True Crime Theatre: Hell’s Belle

True Crime Theatre is a multi-media immersive performance bringing the feel of radio dramas and podcasts into the live arena of arts. Two live actors weave the tale of Belle Gunness supported by live foley artists as well as a live sketch artist, who brings to life missing persons posters in real time. The audience is surrounded by subtle art installations of various artifacts connected to the crimes and vanishing of one of America’s earliest female serial killers.

Written and directed by Kevin G Becker, live drawing by CS Frank.

Curatorial Work

Anita S Wooten Gallery
Valencia College
Orlando, FL

It Goes With the Couch
June 15-August8, 2023
Co-curated with Rachael Zur
Artworks by Xuanlin Ye, Jamie Nakagawa Boley, Jenny Chernansky, Bill Wells, and Ben Creech

Earth and Water, Wind and Fire: Ceramics by Hadi Abbas
January 12-March 3, 2023

Selected Fine Arts Faculty 2022
KYLE
Michael Galletta
Richard Munster
Rose Casterline
Leah Sandler
Cassandra Anselmo
CS Frank
Viktoriya McGrath
David Cumbie
Marcus Barrett
Haris Ahmad
Dino Casterline
Dennis Schmalstig
Dennis Angel
Camillo Velasquez
Kathleen Marquis

November 3-December 9, 2022

Affliction: Photographs by Natalie Diienno and Nika de Carlo
September 8-October 14, 2022
Co-curated by Jacob Rodriguez

Natalie Dienno: Through the Blue Hour, Self Portrait (MRI/Hunch), 2018

Nika de Carlo: Fifth Anniversary, 2019

Standing in the Gap of the Here and In Between
Jamie Nakagawa Boley
September 3, 2020 – October 9, 2020

Jamie Nakagawa Boley, Winyan Omnicha (The Gathering of the Women)

Tattoo Me!
Faun Manne
January 14, 2021 – March 4, 2021
Continue reading Curatorial Work

Blog: The Truth in a Nutshell

Each semester, I ask my students to construct dioramas in the style of Frances Glessner Lee’s Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death.

This means reckoning with the body- in or out of its context, left behind, dumped, the object of violence. In these cases, bodies provide the narrative, bodies are the narrative.

Nutshell based on the murder of Andrew Borden

And, often, the stories bodies tell are ambiguous- clearly, something violent happened to them, but the story remains a riddle; the circumstances muddied by the elements, and by time.

Nutshell based on the murder of Betsy Aardsma

Often, the bodies in question are missing- out of sight but still central, still holding the power to fascinate. In all cases, the dioramas are about ways of seeing the (in)visible body. They’re about seeking information, using image as a way to construct a narrative that suits the visible evidence and makes sense in its own context. They’re not about solving the mystery- about closure, whatever that means. Rather, they’re about learning to look, learning to read the body in its context as text, to reconstruct the circumstances of its unmaking.

Nutshell based on the death of Gareth Williams

Blog: And Then The Lights Went Out

No image, for reasons that will become obvious.

I am the faculty advisor for my college’s Art Club. The students and I have been working on a mural project all semester- an ambitious piece that covers an entire first floor hallway, where the offices of Arts and English faculty are located. The work involves a lot of contortions- twistings of the body, stretching, strange yoga poses. We end up sore, tired, sloppy with paint at least two days a week. We are often also subjects of fun and observation; Admissions staff will come through with prospective students, to show us off.

My students taught me something on Monday, though I’m not yet sure how to articulate it. We had been working for around half an hour. And then, the lights went down. The entire neighborhood was plunged into darkness. I sat back and stretched, ready to call it a day. But my students simply took out their smartphones, turned on the flashlight devices built into them, and kept painting.