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  • Signal

    Signal


    1993
    A site specific Art/Architectural Collaboration with the Metropolitan Transit Authority for The Broadway/Lafayette Subway Station, City of New York.
    In collaboration with The Six Nations of the Iroquois and Seneca Tribe member Peter Jemison.

    Signal
    is a project that concentrates on the relationship of people in the historic past and the cultural present as they travel along a well-known road. Native American trails that formed a connective cultural highway through Manhattan produced one enduring track, later known as Broadway, which lead to the Dutch trading wall that came to be called (aptly) Wall St. The Broadway/Lafayette station sits on this historic path.

    Components of Signal are to be found on all levels of the station.

    A tile motif is on the wall of each section and begins on the platform level — a simple accent of four tiles in “Echo Blue” is set on a white tile background below each Broadway/Lafayette sign, all consistent with the Arts and Crafts design of the platform level. Ascending the stairs that lead to the mezzanine one sees the continuation and expansion of the blue tile pattern into a more elaborate geometric repeating pattern that can be read as traces of rising smoke. On the top level (upper mezzanine) the tiles are organized into a specific pattern, wampum-like in design, and loaded with the same cultural significance as the sacred belts. The design was prepared by artist Peter Jemison, on behalf of the Six Nations: the Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Mohawk, Tuscarora, and Oneida — all North American Indian nations who continue to inhabit New York state and beyond.

    This connection of blue and white tiles is intended to reaffirm a demographic reality. The influence of the Dutch on Manhattan is well documented. White tiles comprise a majority of the wall covering in the station; these white tiles (delft tile) recall the Dutch occupation of early Manhattan. Certainly the Dutch are still active in urban New York, as are Native Americans.

    These tile patterns can be viewed from a gently arcing overlook that is located on the main passage of the upper mezzanine. From this vantage point an ember-like glow can also be seen emanating from the level below. This glow comes from five conical fixtures wrapped around the central structural columns. These Signal “fires” are enunciating fixtures that ground the columns with light. Their ember-like appearance and glow is intended to have multiple purposes. These function to alert the subway rider of approaching trains by means of aesthetic elements that also rekindle a certain moment of the historic past.

    The Masonic Compass & Square emblems served as a pattern of reinvention for some 17th Century Native Americans, who transformed the insignia into highly decorative variations. Although trade items, they were considered symbolic representations of the Council Fires. In consideration of this fusion of cultures, they serve as the primary source of design for the Signal fires.


  • Ghost

    Ghost


    1991
    chalk on nylon mesh, wood, steel, construction rubble
    Hartford, CT
    10 feet x 30 feet x 35 feet

    Ghost was a temporary installation that recreated the facade of the Talcott Street Congregational Church, Connecticut’s oldest free black church, whose original meeting house stood on this site from 1826 to 1906 and was the cornerstone of a thriving community. This project is not about nostalgia. Ghost functioned as a haunting presence that critiqued the unfulfilled promises of urban renewal. Ghost was intended as a catalyst for continuing critical discussion and developing action in response to those unfulfilled promises.


  • The Conditions for Memory

    The Conditions for Memory

    Labrador Duck: 1875

    Heath Hen: 1932


    Sea Mink: 1890

    Passenger Pigeon: 1914

    1989
    cast stone

    Originally installed in New York’s Central Park, Conditions for Memory is a four-part sculpture recalling the extinction of animal species native to the East Coast. The Sea Mink, Heath Hen, Passenger Pigeon, and Labrador Duck are represented by negative casts of those animals’ bodies configured as non-functional molds, unable to replicate the specimens. Each element is inscribed with the year of the given species’ extinction.

  • Myrrha/P.I.A. (Post-Industrial Age)

    Myrrha/P.I.A. (Post-Industrial Age)


    1984
    perforated steel, plugs, steel, wood, fiberglass
    29 x 16 x 4 feet
    originally installed in Bryant Park, New York, NY
    created for the Public Art Fund

    A paradoxical work, containing contemporary and historical references to literature, art, and myth. The monumental work portrays a seated woman, face partially obscured by upraised arm, body bent forward. The image is taken from an engraving found in Gustave Dore’s illustrated version of Dante’s Divine Comedy. Constructed as a double silhouette, the figure’s details are ‘drawn’ through the use of steel plugs, which fit into the 1/2″ apertures of the work’s perforated steel surface. Visible through the cage-like enclosure formed by the silhouettes is a full, three-dimensional, skeletal rendition of the figure.

  • Manilla Palm

    Manilla Palm


    1978
    Manilla rope, burlap, steel, fiberglass
    60 feet tall, 16 feet diameter

    Manilla Palm
    is a full-scale artificial palm tree erupting out of a metal pyramid with cracks that map the White Nile and Blue Nile rivers.

  • See-Saw

    See-Saw


    1976
    existing landscape, steel, hydraulics, rubber
    This project was commissioned for the Houston Main Street Festival Monumental Sculpture Exhibition in 1976.

    Consisting of two 6 ft by 6 ft “planter boxes” set approximately 60 ft apart, and linked by a hydraulic system. A participant standing on one part of the “incised” ground would slowly sink while watching the other section of the ground silently and simultaneously rise.