This piece continues my exploration of lacy vases, shifting the visual language to circles. The overlapping circles in the painted design are reminiscent of the circles that bubbles leave behind on a surface and have a more playful feel than a lot of my work. All of the circles, in both the lace and the painted pattern, were hand-drawn free-form, so there are small inconsistencies and imperfections. Similar to the Sunburst lacy vase, the shape of the vase also echoes the round shapes in the painted and lacy textures. The shape is also a play on shapes common in scientific glassware, playing off of my multiple interests in art and science.
I’ll have one more piece in this mini-series to post soon.
This piece is a continuation of my lacy vase series, continuing the theme of creating complementing paint and lace patterns. Unlike the last form based on waves and curves, this piece is based on a sharper, more angular geometry. As the vase widens in the middle, a painted pattern of bright angular brushstrokes emerges from underneath the black lacy panels. The lace cutouts, the painted pattern, and the overall shape of the vase all reflect similar angularity. However, similar to my previous piece, the painted pattern gives a softer version of the same visual language as the lace does.
I’ll be continuing to explore similar themes in my next two posts.
I’m catching up on posting some pieces from several years ago that I never posted when I folded them. This piece is a continuation of my lacy vase series, continuing to play with the contrast between a black lacy pattern and a contrasting painted section. The new element here is that instead of leaving the non-lacy sections white, I painted them in a pattern reminiscent of water the complements the wavy patterns in the lace.
Wavy lacy vase
The lace pattern and the painted pattern represent the flow of water in different ways: the painted section represents it in gradations of color, but the cuts of the lace represent it in fluid curves. Unlike most of my pieces, there are no folds that cross the central lacy section, so the lace is able to flow smoothly all the way around the vase without any interruptions.
I’ll be posting the continuation of this mini-series soon, with several other pieces that explore the connection between painted patterns, lace patterns, and the overall form of the vase.
I’ve been catching up on posting pieces that are currently on display at the Urbandale Art Gallery, and this is the last of those pieces. This piece continues my diagonal shift series and builds on a recent test fold. I continued the theme of cone-based diagonal shifts here, putting the test fold into practice in a finished piece. One of the challenges in designing this piece was volume and balance: all of my diagonal shift vases up to this point have had shifts that naturally tend to have similar volume on either side of the shift, so it was always fairly easy to make the piece look like the top and bottom halves were proportionate. (This type of visual balance is very different from the piece looking or being physically balanced – most of my diagonal shifts include small weights in the bottom so they don’t fall over!) For this piece, the cone on the top half is a lot narrower than on the bottom half, so I had to play more than usual with height to make sure the proportions looked right. This piece ended up an inch or two taller than most of my shift vases to get that balance.
Before my diagonal shift series went on hiatus for several years, I was playing with cone-based diagonal shifts, including ones where the cone pointed inward as it approached the shift plane and ones where it splayed outward. This test-fold combines an in-turned cone on the bottom with an out-turned cone on the top, creating the appearance that a singe cone continues through both halves of the model. This continues a theme of mixed-shape twists that I had started several years ago.
This was a test fold for one of the pieces currently on display at the Urbandale Art Gallery – photos of the finished piece coming soon!
This piece is a return to my long-dormant diagonal shift series. I played a bit before with diagonal shifts based on a cone instead of on a cylinder, along with a test fold of a diagonal shift based on an out-turned cone. Similar to my previous downhill diagonal shifts, the shift in this piece is really a stack of two bends and one shift. To get all the angles correct, the bends are cone-based bends, and the shift is based on an out-turned cone instead of an in-turned cone.
I also included a photo of the painted paper below. For most of my diagonal shifts, I’ve used sine waves for the painted patterns and let the painted lines naturally zig-zag a bit as they crossed the pleats. For this piece, since the narrowest parts of the black stripes are in places where the pleats are the widest, I incorporated zig-zags into the painted pattern. That made for a lot of measuring reference points, but it smooths out the painted lines nicely.
