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048_FloJoe_DIG
Making Before Meaning: Primary Colors, 2001, glass, wood, sisal, dye, and steel, red brush, 74 x 28 x 11 inches
  • Making Before Meaning: Primary Colors, 2001, glass, wood, sisal, dye, and steel, red brush, 74 x 28 x 11 inches
  • Steering Shallow Waters , 1996, glass, wood, paint and steel, 34.5 x 24 x 11.5 inches
  • Island, 1998, glass, wood, paint and steel, 19.5 x 17 x 17 inches
  • The Edge of Certainty, 2002, wood, glass paint and steel, 79 x 37 x 25 inches
  • Walking Nature’s Seams, 1994, glass, wood, and steel, 48 x 22 x 16 inches
  • Wooded Hollow, 1993, glass, wood, paint and steel, 84 x 75 x 25 inches
  • Every Soil Bears Not Everything, 2008, wood, glass, paint, and steel, 50 x 27 x 5 inches
  • Drawing Figures, Finding Form, 2002, wood and steel, 42 x 40 x 6 inches
  • What Water Carries, 2011, wood, glass and steel, 49.5 x 35 x 4 inches
  • Sylvan Figure, 1992, wood, 111 x 43 x 29 inches
  • Making Before Meaning: Paintbrush Group, 2007, glass, wood, sisal, dye, and steel; purple brush, 77 x 16 x 10 inches
  • Carry Land, Carry Water, 2011, wood, glass, paint, and steel, 78 x 65 x 30 inches
  • Look Upon the Vessel, 2002, wood, glass, and steel, 62 x23 x 10 inches
  • By Means and Measure, 2002, wood, glass, sisal, and steel, 64 x 25 x 15 inches

“The wood and glass sculptures reflect our continuing interest in the many and varied ways we experience nature. By using nature's own material we draw its imagery, often placing it in combination with domestic objects. These domestic objects are juxtaposed to a figure or torso illustrating, through metaphor, some of the life experiences in which we access our strengths both creatively and emotionally. With these forms, to us innately beautiful, we embrace tradition and distinguish ourselves within it.”

Joey and Flora