension and stillness in the midst of movement and interaction. My subjects feel closely bonded—even stuck—to one another, yet interrupted.

Whatever our compulsions may be, personal insignias begin to speak for us. They determine how we move, in the selection and arrangement of our homes. They determine how we interact, in proving how well we know other people by the gifts we choose for them. They fuel our need to have concrete evidence that our sense of belonging exists and what we do is relevant. Even when a circumstance changes—be it the end of a job, a relationship, an event—our attachment to an object associated with it remains, and in that way our experience lives on.

Break

Title: Break
Medium: Ink on Paper
Dimensions: 7 x 6 inches
Original available for purchase

Home

Title: Home
Medium: Ink on Paper
Dimensions: 5 x 7 inches
Original sold
Prints available for purchase

Bonding

Title: Bonding
Medium: Ink and Watercolor on Paper
Dimensions: 15 x 21 inches
Original Sold
Prints available for purchase

Security

Title: Security
Medium: Ink and Watercolor on Paper
Dimensions: 13 x 13 inches
Original Sold

Pull

Title: Pull
Medium: Ink and Watercolor on Paper
Dimensions: 30 x 20 inches
Original available for purchase

Push

Title: Push
Medium: Ink and Watercolor on Paper
Dimensions: 30 x 20 inches
Original available for purchase
Prints available for purchase

Stick

Title: Stick
Medium: Ink and Watercolor on Paper
Dimensions: 14 x 10 inches
Original available for purchase
Prints available for purchase

Loose

Title: Loose
Medium: Ink and Watercolor on Paper
Dimensions: 10 x 14 inches
Original available for purchase
Prints available for purchase

Juncture

Title: Juncture
Medium: Ink and Watercolor on Paper
Dimensions: 7 x 10 inches
Original Sold

Special Blend

Title: Special Blend
Medium: Ink on Paper
Dimensions: 10 x 7 inches
Original Sold

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