Tag: sustainable practices

The Closet(uniform city)

Sculpture 2025
14’x12’x12′
Metal, wood, clothing, fabric, light, sound, performance.
The Closet(uniform city) is a site-specific sculpture/installation comprised
of hundreds of post-consumer garments collected from multiple 
communities. The installation invites the viewer to walk through
a labyrinth of garments to experience the looks and sounds of different periods and
functionality of clothing from all walks of life. The work explores the interplay 
between cultural identity and clothing. It considers how our identities are sculpted
through rituals that are connected to domesticity and fashion. The work addresses
the environmental impact of the textile waste that has piled up over many decades 
during the rise of ready-made and fast fashion.
This project is made possible in part by a Maryland State Art Council Creativity Grant.

Luxury Goods

installation/performance 2023.
Post-consumer fur garments, paper, paint, ceramics, animal pelts, audio, 2 performers.
Luxury Goods is an installation activated by performance that explores humans relationship
with animals. The work reflects upon fur and other commodities related to social status and economic power.

From Our Waist To Waste

Public Art Project 2022
Installation of multiple post-consumer garments with a performance workshop including a publication about textiles and fashion sustainability. The work considers the relationship between glamor and waste.

This mobile project was a part of Arlington Art Truck, Arlington VA. The Art Truck moved to different locations throughout Arlington for 2 months in Spring 2022. Curated by Cynthia Connolly.

Gateway Park, Arlington Virgina. Photos by Sue Wrbican.
Page 1 and 2 of the zine. Below is a performance/workshop and survey that the visitors were invited to fill out to add up how long the clothing they were wearing that day would last. Riso zine and garment timeline tags were designed by Laure Drogoul and printed by Sense of Press in Baltimore Maryland.

Clothing timeline tag

(dirty~clean)Cleaners

installation/performance 2019
neon sign, neon lighting, clothing rack, wire hangers, filament, collected used dry-cleaning bags, sound, 4 performers. The work is an installation by day and in the evening a participatory theatrical event. This installation, located in a gallery storefront, takes the form of a conceptual dry cleaner shop. Composed of thousands of low density polyethylene (the clear plastic used to package “clean” garments). The work reflects on the ubiquitous cleaners of our urban landscape and  emphasizes the ever growing problem of LDPE plastic #4 and the use of perchloroethylene, a known toxin, to clean wearables.

(dirty~clean)Cleaners is activated with intermittent performative events. The installation considers the after-life of human made materials related to domesticity. During the performance,  Sisyphean cleaning clerks endlessly fold, process and roll the ghosts of our laundry.