Reflection
Artwork can be acquired through galleries or direct from the artist
36” x 48” Oil on panel
Available at Christina Parker Gallery, NL
www.christinaparkergallery.com
709-753-0580
12” x 36” oil on panel
Available at Christina Parker Gallery, NL
www.christinaparkergallery.com
709-753-0580
24" x 24" oil on panel
Available at Christina Parker Gallery
www.christinaparkergallery.com
709-753-0580
24" x 24" oil on panel
Available at Christina Parker Gallery, NL
www.christinaparkergallery.com
709-753-0580
land
Artwork can be purchased through galleries or directly from the artist
36” x 36” oil on birch panel
Available: The Gallery House/Skwirl Gallery, Bayfield ON
www.skwirl.ca
548-388-1101
46” x 46” oil on birch panel
Available at Christina Parker Gallery, NL
www.chrisitnaparkergallery.com
24” x 24” oil on birch panel
Available: The Gallery House/Skwirl Gallery, Bayfield ON
548-388-1101
12” x 24” oil on panel
Available at Christina Parker Gallery, NL
www.christinaparkergallery.com
709-753-0580
24” x 24” oil on birch panel
Available at Christina Parker Gallery, NL
709-753-0580
46 x 60 oil on board SOLD
The Gallery House/Skwirl Gallery, Bayfield ON
www.skwirl.ca
548-388-1101
the ice project - immersive installation
The Ice Project is an imagined experience, created to highlight the incredible beauty as well as the fragility and precarious situation of the Arctic and the bigger picture of climate change.
The sounds you hear were researched online. They are the sounds of melting glaciers, a calving glacier, an iceberg hitting ground and the ambient sounds of a Bowhead whale which is archival footage from the 70’s, originally recorded by Ocean Conservation Research Organization, courtesy of the Macaulay Library, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithica NY.
This painting is the first one in a new direction for an upcoming solo exhibit that explores metaphors of nature and the human condition as well as our current state of environmental change. The iceberg, is a symbol and represents the metaphor of “seeing only the surface” of an issure, compared to the whole picture. Only 10% of the iceberg is visible above water. Hense the common chliche phrase: “The tip of the iceberg” I am interested in the 90% that is beneath the surface, what we don’t see.
Ice berg and sea ice series for upcoming immersive installation “The Ice Project”
View from the Campus Gallery exhibition, September 22nd to October 23, 2022. Located in the Helen & Arch Brown Centre for Design and Visual Art, Georgian College, Barrie, Ontario.
An immersive installation focusing on the beauty and fragility of the Arctic. Exhibited at The Campus Gallery, Georgian College, Barrie Ontario.

The Ice Project highlights both the incredible beauty as well as the fragility and precarious situation of the Arctic. The paintings are original oils on birch panel and acrylic ink on mylar made into light boxes. The sounds you hear were researched online. They include the sound of a melting glacier, an iceberg hitting ground, a glacier calving, and the ambient sounds of a bowhead whale which is archival footage, originally recorded by Ocean Conservation Research Organization, courtesy of the Macaulay Lab of Ornithology, Cornell University, Ithica NY.
Primordial water immersive Installation
Primordial Waters is an immersive installation inspired by shorelines of Georgian Bay Canada, but also from a broader perspective speaking to the innate human primal connection to water.
This exhibition included large scale paintings, a central kinetic sculpture created with suspended Snake Grass reeds, sand & detritus from the shore. Also included is a layered soundscape of shoreline recordings.
At present, the installation is in storage waiting for it’s next incarnation.
This sculpture was created by suspending shoreline detritus into 2.5” square resin cubes. Then fit into a 3’ x 4’ light box.
Orillia Museum of Art & History, 2018
12’ x 12’ kinetic sculpture, snake grass and driftwood suspended from monofilament & beach detritus.

Art and sound installation created for Orillia Museum of Art and History, Canada. An immersive exhibit focusing on the fragility of the Georgian Bay water and shoreline habitat