Studio Work > With Apologies to the Future (2012 - present)

Golden Langur (from the Apologies to the Future series)
Acrylic ink on paper
30 x 44 inches
2012
Polar Bear (from the Apologies to the Future series)
Acrylic ink on paper
30 x 44 inches
2012
Giant Panda (from the Apologies to the Future series)
Acrylic ink on paper
44 x 30 inches
2012
Sumatran Tiger (from the Apologies to the Future series)
Acrylic ink on paper
44 x 30 inches
2012
Monk Seal (from the Apologies to the Future series)
Acrylic ink on paper
44 x 30 inches
2012
Golden Langur Skull, preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
11 x 8.5 inches
2012
Golden Langur, preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
8.5 x 11 inches
2012
Golden Langur, preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
8.5 x 11 inches
2012
Brown-Footed Ferret skull, preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
8.5 x 11 inches
2012
Brown-Footed Ferret, preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
8.5 x 11 inches
2012
Giant Panda skull, preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
11 x 8.5 inches
2012
Giant Panda skull, preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
11 x 8.5 inches
2012
Giant Panda, preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
11 x 8.5 inches
2012
Sumatran Tiger skull, preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
11 x 8.5 inches
2012
Sumatran Tiger, preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
11 x 8.5 inches
2012
Cross River Gorilla skull, preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
11 x 8.5 inches
2012
Cross River Gorilla, preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
8.5 x 11 inches
2012
Borneo Pygmy Elephant preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
8.5 x 11 inches
2012
Javan Rhino, preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
11 x 8.5 inches
2012
Monk Seal skull, preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
8.5 x 11 inches
2013
Monk Seal, preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
8.5 x 11 inches
2012
Mekong Giant Catfish, preparatory drawing
Ink on paper
8.5 x 11 inches
2012

Each of the magnificent creatures depicted in this work is struggling to resist the inexorable decline of its species. Their prospective extinctions are predicated on a wide array of circumstances, but all are anthrogenic in nature. In other words, humankind is responsible.

I hoped to explore the precarious state of these animals through the metaphor of the form (drawing) and presentation itself. Each of my subjects is isolated, removed from any environmental context, natural or otherwise, floating disembodied in a void of negative space. The drawings themselves hover tenuously, inches from the wall, unprotected by wood or glass, suspended by just two small magnets.

Ordinarily I work with printmaking processes, but drawings – due to their singularity as objects - assume an authoritative and distinct quality. This aura of originality seemed appropriate, suggesting the exceptional nature of my exquisite subjects. If lost to us, they can never be recreated.

Working with a large brush and thin ink washes, I formed faint clouds on my paper from which the portraits would coalesce. Though the ink is permanent, securing each animal to the future through the drawing itself, the imagery wavers between resolution and dissolution. These creatures are emerging – moving to the forefront of my/our consciousness, even as they disappear from Earth.

I have rendered these portraits as a means of honoring each subject for the integral role it plays in our global ecosystem, contemplating my own role in their probable demise, and apologizing profusely…not only to the animals, but to a future which would be considerably less rich, less vital without them.