Do you think you will keep working with assemblage or switch to another medium in the future?
I plan to continue doing assemblage work. My work stands out to gallery owners who seek to offer their clientele something unusual, three-dimensional, does not need to be freestanding, and can be hung on the wall. With there being so many painters it is much easier to get into a venue.
What about assemblage still challenges you after all these years?
When painting on a flat surface the three-dimensional challenge is in creating depth and perspective. With assemblage sculpture, the three-dimensional challenge is durable attachment.
Over the years, moving art from one place to another and leaning pieces against each other, inadvertently aspects of sculptures may be struck or otherwise detached by pressure against protruding segments. Having to do warranty work on a sculpture is an infrequent occurrence, but the spectre of having to do it gives us one pause to ensure that vulnerable pieces are glued and their attachment reinforced with screws from behind. Trying to avoid repair work of any kind makes one rethink materials, manner of attachment, and composition of representation.