collaboration with Shawn Spangler
Exploring the ways that culture, labor, art, utility, and technology are implicitly tied, the exhibition Re / Charting focuses on the differences and similarities between hand-forming processes and digital reproduction technologies. Re / Charting not only probes how new tools can be used in the creation of new forms and surfaces, but also considers theoretical questions regarding the slippery boundaries between convention and invention.
During the summer of 2014, I was a guest artist-in-residence at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa, in Honolulu, HI where I collaborated with Shawn Spangler on work for an exhibition at the University Art Gallery.
Our points of departure were three historical objects selected from the John Young Museum. These three objects were digitally scanned and reproduced in a variety of ways. First, the objects were reproduced at their original scale as exactly as the digital processes would allow (see Re / Charting Historical Objects and Narcissism below). Additionally, the digital scans were used in whole and in parts in a remaking, reconfiguring, and remixing process that was a search for new formal and material territory.
Using an extrusion-based ceramic 3D printer that i built for the project, we were able to 3D print the same clay used for generating form on the wheel and by hand, allowing for a depth of collaboration on each individual object that would be impossible with other digital and 3D printing processes.
All the digital models were also reproduced on my CNC machine as a drawing that is at once a continuous scroll, a document of our process, and a nautical chart exploring the territory we charted.
The exhibition also featured solo work from both artists, which can be found under Breathe, Diagnostics, and Assessment under my Portfolio page and on Shawn Spangler’s website.