The Amber Room   

“The Amber Room,” is the first of a two-part installation referring to the mythologies attributed to amber.  Tiles cast from copal, a fossilized tree resin, line the walls of the gallery’s entrance space creating an “amber room.” Copal is a premature form of amber and can only mature into precious amber over millions of years. A clock embedded in the wall monitors the slow maturation process of the copal into precious amber day by day. 

Sounding Measures

"Sounding Measures,” the second of this two-part installation, pulls away from the visceral experience of being in amber to call attention to other bodies: the shapes of animal death masks embedded within amber “rocks.” The amber preserves the heads, but only as volume, as negative space, as absence.  
An ultrasound device mounted on the back of each rock form measures and displays the volume of each death mask at regular intervals. 

1993
Dimensions Variable 
Materials: cast copal (amber) rock forms containing negative impressions of death masks (rhinoceros, bear, gazelle, mt. goat, mt. lion), ultrasound measuring devices, wood

Project Venue: 1993 Nordanstad Gallery, New York, New York 

Previous
Previous

Calibration

Next
Next

Willing Suspension of Disbelief