AT AN ANGLE

Creation of this work was made possible in part by an Award from the Artist Foundation of San Antonio, with funding from the City of San Antonio Department of Arts and Culture.

I kept looking down and finding shifting white sands all over my feet, familiar, yet feeling as though it was covering what I was looking for. Suddenly, when I wanted to give up and dunk myself in a nearby refreshing pool, I found the place.

This is when I spotted rows of stacked blocks that were being deconstructed, each being carefully jackhammered away in a uniform fashion until nothing was left, like Tetris rows decimating in place. I was immediately sure that this was the place, and simultaneously bereft that it was being destroyed. I wanted it to stand forever – as a monument to my pain, or to my history. It was being destroyed and I felt destroyed. I soon found the exact room but it was next to be imploded. I grabbed the sign that marked the entrance – a rusted letter that started to crumble in my hands as I saved it from the wreckage. 

I just wanted something – some token of this place. I tried to take photos of the lamps as they were coming out of the rooms. I felt that it needed to be recognized and remembered. Someone had to know.

The works in At An Angle are a way of documenting past moments of trauma or pain, and are glimpses in the fleeting feelings that often give way to larger impressions that become memory. I wanted to build mountains out of molehills, and create a testament to the unknown suffering that people endure every day, and the ways that it can harm, change, or scar them.

Nicole Geary, 2017

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Tracing the Former World

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Cairn and Collage