Cemetery Walks Collection: 2023
Collection Displayed at Ravensgate Gallery in Phoenixville, PA in September 2023
I’m starting to become known in Phoenixville as “the artist who takes cemetery walks”, and I am thrilled to embrace that label.
I have been walking through cemeteries the way most people walk through parks for many years now. I was raised by parents who taught me that death is just another phase of life, and so I grew up seeing the beauty in it without the fear of it.
Last Summer, I started to collect flowers, weeds, and any natural element I could find during my walks and bringing them back to my studio to make encaustic artworks with them.
I had started using encaustic in a completely new way during Quarantine of 2020, pouring it in frames instead of just painting over my photographs with it. And so, I inadvertantely started creating a collection that summer, which I simply titled “Cemetery Walks”.
I decided to revive the summer ritual of walking in cemeteries weekly, and the building this collection brought me great joy once again. Last year, I brought my oldest son (he was 4 years old at the time) along and we made a piece that I ended up hanging with the collection again this year.
Since my three kids are all one year apart, my middle son turned 4 this summer, and so I decided to take him along with me to create a piece for this year’s collection.
Last year, I did a piece at Zion Lutheran Church, which I pass every day on my commute between my home and studio here in Phoenixville. That piece sold, so I decided to make another there, and it was one of my largest pieces of the collection.
For this next cemetery, I ended up making two pieces, which hung together like this.
This piece was also a part of the 2022 collection, but seeing as it was still unsold, I decided to hang it and include the story along with the rest.
When I had completed my walks, I realized that the collection was feeling somewhat flat. Because I had been accepted by a gallery, I knew I had the wall space and the opportunity to include more work.
I am also an avid writer and poet, so Including some framed poetry pieces felt like the perfect puzzle piece. In fact, we placed my largest poem in the center of the layout, which perfectly balanced the viewing experience between the written word and the three dimensional art.
Lastly, I returned to my original way of working with encaustic. I was taught how to paint encaustic wax over Photographs back in college (my BFA was in Photography) by Leah Macdonald, and so returning to this original way of working, combining my first love of photography with my new passion for encaustic, brought my summer project to a close just before opening night on September 1, 2023.