PieLab

PieLab was a backwards business, an outgrowth of the Free Pie! event I co-created with a team of young designers, while at the Project M workshop in Belfast, Maine.

PieLab’s goal was to bring together one of the poorest communities in America, and provide job opportunities, through affordable, delicious, homemade pie. We collaborated with a local aid organization to extend the reach of our efforts, and the restaurant opened to rave reviews in the New York Times, Bon Apetit, and Southern Living. The restaurant space, a repurposed storefront, was nominated for a James Beard award in restaurant design, and the store was named one of the ten best places to eat pie by Bon Apetit magazine.

Locals came to the restaurant to eat good pie, and some came to make their own family recipes for the customers. With the space functioning as a social hub for the community, there were music events and entrepreneurial initiatives, like the one that helped a local group of kids launch their pecan brittle business out of PieLab’s kitchen.

Tiny Lab

Tiny Lab opened as part of the Hoboken Artists’ Studio Tour group show, October 2009. In the exhibit, I showed microphotos of ordinary things, 13 large macro- and micro-photos, output on archival Fujichrome photo paper at 30×45″. I also setup two cameras fitted with high-powered lenses and a variety of small everyday objects for visitors to explore in exactly the same way I create my art. I photographed small personal objects for visitors and sent them the resulting macro- and micro-photos after the show. Kids & adults were fascinated by the magical transformation of their everyday objects into art before their eyes. Objects shot at the show included an old cough drop, jewelry, a half-eaten twizzler, a dollar, some coins, and other mundane objects.

Most objects represented in this show’s artworks are smaller than a quarter, some the size of a grain of rice. But in this presentation, they become far larger and closer than the viewer has ever experienced, transforming the viewer into the tiny thing exploring a new alien landscape previously out of reach.