Title: Peace on TV
Medium: Photographic canvas print
Series: Doll’s Head Trail
Size: 12 × 16 stretched canvas
Peace on TV continues the visual narrative from Doll’s Head Trail in Atlanta, Georgia—where discarded objects become unlikely storytellers.
An abandoned Jensen television, weathered and corroded, sits half-swallowed by nature. Inside its darkened screen, a dirt-streaked doll’s face stares outward—fragile, haunting, and strangely human. Beneath it, a bold red “PEACE” sticker cuts sharply through the decay, graphic and defiant against the fading blue metal.
The juxtaposition is intentional. A once-functional television—symbol of mass communication and collective experience—now frames silence. The promise of broadcast unity is reduced to debris, while the word peace remains intact, stubborn and loud.
Vivid greens and blues from the surrounding foliage heighten the tension between artificial and organic, consumption and abandonment. Like other works in the Doll’s Head Trail series, this piece captures more than found objects—it captures cultural residue.
Printed on a 12 × 16 stretched canvas, Peace on TV preserves a moment where technology, memory, and nature collide—inviting the viewer to question what messages endure long after the signal disappears.
Title: Peace on TV
Medium: Photographic canvas print
Series: Doll’s Head Trail
Size: 12 × 16 stretched canvas
Peace on TV continues the visual narrative from Doll’s Head Trail in Atlanta, Georgia—where discarded objects become unlikely storytellers.
An abandoned Jensen television, weathered and corroded, sits half-swallowed by nature. Inside its darkened screen, a dirt-streaked doll’s face stares outward—fragile, haunting, and strangely human. Beneath it, a bold red “PEACE” sticker cuts sharply through the decay, graphic and defiant against the fading blue metal.
The juxtaposition is intentional. A once-functional television—symbol of mass communication and collective experience—now frames silence. The promise of broadcast unity is reduced to debris, while the word peace remains intact, stubborn and loud.
Vivid greens and blues from the surrounding foliage heighten the tension between artificial and organic, consumption and abandonment. Like other works in the Doll’s Head Trail series, this piece captures more than found objects—it captures cultural residue.
Printed on a 12 × 16 stretched canvas, Peace on TV preserves a moment where technology, memory, and nature collide—inviting the viewer to question what messages endure long after the signal disappears.