




Jonathan Traviesa
"WATER! WAVER!"
This piece highlights how big hopes/needs produce nervous, teetering
effects.
Valerie Massimi
Michelle Levine
Maxx Sizeler (detail)
Elizabeth Underwood
(detail)
Everything exhibited on the interior table as artifact was found on-site. Like a garage of tools a gnome might use - tongue depressors, plastic knives, bits of broken china - obsessively ordered, following some strange but evident system. This is one way to make what we can with what we find, and it's fun, here in the post-apocalypse.
All photos by Jonathan Traviesa
No comments:
Post a Comment