Paintings and Sculpture:

A large, abstract, wall-hanging cruxifixion with a tall, broken chair back as a spine and bowels made from an old painted extension cord falling to the floor, one end being held by the proper left hand. Gessoed board with coffee grinds and streaks of coffee growing mold which has been cut into abstract shapes. A wall-hanging triptych, made from wood and covered in a slick, stretchy fabric. with an abstract spine cut out of the doors. The open triptych reveals a plaster sculpture in the middle of Wisdom, surrounded on either side by two courters/worshippers. A large piece of linen mounted to the wall. On it, is are numerous lines of handwritten text taken from one side of a series of letters from a prisoner to his girlfriend. A male manequin arm emanates from the center of the linen, clutching the top three-fourths of a beaten white picket fence which has rotted off from the bottom. On the floor, in front of this offering hand, is a table base with a bicycle wheel where the table top would be. On top of the bicycle wheel is a female arm reaching out, which spins as the bicycle wheel turns, at moments, almost accepting the picket fence but then quickly spinning away. Closer details of the table, writing, and reaching arms. A large canvas with twelve coal miners, painted as an old, frozen photograph. A shovel hangs from a large chain below the center canvas and is flanked on both sides by windows painted with dapper men. Details of the canvas and men. A King James Version Bible edited by a literalist who takes what they want and discards the rest flanked on either side by extremely fragile unfired clay hands authoratatively gesturing. A detail of the King James Version Bible edited by a literalist who takes what they want and discards the rest. A large Pieta that has been sanded out. A tall, roughly-textured  canvas with maps of the Middle East forming a cross and little, plastic army men creating a design within the cross. Details of the textures and army men. A chessboard with one side's squares filled with passages from Kings (KJV) while the others are filled with magazine writings about the faith of George W. Bush. The side with Kings consists only of clay pawns, bishops, and a small, feeble king, craning his neck to look up at the large imposing queen, towering over him and surrounded by only knights and pawns. Gessoed and painted wood with screws and picket fence pieces. Another large, roughly-textured cross on board.