A Marine Mountain Flies Toward the Islands
A Marine Mountain Flies Toward the Islands, 2025, 18 x 24 x 1.25 inches unframed or 19.25 x 25.25 x 2 inches framed, acrylic, embroidery floss, flashe, LDPE, oil pastel on canvas
$435 unframed or
$585 framed
paintings are framed to order so kindly allow additional time for framing
The Story Behind the Work
As beautiful as Patagonia is, it has – as with all colonized lands including where I live and work– a violent history of forced displacement.
I made A Marine Mountain Flies Toward the Islands by gluing cut-out shapes of canvas over stretched canvas and then, after they were securely attached, forcibly ripping the cut-out shapes of canvas off the main support. I then painted over a majority of the distressed canvas. In an act of both further violence and faux attempts at repair, I continued to attack the canvas by stabbing it with an embroidery needle, covering the tiny slivers of canvas that remained after the canvas removal with embroidered thread.
With the other pieces in the End of the Earth Series, A Marine Mountain Flies Toward the Islands, was named after a line in a Pablo Neruda poem.
"Every print is a result of contact and release, which links it immediately to themes of touch, presence, and intimacy but also loss, separation, and memory."
– Jennifer L. Roberts, art historian, Harvard
We live in a time of overwhelming speed — digital immediacy, rapid production, and a barrage of news updates. Nature, in contrast, moves at its own pace. Glaciers form over centuries, forests regenerate over decades, and landscapes shift in ways that are imperceptible to us yet are made apparent over time. I feel the contrast in timescales between people and nature as I worked on this series in New York surrounded by skyscrapers, new shops popping up on my street, and social media updates while thinking about the inspiration for this series, the slow descent to the Torres del Paine granite peaks of Patagonia and the glaciers that formed them over millennia.
As Jennifer L. Roberts says in her six-part National Gallery of Art lecture series, printmaking is an intimate act of creation in which two foreign bodies rub up against each other with part of one of those bodies physically rubbing off onto the other.
I see this, the contact and release, the rubbing up and rubbing off, as a beautiful metaphor for our relationships, including our relationship with the natural environment. This is why I encorporate monoprinting in my paintings. We shape the environment through our fear and an urge to contain, control, ignore, damage, admire, revere, abuse, and preserve it, and it shapes us via the fragments of it we take with us in the forms of materials, photographs, sustenance, memories, ideologies, and beliefs.
This piece will ship from New York within 10 days of order. Please allow an additional 1 - 2 weeks for domestic shipping.
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