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BIO
I see faces in everything, in the folds of a curtain,
in a pile of rocks. Shapes and shadows transform into eyes, a nose,
a mouth. As a sculptor I am fascinated with faces. Simply changing
the tilt of an eyebrow can radically change the feeling of a sculpture
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A face can be exaggerated, distorted or reduced
to it's simplest form and still be recognizable as a face. When
you are sculpting a face you are speaking in a visual language that
everyone can understand.
My parents are artists who used Halloween as a
time to indulge in extravagant design experiments. One year I wanted
to be a pirate. I was picturing torn pants, an eye patch, maybe
a toy parrot. My father constructed an entire pirate ship complete
with sails and an anchor. In 1988 I was performing in a theatre
production of “The Blue Bird,” a fantasy story that
required many special effects. The director knew I had made masks
with my family and asked me to design masks for the ghost characters.
Since then I have designed masks and puppets for theatre companies
across the US and in Canada.
In 1992 I graduated from the Dell’Arte School
of Physical Theatre where I studied mask performance and Commedia
Dell’Arte. I now work as a physical theatre director and educator.
I enjoy introducing people to mask performance for the first time.
Performing in mask ignites a fire in people and I love seeing that
fire light in their eyes when they tell me how much fun they had
working in mask.
People talk about masks as a method to hide or
disguise. I believe the opposite, that wearing a mask is a way to
reveal parts of yourself that are hidden behind your everyday face.
Masks create an opportunity to explore our sense of self in a new
way and release hidden energy.
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