Abstract I
Please contact the gallery at 412.741.5858 for Availability or Commissions!
Please contact the gallery at 412.741.5858 for Availability or Commissions!
This series started innocently enough. (It’s working title, incidentally, was The Things They Used.) First of all, I was interested in the form of the objects. I thought that by isolating the utensils from their normal environment, and either enlarging or miniaturizing their images, I could show the beauty of the forms themselves. In addition to honoring these humble objects, I thought their strong graphic presence would make interesting decorator items in a kitchen or elsewhere. More…
Giclée prints are available at request
$35 for Pen & Ink Giclée’s of Market Square Series (exceptions may apply)
Call 412-741-5858 to inquire!
Please contact the gallery at 412.741.5858 for Availability or Commissions!
This series started innocently enough. (It’s working title, incidentally, was The Things They Used.) First of all, I was interested in the form of the objects. I thought that by isolating the utensils from their normal environment, and either enlarging or miniaturizing their images, I could show the beauty of the forms themselves. In addition to honoring these humble objects, I thought their strong graphic presence would make interesting decorator items in a kitchen or elsewhere. More…
This series started innocently enough. (It’s working title, incidentally, was The Things They Used.) First of all, I was interested in the form of the objects. I thought that by isolating the utensils from their normal environment, and either enlarging or miniaturizing their images, I could show the beauty of the forms themselves. In addition to honoring these humble objects, I thought their strong graphic presence would make interesting decorator items in a kitchen or elsewhere. More…
The name of the series comes from the terms used in plowing with a mouldboard plow. The furrow is the ditch left by the blade or share of the plow; the slice is the ribbon of dirt that is lifted up and flipped over into the furrow from the previous pass of the plow.
For 20 years or so, every more…
This series started innocently enough. (It’s working title, incidentally, was The Things They Used.) First of all, I was interested in the form of the objects. I thought that by isolating the utensils from their normal environment, and either enlarging or miniaturizing their images, I could show the beauty of the forms themselves. In addition to honoring these humble objects, I thought their strong graphic presence would make interesting decorator items in a kitchen or elsewhere. More…
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