Artwork > Sports

Private commission
Acrylic on Book Page
12.5 x 9.5
2018
The Course of Empire: Rebuild
Acrylic on Ink Jet Print
2012
Cowboy Caravan
Acrylic on Book Page
2012
Redskins
Acrylic on Book Page
2012
Mariners
Acrylic on Book Page
2012
Marine off Big Rock
Acrylic on Book Page
2014
Mouth of the Moodna, on Gameday
Ink on Antique Engraving
2012
Dandy Autograph Day
Ink on Antique Engraving
2012
The Catskills, Citi Field
Acrylic on Ink Jet Print
2012
Nutzy
Acrylic on Antique Lithograph
2014
Jaguars
Acrylic on Book Page
2011
Bears
Acrylic on Book Page
2011
Ravens
Acrylic on Book Page
2011
Orioles
Acrylic on Book Page
2011
Eagles
Acrylic on Book Page
2011
Seahawks
Acrylic on Book Page
2011
Starbury
Graphite
14x11
2011
Shockey
Graphite and Carbon Transfer
2011
Chosen 1
Graphite
12x10
2011
History Witness
Graphite
10x12
2011
Graphite on Yupo, Collage
36x29
2011
Ring Stock Ballyhoo - Swarm
Collage
Variable (16x19)
2010
Ring Stock Ballyhoo - Gallantry
Collage
Variable (16x19)
2010
Ring Stock Ballyhoo - Swarm
Collage
Variable (16x19)
2010
Ring Stock Ballyhoo - Parlor
Collage
Variable (16x19)
2010
Ring Stock Ballyhoo - Press
Collage
Variable (16x19)
2010
Ring Stock Ballyhoo - Arch
Collage
VAriable (16x19)
2010
Ring Stock Ballyhoo - Festoon
Collage
Variable (16x19)
2010
Ring Stock Ballyhoo - Pastoral
Collage
Variable (16x19)
2010
Shirts vs. Skins
Oil and Gold Leaf on Canvas
48x36
2010
Two Sides of the Same Coin
Oil on Cut-Out MDO
57x39
2010
Ace
Oil, Gold Leaf, and Glitter on Cut-Out MDO
48x62
2010
Hiding the Idols
Oil on Canvas
48"x36"
2010
Shaking off Enchantment
Oil on Panel
40"x60"
2010
Untitled
Oil on Panel
16"x13"
2010
Untitled
Oil on Panel
16"x13"
2010
Victory Takes a Dive
Oil on Panel
16" x 12"
2009
Untitled
Oil on Panel
16 x 14
2009
Open the Hatch
Acrylic, gold leaf, oil on panel
20 x 16
2009
Open the Hatch (Study)
Pencil on Paper
11 x 8 1/2
2009
Untitled
pencil on paper
11 1/2 x 8 1/2
2009
Cover the Earth
Pencil on Paper
12" x 9"
2009
Bail Out
Pencil, Acrylic on Denril over color Xerox
12" x 9"
2009
Grab Life by the Horns
Pencil on Paper
11" x 8 1/2"
2009
Cherubim
Pencil and Collage on Paper
8 1/2" x 11"
2009
Kaplooie
1:24 Scale Hobby Model, Cut-out and Bent Sintra, Enamel, Decals
16" x 22" x 15"
2008
Kaplooie
1:24 Scale Hobby Model, Cut-out and Bent Sintra, Enamel, Decals
16" x 22" x 15"
2008
Kaplooie
1:24 Scale Hobby Model, Cut-out and Bent Sintra, Enamel, Decals
16" x22" x 15"
2008
Kaplooie
1:24 Scale Hobby Model, Cut-out and Bent Sintra, Enamel, Decals
16" x22" x 15"
2008
Antique Sorrow
Oil and Enamel on Sintra and MDO
36" x 60"
2008
Antique Sorrow
Oil and Enamel on Sintra and MDO
36x60
2008
Nativity (After Boucher)
Black and White Charcoal on Paper, French Mat, Gilt Frame
38 x 42
2008
Shell Shock
Oil on canvas over panel, gold leaf on cut-out MDO
60" x 50"
2008
Greg Biffle
Automotive Painted Ceramic
22" x 19" x 9"
2008
Greg Biffle (Detail)
Automotive Painted Ceramic
2008
Burnout
Silverpoint and Acrylic on Paper
2007
Dale Earnhardt Portrait Cartouche
Cut-Out Gold Foil Paper
45" x 21"
2007
Dale Earnhardt Portrait Cartouche (Detail)
Cut-out gold foil paper
45" x 21"
2007
Kevin Harvick Portrait Cartouche
Cut-out gold foil paper
22" x 29"
2007

To Understand the history of American team sports is to understand our national development. From our rural, agrarian beginnings comes baseball: originally played during the day, on a “field”, tethered to the elements, with no clock, rife with personal failure, overcome. Out of the Industrial Revolution came football. The synchronicity of specialized moving parts, the restrictions of performing tasks within a time limit, the taking of land by force-a blithe reflection of a nation at work and at war. The post-industrial era saw a rise in the popularity of basketball. Free-formed and creative, individualism within a collaborative scheme, stripped of gear and protection and played at a continuous pace. The “big three”American sports are, at their core, representations of our past and so they embody our parochial and national allegiances, and in part define our ethos.

The games that professionals play are staged in architectural wonders only found in urban centers. The modern sports stadia are “homes”, cathedrals to their sport, icons of urban planning, and big time money makers. They are triumphs over nature, with vast fields of perfect grass grown partially indoors when retractable roofs stave off the harsher elements. They are gleaming examples of man vs. nature and again mirror the moment when Americans' roots were re-planted into city plots. The stadia are visible signs of bustling urban development and activity, in spite of the fact that they sit idle for half a year, every year. After the crowds disperse and fireworks fade, we are left with grand sporting vistas, quiet pilgrimage sites for dedicated and decorated masses.