I welded exactly one piece for the Art Garden. A female figural base — steel, antebellum big-hoop-skirt silhouette. Built at my own studio, for free. Jane Wegscheider praised it to my face. That praise felt like acceptance into the community of makers they claimed to champion.
For years I was one of the community-oriented art providers in Shelburne Falls. My sculptures still stand around town — Bridge of Flowers installations that draw visitors every season, Brookie the Trout swimming in RiverWorks Park, the Sturgeon on the Hudson. I showed up at Tish Murphy’s memorial (another Art Garden member who took her own life) when the community needed presence, not performance. I believed in the values they advertised: radical acceptance, non-judgmental space, real community.
That single hoop skirt became the perfect, bitter symbol for what the institution ultimately did with that community.