Mother-tongue (2024–current)
“Mother-tongue” is a series of blind-embossed paper collages that draws on early modern palimpsests as models for inscription, erasure, and memory. The series belongs to a larger body of work based on archeological sites that have played strategic roles in the cultural crosscurrents of the Mediterranean Basin.
The project fuses the sites of pre-literate civilization using a site footprint as a starting point and in combination with twenty-first century texts that grapple with the erasure of cultural traditions. The forms for “Mother-tongue” are based on several sites, called nuraghe, built on the island of Sardinia between 1900-730 BCE. In its collage imagery, “Mother-tongue” incorporates handwritten facsimiles of the poetry of Sardinian writer Antonella Anedda (1955- ) printed on transparent paper. Anedda writes in Italian and Lugodorese, derived from Latin with incorporated elements of Byzantine Greek, Catalan and Castilian. I bind the embossed paper to these words with silk thread, fusing ancient protectorates to the contemporary pluralities of Sardinia’s geography and language.
Where I hoped rock would be (2022–2023)
“Where I Hoped Rock Would Be” is a series of eighteen sewn-paper collages that draw on early modern palimpsests as models for inscription, erasure, and memory. The series belongs to a larger body of work based on archeological sites that have played strategic roles in the cultural crosscurrents of the Mediterranean Basin.
The building block is a drawing of Ħaġar Qim, a temple site located in Malta from a prehistoric civilization that existed between 3600 and 2500 BCE. Its footprint is collaged with colored pencil, ink, graphite, raw silk fabric, and a lithograph of the fifteenth century poem “Il-Kantilena” by Maltese poet Pietru Caxaro. Caxaro writes in a Semitic language that is a synthesis of late medieval Sicilian Arabic and Romance languages. Silk thread binds his astonishingly modern poem—addressing despair, resilience, impermanence, and the geographies of place and belonging—to its physical crossroads.