Orchids and carnivorous plants vie for space with baby bird mouths, snakes, bees, and everyone here is hungry. Are they sharing resources, or competing for them? Do they depend on each other, or steal from one another? While they co-evolve, roles ar

Orchids and carnivorous plants vie for space with baby bird mouths, snakes, bees, and everyone here is hungry. Are they sharing resources, or competing for them? Do they depend on each other, or steal from one another? While they co-evolve, roles are switched, active and passive standards reverse, and life squirms its way into the future.

Each piece is white earthenware, and roughly 10” x 8”, with structures on the surface between 1-5” in depth.

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Spotted Orchid, 11in x 8in x 2in, 2013, Ceramic.jpg
D. Miller, Untitled (1), 2013, ceramic.jpg
Dendrobium and Snake, 2013, 11in x 8in x 2in, Ceramic.jpg
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D. Miller, Untitled (6), 2012, ceramic.jpg
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D.Miller, Untitled (9), 2012, ceramic.jpg
Dendrobium and Baby Birds, 2013, 11in x 8in x 3in, Ceramic.jpg
Flytrap, 2013, 11in x 8in x 3in, Ceramic.jpg
Pitcher with Tongue, 2013, 11in x 8in x 5in, Ceramic.jpg
The Nervous Snake, 2013, 11in x 8in x 3in, ceramic.jpg
Long-petaled Orchid with Snake, 2013, 11in x 8in x 2in, Ceramic.jpg
Hungering
Hungering

installation at South Broadway Cultural Center, Albuquerque, NM, 34" x 85", each panel 11" x 8", ceramic