
Medium: Charcoal and Pastel on Paper
Size: 18″ x 12″
$35.00
[wp_cart:houses with backwards moon phases drawing:price:35:end]


A North Minneapolis Dentist office desperately needed a way to keep rain water away from the foundation. We donated one.
The terminus. This was my part of this group project.
Cut Cut Cut
The Route (pronounced ROOT)
The Ritualizer.
All of the Scupper’s Scupping.
Top-down on the Scupper.
Take care of your neighborhood businesses like the artists and architects of Vesper College.

It’s so hollow.

A little preview of a piece of a group project I’m working on.
It took hours for the machine to cut through this.

And to be completely honest, it’s creepy.

The power of positive thinking.

Someday I will build this.






This sculpture holds three ounces of water along a horizontally flat bamboo chute.
The sculpture is powered by small amounts of wind that movement of people in the room create, and the heat coming up from the candle.
The sculpture gently rotates, and the water drips to the floor. Flat becomes round.




We took our Saturday studio time to revisit first semester and create small wood sculptures.
This log is modulating into something else.

This is how you can grow super intelligent plants.

That’s about where this one gets me.

It’s a little out of tune.
However, it is very nice company while you’re cutting metal.




The project was to take a piece of wood and get it to hold three ounces of water, and to have it done in three hours.

I think that I think. At least I hope that I think that I think.

This is why I like the downstairs work space.

I put some eyes on Ryan’s project. Much better.

Candid photo of John pounding out some hot metal on the anvil he made.

This is where fabric goes to wait.

Especially when they have upset stomachs.

I’m building one of these in real life right now.

No surprises.

Perhaps the finest in the land.

Pipes and doors everywhere.

I’d love to keep it.
But it’s just the nature of all this useless information.