in situ
site-specific installation at Vermont Studio Center, February 2020
Arlington, VA
March 24 - May 6, 2017
Brendan Smith of BmoreArt wrote a review of this work in Artomatic has reloaded, April 13, 2017:
“Handmade paper is often associated with handmade journals rather than fine art, but King reveals the true potential of paper as a medium. Her large paper pieces, some riddled with holes, feel otherworldly and sculptural with their subtle bends and ragged edges. The work feels organic and elemental both in texture and form, resembling a topographic map of a mountain range with its swirling blacks and browns or a satellite image of the moon. The fragility of the paper itself also stretches a cord of tension, reminiscent of our tenuous grasp on nature and our own mortality.” (BmoreArt, April 13, 2017)
Arlington, VA
March 24 - May 6, 2017
Arlington, VA
March 24 - May 6, 2017
Brendan Smith of BmoreArt wrote a review of this work in Artomatic has reloaded, April 13, 2017:
“Handmade paper is often associated with handmade journals rather than fine art, but King reveals the true potential of paper as a medium. Her large paper pieces, some riddled with holes, feel otherworldly and sculptural with their subtle bends and ragged edges. The work feels organic and elemental both in texture and form, resembling a topographic map of a mountain range with its swirling blacks and browns or a satellite image of the moon. The fragility of the paper itself also stretches a cord of tension, reminiscent of our tenuous grasp on nature and our own mortality.” (BmoreArt, April 13, 2017)
Artomatic 2017 - Crystal City
Arlington, VA
March 24 - May 6, 2017
Arlington, VA
March 24 - May 6, 2017
Brendan Smith of BmoreArt wrote a review of this work in Artomatic has reloaded, April 13, 2017:
“Handmade paper is often associated with handmade journals rather than fine art, but King reveals the true potential of paper as a medium. Her large paper pieces, some riddled with holes, feel otherworldly and sculptural with their subtle bends and ragged edges. The work feels organic and elemental both in texture and form, resembling a topographic map of a mountain range with its swirling blacks and browns or a satellite image of the moon. The fragility of the paper itself also stretches a cord of tension, reminiscent of our tenuous grasp on nature and our own mortality.” (BmoreArt, April 13, 2017)
Arlington, VA
March 24 - May 6, 2017
Brendan Smith of BmoreArt wrote a review of this work in Artomatic has reloaded, April 13, 2017:
“Handmade paper is often associated with handmade journals rather than fine art, but King reveals the true potential of paper as a medium. Her large paper pieces, some riddled with holes, feel otherworldly and sculptural with their subtle bends and ragged edges. The work feels organic and elemental both in texture and form, resembling a topographic map of a mountain range with its swirling blacks and browns or a satellite image of the moon. The fragility of the paper itself also stretches a cord of tension, reminiscent of our tenuous grasp on nature and our own mortality.” (BmoreArt, April 13, 2017)
Allegany Arts Council
Saville Gallery, Cumberland, MD
January 29 - February 20, 2016
Artists & Makers Studios, Rockville, MD
March 1 - 30, 2016
4 North Park Place
Hitchcock Series, 2012
A collection of oil pastel drawings based on stills from Alfred Hitchcock films. In 2011, I spent the summer watching 45 Hitchcock films with my mother while she recovered from hip replacement surgery. These drawings represent key scenes from those films.