Chairs
is a sculptural series made from years of collecting and assembling discarded chairs—each one a kind of surrogate body. We describe chairs in the language of anatomy: legs, arms, backs, feet. They hold us, mirror us, and, like us, they break, wobble, sag, and get replaced.
These sculptures treat chairs not just as furniture, but as fragmented self-portraits—stacked, tangled, and strained under their own weight. By reconfiguring these objects into towering and precarious forms, the work reflects on identity, support, and collapse. It asks how we hold ourselves up, what structures we inherit, and what happens when they fail.