Ecologies of Attention
Through walking, gathering, recording, and making, I engage with the subtle shifts that shape a place over time, the changing angle of light, seasonal rhythms, evidence of weathering and renewal, and the quiet persistence of living systems. Living in Maine, where each season transforms the landscape in distinct and dramatic ways, has fostered a practice of close observation and return. Over time, this sustained noticing becomes a form of relationship, shaped by repetition, proximity, and responsiveness to change.
Each project grows from sustained engagement with a specific landscape or ecological condition. Rather than seeking mastery or certainty, the work embraces curiosity, reciprocity, and ongoing inquiry. By returning to places repeatedly and staying receptive to transformation, these projects explore how perception is never neutral, it is shaped through relationship. In this time of ecological uncertainty, this practice of attention has become the way I witness, learn, respond, and prepare.
Exhibitions
Shift, Center for Maine Contemporary Art, Rockland, Maine, 2015



