
Remains of “Stay Alive” Performance, 2020

A Piece for Two Hills and a City
2016
A site-specific installation designed for gallery located on the 7th floor of the Sullivan Center building in downtown Chicago.

A Piece for Two Hills and a City
2016
A site-specific installation designed for gallery located on the 7th floor of the Sullivan Center building in downtown Chicago.
Image courtesy of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago

35.7088568, -79.7806110
2017
Installation with vinyl text. The piece's title corresponds to geographic coordinates.

1372549
2016
A performance in which viewers were asked to stay in the gallery only for as long as they could hold their breath. Upon entering, they encountered a performer reading interview transcripts about the way individuals perceive their physical limits. The performer occasionally paused to take a drink from a jug of water, which she also used to intermittently water a plant.
The piece's title, 1372549, was created by calculating the number of human breaths it would take to fill the gallery space where the performance took place.


Several Pieces to Be Completed at Will
2016
Site-specific installation at the Hyde Park Art Center, Chicago, IL.
Photo: Tom Van Eynde

Several Pieces to Be Completed at Will
2016
Site-specific installation at the Hyde Park Art Center, Chicago, IL.
Photo: Tom Van Eynde

Transmissions
2017
A four-channel sound installation for car radios, commissioned by the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs for the Edgewood, NM Town Park and Pavilion. The audio featured a conversation among three of the town’s residents. Each voice in the conversation was recorded individually and then broadcast on a separate radio frequency. Thus, multiple cars and viewers had to be present to hear the entire conversation. A fourth radio transmitter broadcast a field recording of wind blowing at the site, a prominent and persistent environmental feature in Edgewood.

Transmissions
2017
A four-channel sound installation for car radios, commissioned by the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs for the Edgewood, NM Town Park and Pavilion. The audio featured a conversation among three of the town’s residents. Each voice in the conversation was recorded individually and then broadcast on a separate radio frequency. Thus, multiple cars and viewers had to be present to hear the entire conversation. A fourth radio transmitter broadcast a field recording of wind blowing at the site, a prominent and persistent environmental feature in Edgewood.

untitled project (arrows)
2014-ongoing
Photographs from across the United States

untitled project (arrows)
2014-ongoing
Photographs from across the United States











