DRIVE IT LIKE YOU STOLE IT - SORRY (2011)

I first began collecting newspaper apologies after finishing my dissertation the topic of pain and peoples responses to it in 1999. Over the decade I continued to follow the media spectacle of public apologies and gather images and quotes from the mouths of CEOs, politicians, sports stars and others. Some of these apologies are of major historical significance while many are salacious in nature and of little public consequence. SORRY aims to distinguish what is important from what was not in this blur of fleeting media moments.

For this exhibition at Platform Gallery (Seattle, WA), I paired SORRY, featuring 12 recent apology mouth images, with DRIVE IT LIKE YOU STOLE IT, a window-text painting which looks at the car culture and advertising language.

Prior to 2011, SORRY was exhibited at MacMaster Museum of Art (Hamilton, ON), Saint Mary's University Art Gallery (Halifax, NS) and the College of Fine Arts (Sydney, Australia), and four SORRY publications share a larger breadth of this collection of mouths and their correlating apologies.