Malignant Landscape Statement
They are exploring the relationship to culture and natural environment. This series of watercolors is trying to tell the stories of life and death, science and art, religion and politics that are all one in the same. They are trying many directions to express our themes, both macro and micro, to represent cancer in landscape as a global issue. Cancer caused by pollution, is not only inside our cells, but also now a part of the earth. On a macro scale, air pollution can be considered to be cancer in landscape, and on a micro scale, this disease is in the cells of our bodies.
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Win 2017 MFA Graduate Award from Ferris State University
Four pieces of this series were collected by Grand Valley State University Art Gallery
One pieces of this series was collected by Ferris State University