Artist Statement (excerpt)
In my work, I have created refuges in cities and public spaces. Places of gathering for people to be together or alone, to imagine or remember, and perhaps both.
For the Madison Square Park project, I started studying the geographic history of the Manhattan park, and the mapping of the area revealed that two bodies of water once ran under the park. The Cedar Creek and Minetta Brook, now forgotten, once coursed for two miles before flowing into the Hudson River. And though in many of my works there is a direct study and reference to the site they are conceived for, they also belong to a universal imagination of the land we all share, its profound depth, its memory, and the concept that two geographically distant places are in fact mentally connected. It is precisely this idea of connection that I used to create the fiction that activates the work Landscape and Memory at Madison Square Park.
Five bronze elements constitute the work, placed at different intervals around the park. Together they draw the old course of the rivers that once flowed under what today is Manhattan. Where the waters once ran, now lies a mass of communication cables and infrastructure pipes, but also roots of trees, a vast network of fungi, and all types of living organisms connected amongst themselves. In this way, these five geometric openings reveal a bronze interior landscape, talking about the ancient and the eternal. Water flows continually through these bronze elements located below floor level, obliging our bodies to get closer to what lies underneath us. Reflective walls at each end of the rectangular shaped bronze spaces enable me to enhance the fiction that this water is indeed flowing from one space to the next. We have also planted between each bronze concavity a different type of grass, one that grows higher than the rest of the park's extension, fictionalizing once more that the water is indeed running under that line and its humidity is becoming visible to the viewer. This suggested continuity of the water flow unites the five holes making us imagine the whole.