INFANT JUSTICE, 2002, works from installation at Pittsburgh Glass Center
https://www.pittsburghglasscenter.org/pages/artists-crossing-lines
Inheritance, 2004, glass baby rattles filled with stones
In Infant Justice, two somber cribs provide a dialectical foil for a delicate medium, using its material qualities to work with, and not against, its stereotypical associations. Here, glass remains fragile, beautiful, precious.
Inheritance , 2004, glass baby barbell rattles filled with stones surrounded by a group of twelve BCE stone shekel weights
Infant Justice is immanent, as well as present, and lives, as do we, with the discrepancies between the seen (frozen, utopic) and the known (active, chaotic). We know the ideals of our judicial system to be illusory; transparent gavels cast condescending and often cryptic shadows over our heads. The promise and image of impartiality is, in practice, easily broken, splintered through selective prosecution at home and shattered through blatant inequities in our foreign policy. Pleas for justice are muted, not pacified. Rattles of resistance unshaken, are not resigned. The stones' cries contained, at great cost, for this moment.
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Installed at The Palmer Museum of Art at Penn State University for Objects in/and Visual Culture
INFANT JUSTICE, 2002 two cribs with mobile consisting of nine glass gavels
Be quiet.
Good night.
Don't let the bedbugs bite,
but when they do
don't cry.
Be quiet.
For God's sake,
Be quiet.
for my sake,
Be quiet.
for truth
for justice
for the American way
just
Be quiet.
Detail of INFANT JUSTICE, 2002 crib with mobile consisting of nine glass gavels
Installed at Pittsburgh Glass Center