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I created this series of paintings in 1996 and 1997, while living in a basement apartment in a
far suburb of Washington D.C. called Gaithersburg. Predicated in the belief that mystery and
mythology are hidden in the mundane moments of our day to day life, I created a series of
images wrested from the stream of everyday existence.
As we trudge through our daily lives, we pass through literally millions of moments that act as
metaphor for our personal struggle and the struggle of humanity in general. Moments in a bar
with friends; a smile exchanged with a lover, a heated conversation, an afternoon spent
baby-sitting a nephew -- all of these experiences pass through us almost completely without
notice while we are busy focusing on more important things, such as our future life plans or the
latest political crisis.
But it is in the small moments of day to day life that we truly exist -- and it is in these generally
ignored experiences that we can find all of the mystery, beauty and metaphor that human
experience has to offer.
In this series of paintings, I have captured some of these fleeting moments, removing them from
the stream of life. Displaced from their context, these moments among friends and family take
on mythological meaning. The brief encounters in a bar or living room become representative of
human interaction in general, capturing the charm, the mystery and even the absurdity that
passes unnoticed through each of us everyday.
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