SELECTED WORK
1. Garage Rooster (gumball eyes chewed by the dark)
2024, installation (hay, heat lamps, steel, plaster, toilet paper, latex, feathers, acrylic paint, pumic gel, air dry clay, gumballs)
2. Exit
2025, Installation (cement, steel rod, wood, wax, acrylic paint, plaster, spray foam)
3. Sandtrap
2025, Installation (sand, projection, golf ball, golf club, air dry clay, acrylic paint, spring, wood, tarp)
Sick for Home (she stood in tears amid the alien corn)
2025, mixed-media sculpture (shucked corn cobs, shellac, corn husk pulp, paper pulp, rusted agricultural chains, steel, string, wax, acryilic paint, corn silk)
5. Bubblegum
2024, mixed-media sculpture (plexi glass, glue, borax, acrylic paint, alchohal ink, picture hanging wire, paper, spray foam)
6. The Cowardly Lion (whole body)
2025, mixed-media sculpture (ply-wood, plaster, faux-fur, gem-stones, rope, clothesline, acrylic paint)
7. Plumage
2024, installation (glitter, mini-fans, chicken wire, burlap, plaster, latex, air dry clay, acrylic paint, feathers)
8. Dolled Up
2025, mixed-media sculpture (wood, found objects, faux-fur, bells, wire, porcelain, air-dry clay, rock, acrylic pint, wallpaper)
ARTIST STATEMENT
I am interested in the materials that stick to my fingers, that even hours after leaving the studio cling to my clothes and hands. A year after my installation, Garage Rooster, which involved hay, heat lamps, and a humanoid rooster figure, I still see small red feathers float from dusty corners. Bright pink slime made to imitate bubblegum still renders the zipper of my favorite jacket useless. And right now— my freezer is completely filled to the brim with corn that I shucked for my current project. It’s too sweet, it's too sticky: it's everywhere.
I pull from the mundane and add surreal twists: what begins as a piece of cheese transforms into a lure down a long hallway. I think of it as a disorientation of the familiar. I force things together, disrupting patterns of association and assumption; like filling a white room with sand to emulate a golf course sandtrap. Sculpture allows me to explore when things contradict themselves. Within the creatures and forms I create, I play in the gradations between alive and not-alive, of simulated and real. Installation plays a key role in how I express my conceptual interests: when an element of a work begins to impact the body beyond sight. If you can smell or feel it, then it becomes real. I question how close I can pull the viewer into an illusion.
© TOM DAILEY ART