contemporary mixed-media ART

ART

Wing Nuts: BE BEST portrait

Wing Nuts: BE BEST

Carbon steel, aluminum, wood, acrylic paint.

60 x 48 x 2.125 in (121.9 x 152.4 x 5.4 cm)

Two wing nuts that remained from a toilet repair served as inspiration for this portrait, which was created by riveting 9,500 wing nuts and 1,500 hex nuts in seven shades of orange.  In addition to a wing nut being a bolt fastener with wings for gripping, a wing nut is also the slang term for a person who advocates extreme political ideas and spreads conspiracy theories. This piece memorializes the moment when, at a campaign rally, Donald Trump mocked a journalist with disabilities.  After he won the U.S. Presidency, his wife Melania, in her role as First Lady, launched an awareness campaign entitled BE BEST, which focused on the emotional, social, and physical well-being of children.


Lone Star

Wire hangers

39.5 x 40.5 x .5 in (100.3 x 102.9 x 1.3 cm)

Lone Star was created in response to the Texas legislature’s passage of Senate Bill 8 (S.B.8), which instituted a six-week abortion ban.

Lone Star by Diane Hathcoat

January 6

Rat traps, plywood, acrylic paint.

2 pieces – ea. 76.5 x 43.5 x 1.5 in (194.3 x 110.5 x 3.8 cm)

Two inverted U.S. flags symbolizing distress* created from 216 rat traps form the foundation of January 6.  Each trap includes the name of a U.S. Senator or Congress member who:

  1. Objected to certifying the electoral votes from Arizona or Pennsylvania based on false allegations of election fraud.

AND/OR

  • Voted against forming a bipartisan national commission to investigate the January 6 U.S. Capitol attack perpetrated by insurrectionists who believed lies of a stolen election.

The traps were set with paint-filled balloons and triggered for each event.  If a representative objected to the certification, their trap triggered one balloon; if they also voted against the commission, their trap triggered another balloon.  The red stars represent the proportional damage to our democracy related to these votes (left certification, right commission).

*This piece was created before it was reported that Trump supporters, including Supreme Court Justice Alito, had pilfered and perverted the upside-down flag to represent their unfounded claims that the 2020 election was stolen.


Death Knell series – 70 +

Cotton, acrylic, ink.

11 x 8.5 x .75 in (27.9 x 21.6 x 1.9 cm)

Death Knell grapples with the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2022 Dobbs decision, overturning Roe v Wade and a half century of legal precedent.  Each piece in the series begins with a cutting of cotton emblazoned with the first page of the Court’s opinion. Embroidered upon this is text exposing emotions incited by this decision, beginning with dismay, moving through rage, and culminating with resolve. Embroidery, a traditionally feminine pursuit, is employed to deliver an unvarnished rejection of the restrictions imposed on women by the court and society at large.


Choice(s)

Chromed copper wire, carbon fiber, filament,

115 x 18.5 x .25 in (292 x 47 x .635 cm)

A letter, poem, a plea.

Choice(s) was written shortly after the SCOTUS shadow docket decision declined to prevent Texas’ S.B.8 from going into effect. Sadly, at that point, the writing was on the wall. Between concept and completion, our fears were confirmed.

You said
They would never overturn it
Perhaps you even believed
No guilt
With a dash or a bubble or a tap
Fates were cast
Rights denied
Options eliminated
Not then
Not fully in that moment
Erosion takes time
And many
Those who act
Those who enable
Those who blindly look away
But it is here now
Not here here
Yet
Not in this bubble
Not in this world of choice
Of privilege
Of agency
But for other people
For women
For girls
For those not ready
And perhaps never will be
For those whose bodies
bestow instinct but deny sanctuary
Autonomy is not theirs
Neither is safety
Maybe it never was
And the highest of the high affirm this
In the shadows
Late... while we slumbered
They said they wouldn't
In their slippery sermon hearings
Their roadshows
Creed and politics palpable
but cautiously cloistered
Precedent
Their password to ascension
Echoed and then forgotten
They said what some needed to hear
Demanded to hear
Absolution granted
Responsibility relinquished
So that the jurors could confirm
While remaining in good graces
And Power
Because that is the bottom line
Always
What will you do with yours?
Will you remember you?
The principles at your core?
Who will you stand with now?
Your girlfriend, wife, sister,
daughter, granddaughter, niece,
friend, colleague, neighbor?
Will you defend our rights?
Our freedoms?
Who will you vote for next?
And what will it say
about what you value most?
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