Cone-based downhill diagonal shift vasePainted paper for cone-based downhill diagonal shift vase
I’m continuing to share some of the pieces currently on display at the Urbandale Art Gallery. This nesting piece builds on the lacy series, but shifts the visual language from curves and circles to sharp angles and triangular forms. As with the circular nesting bowls, this work is composed of four separate pieces that nest together and function as a single object. The triangular cutouts echo the sharp outward angles in the bowl and vase forms. Unlike the circular vases, where gradient from light to dark tended to highlight the distinctions between the forms, these pieces gradient from dark to light. This enhances the unity between the forms because the contrast between the outer, darker piece and the inner, lighter piece viewed in partial shadow is small. The color gradient and the angularity suggests flame-like imagery. Together, the four pieces form a cohesive object defined by repetition, contrast, and gradual transformation.
I’m catching up on posting some of the pieces that are currently on display at the Urbandale Art Gallery. This piece continues the theme of my lacy series, with the new twist that this piece is really four separate pieces that nest. The shapes of all four bowl/vase forms echo each other but become taller and narrower for the inner pieces. The color also follows a gradient from light to dark, giving a sense of continuity while also clearly showing the distinctions between each of the four pieces. Together, the four component pieces function as a single object unified by a gradual progression. Individual photos of the component pieces are below.
I’m excited to share that my work is currently featured in a two-artist exhibition at the Urbandale Art Gallery, alongside paintings by Suzanne LaTour Stevens. The exhibition will be on view through February 21, 2026, with a reception on Sunday, February 1, 1-2 pm. The title of my show is “Twists and Bends.”
The gallery is located in the Urbandale Public Library (3520 86th Street, Urbandale, IA 50322). If you’re in the area, I hope you’ll stop by!
Some photos of the show – I haven’t been posting new work for a while, so some of these will show up on the blog in the coming weeks.
Urbandale Art Gallery show – lacy series Urbandale Art Gallery show – diagonal shift series
Artist Statement and Show Description
Origami is a synthesis of my two interests: the scientific and logical in harmony with the artistic and creative. Paper offers a unique balance of freedom and constraint: every form must emerge from a single continuous surface through folding alone. Rather than restricting creativity, these boundaries generate it. Every piece begins with the question whether a form can even exist within the constraints of folding. Working within these constraints echoes my broader interest in the union of art and science.
Vases and bowls are especially compelling subjects because they, like paper, are fundamentally surfaces. Even at their most complex, they retain a conceptual simplicity that invites viewers to examine and understand them, while still wondering at their transformation. This accessibility allows people to step into the analytical mindset that drives my work, engaging not only with the finished object but with the underlying logic of its creation.
This exhibit includes two series that examine different aspects of this inquiry. The first series pushes the boundaries of mathematical engineering, exploring structures that appear impossible to create from a single uncut sheet of paper. Each piece is hand-painted with patterns that integrate with the folded geometry, heightening the illusion that the surfaces must have been cut and reassembled. I want viewers to approach these pieces as puzzles, thinking like scientists as they examine how these shapes can exist.
The second series offers a simpler counterpoint. These vessels incorporate lace-like cutouts that adorn the geometry, but the underlying forms are foldable without them. The openness of the lace introduces an interplay of light, shadow, and negative space. Removing portions of the surface also tests the structural limits of paper, creating a tension between the form’s structural integrity and the visual delicacy of the lace. These pieces explore the beauty that emerges from the simple elegance of folded paper.
Together, the two series reflect my ongoing exploration of how structure, constraint, and beauty interact, revealing the expressive potential of a sheet of paper.
This piece is another slightly simpler lacy vase, similar to my most recent piece. In this piece, I continued playing with the contrast between the plain white surface of the paper and the black lacy panels.
The wavy lines in this lacy pattern look fairly freeform, but this was actually one of the trickier lace patterns I’ve done to lay out in a way that actually worked. It was tough to get a balance where there was good variation in the waves so the pattern didn’t look too repetitive, but still avoiding having cutout areas so large that it would be difficult for me to get the lace panels to cooperate while folding. It took me a few rounds of drawing and erasing the lines to find a balance I was happy with.