Friday, February 27, 2026

misPLACEd (2024)


Paintings, drawings, led shop light, political cartoons and photographs related to environmental and native American rights, trash you would find in a park, and books on United States law and key figures regarding these rights. 

Because memorials, historic civil and foundational buildings and sites, national and state parks are publicly accessible they can become contested places where personal and public rights are symbolically or literally questioned. Sometimes infringed upon and protested. These are places where ideas and respect for what degrees of freedom represent are enacted, especially in relation to who has access and what can and cannot be done in those places.