Exhibition - Fort Worth, Texas

To Call To Mind
TCC Northwest, Glass Box Gallery
March 4 – 25, 2026
Curated by Iris Bechtol, Curator and Gallery Programs Coordinator
at the Oak Cliff Cultural Center, Dallas, Texas

I was honored to be part of To Call To Mind, a two-person exhibition with Alicia Eggert, curated by .Iris Bechtol and presented at the Glass Box Gallery at Tarrant County College Northwest.

The exhibition was organized in conjunction with the completion of our public artworks for Fort Worth Public Art along Marine Creek Parkway in Fort Worth, Texas: One Way and Alicia’s A Very Long Now. It felt especially meaningful to have this exhibition create space to reflect on the ideas, materials, and trajectories that connect our studio practices to these newly completed public works.

To Call To Mind brought together older and newer works in a kind of focused survey, offering viewers a broader sense of how our individual practices have evolved over time. My work in the exhibition included sculptures shaped by materials that carry traces of contemporary life, including artificial turf and cast iron. Shown alongside Alicia’s text-based sculptures and time-centered works, the exhibition opened a dialogue around memory, perception, time, and the ways we make meaning through form.

I am grateful to Iris Bechtol for curating this exhibition with such care and thoughtfulness, and for bringing our work into conversation in a way that highlighted both shared concerns and distinct approaches. I also want to thank Fort Worth Public Art Project Manager Michelle Richardson for her continued support, and TCC faculty member Victoria Gonzales for helping make the exhibition possible.

It was a meaningful way to celebrate the completion of these public artworks and to reflect on the larger questions that continue to shape my practice.

I would also like to thank Tarrant County College for welcoming me to present a lecture on Wednesday, March 25th. It was a pleasure to meet TCC students and faculty, to share the experience with my mom and Nancy Thompson-Jones, and to spend time with my public artwork One Way in person. I am grateful for the generosity, conversation, and sense of connection that shaped the visit. And thank you to the student who drew a sketch of my sculpture Loop: Gravity Returned during my presentation.