White Salmon Opening - May 2023

The Stories Surrounding Us (Totems)


What about the beings that have been witness to a changing landscape and history of this region? Beings that have recorded the big changes to our climate from before any of us were here? What about the trees? Trees are living barometers who record the times in beautiful and poetic ways. In my work I seek to highlight some of these stories even though they are reflected to me in a foreign language. Sometimes I have an idea for what direction I would like to take a piece of wood based upon an initial impression while other times I relent to a process of starting, stopping, waiting and watching at the piece for weeks (or even months), until the grain, knots, or other anomalies connect to tell more of a story that inspires me to push the work further. Some of this wood I have the honor of working with has been around for a really long time. The wood I work with does not come to me without some consideration. When trees near my home come down (due to development, disease, storm damage or for disrupting the power grid) I attempt to contact the owner or property manager to find out if there are pieces I could work with so I can commemorate the tree itself, in some way. I record the geographic coordinates of these trees and add this data to the name of each piece. My hope is to memorialize these organisms and highlight places that have changed so much over many years. What was the tree and site like 50 years ago? 100 years ago? In this way, I see each of these pieces as totems, with the resulting biomorphic forms suggesting action, playfulness, and potential utility. For the majority of my career I have kept my design work and my artwork on separate tracks but I am consciously looking for ways to merge both practices in ways that tell stories and blur the lines of prescription.

Cascadian Monotrema

Cascadian Monotrema – Cedar with flame, 2022. Cedrus libani, the”Cedar of Lebanon” –  32” x 16” x 14”

Lat 45.51009513623012, Long -122. 61792011229967 - Portland, OR

This piece is the first of a body of work I started earlier this year that explores a cross-pollinating hypothetical of natural, mystical, and indigenous as it relates to the natural world around us, here in Cascadia. I’ve always been enamored and curious about the tendencies towards anthropomorphizing nature to suit a whim. I do this often myself - with my dogs, birds I see in the yard, even clips I see of animals in videos and on social media. Perhaps the most recognizable Monotreme is the Duck-billed Platapus, which is not native to the Pacific Northwest. What might an abstract, hypothetical species look like in this region that bore characteristics of bird and mammal? This new body of work will include geotag coordinates for where the tree lived. My hope is this small step honors the tree and the life it had.