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Connections &Conversations

// Invitations
on hold.

last edit March 2020

In May 2020, I will be graduating with an MFA in Community Arts from Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA).

Invitations to participate in this component of my thesis work is on hold in light of COVID-19. In the meantime, check out and contribute to Ambivalent Intimacy, a new addition to my thesis studies.

“Connections & Conversations“ is a long-term project. My future thesis exhibition will include a small selection of this project.

My thesis explores the theme of intimacy through a series of investigations into color, material, space, and relationships.

Through the project, “Connections & Conversations,“ I am inviting people who have been a part of my Baltimore experience—whether we have become friends, only say hello in passing, or have simply crossed paths once—this project is about building relationships and celebrating our everyday moments and interactions.

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The Process.

 

[honoring people through conversations and art.]

  1. Share your availability below. We’ll hang out for tea/coffee at a local Baltimore spot.

  2. The purpose of this outing is simply to chat. For some of you we’ve talked many times, for others we could have just briefly crossed paths. Depending on our existing relationship, we’ll be catching up or getting to know each other better.

  3. After or during our conversations, I’ll take a few photographs of you! This is casual and the photos will be artistically manipulated—no need to worry about getting picture perfect! See an example of final artwork below.

  4. Your photograph will be made into a digital collage. The surrounding colors, abstract patterns, and will be a reflection of our conversation and time together. My collages will be printed on fabric.

 
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Why this project?

It’s a way for me to…

• Build relationships and connections

• Increase self-awareness. Create moments of reflection for myself, participants, and the viewer.

• Honor and celebrate every day people

• Build community

• Archive experience and stories

• Share my love and beauty of Baltimore and the people who have made up my Baltimore experience.

• Inspire viewers to appreciate and build the intimacy in their lives.

Outing invitations and scheduling will reconvene at a later date. Be well <3

Further Reading on My Thesis

Intimacy takes many forms—physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual. Intimacy is the loving embrace with a best friend, a heartfelt conversation with a family member, an affirmation from your lover. Intimacy is a process where people can feel seen, known by, and connected to another. Just as it is widely recognized to exist physically between couples, intimacy can exist in any or all its forms within all relationships—including between friends, colleagues, families, and any other self-identified collectives. 

While intimacy is not something to force, it is something that can be intentionally explored, better understood, practiced, celebrated, and strengthened between individuals and communities. Intimacy is one of life’s greatest treasures and fears. It requires opening parts of ourselves up, leaving us vulnerable to the possibility of great loss and heartbreak. In the same breath, intimacy is an essential part of living, loving, surviving, and healing. 

Through material, I weave layers of connections, comfort, and conversations, exploring a deeper connection to mark-making and abstraction. I am embracing my art as a comforting and healing experience for viewers, in new and intentional ways. My art practice begins within myself at the core of my being and expands outward. I have learned that by creating artwork that focuses on self-exploration and vulnerability, audience members join in the journey and begin reflecting on and/or participating in a similar life-enhancing process of self-empowerment.  I wish to inspire people to feel love and courage, as well as appreciate their relationships and everyday interactions with others, whether small or large.

The psychologist Susan David, speaking on emotional courage, has said, “How we deal with our inner world drives everything. Every aspect of how we love, how we live, how we parent and how we lead.” My current work embraces artmaking as a vehicle for my own personal development and inner peace by aligning it with my greatest values—a specific focus on deepening and building the relationships that surround me.