SciArt Magazine - All Issues | Page 16

exciting you right now that you’d like to address in your work in the future? JM: My neurological and figurative work is converging in surprising ways with two new works: “Secret Chambers: Ancestors” and Family of Dendrites. While not consciously intentional, both sculptural groups revolve around family dynamics and could be interpretations of the same event addressed from an internal and external perspective. The “Secret Chambers” series interweaves recurring emotive and scientific themes in a way which fuses the internal world of neurons and biochemistry with the external manifestation of particular psychological states. The first sculptures in this new series are in development and revolve around a concealed family secret involving suicide, Secret Chambers: Ancestors. The sculptural group is composed of two figures and a very large key. The troubled male figure is giving the ‘key’ to a much smaller female figurine who is no match for the weight of this tragic secret. The key is loosely based on allegorical stories involving St. Peter receiving the keys to the kingdom of Heaven from Christ. The plaster cast key in this particular case is one to unlocking a neural and familial mystery and is encoded with the steroid hormone cortisol, released in excessive amounts in response to stress. While originating from a personal story, the sculptures are meant to serve as archetypes, not portraits of specific individuals. Family of Dendrites, the sixth piece in the “Dendrites” series, is composed of three figures in a posture reminiscent of a classical Madonna and child with a noticeable twist. The larger mother neuron is cradling two smaller children in her arms. She is protecting and shielding them from what may be a tumultuous ride ahead. The two sculptural groups when viewed together comprise an interpretative glimpse of what family dynamics look like from the outside and the inside. Expect to see more sculptures investigating this fertile region where internal and external states intersect. 16 SciArt in America June 2015