"An object that is familiar but altered is satisfying to me, like a good puzzle"
This last piece is “All Ball” - an icosahedron about three feet across made of doors and walls in a wooden frame that is displayed by suspending it on wires from the ceiling. Like most of my work it was a reconfiguring of the things around me. I like to work with the materials that are in the room or the area so what you notice in the work is the process the materials have been through - not the materials themselves. You should be capable of using any material to make art, from crushed cans to gold leaf. It is the way you reconfigure and leave your mark on the material that gives it your signature.
I think everyday objects and ordinary materials work well in unusual configurations; umbrellas made into giant balls, rain barrels and drainpipes made into giant insects, chairs and tables made into giant structures. They have a lovely oddness to them, as well as giving me the enjoyment of having turned something mundane into something out of the ordinary.
There is no cultural or political message in my art, unless that message is “Try to make the world a more beautiful place”, because when I see a good piece of art it makes me want to go and create something unique myself. And if my work doesn’t always succeed in communicating that, then hopefully it fails in interesting ways.
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