The Tarot Exhibition
Three Stones Gallery
32 Main St., Concord MA 01742
Oct 15 - Nov 26, 2025
Opening reception Nov 1, 6pm
The Fool’s Journey
In 1989, I picked up The Motherpeace Tarot Deck. I had no idea that moment would plant the seed for a creative and spiritual journey spanning decades. Tarot became a mirror—not for predicting the future, but for reflecting the soul. In 2021, I had a vision: What if I brought the Major Arcana to life in sculpture? This exhibition is the result of that leap into the unknown—The Fool’s Journey. It’s been a path of exploration, challenge, and transformation, expressed through stone, ceramics, wire, felt, and more. Each sculpture reflects not only the card’s archetypal meaning, but the lived experience of creation itself. This journey has taught me presence, patience, humility, and trust. This is not a typical art show. It is a meditative experience, a sacred invitation to turn inward. Walk slowly. Let the work speak. You don’t need to “know” Tarot. Just listen. May you find something in this space that reflects your own path.
XIII Death
Soapstone and felted wool, 7h x20d x 20w in
Traditionally depicted as a skeleton or a shedding snake, Death speaks not only of endings, but of transformation. In this sculpture, a soapstone ram’s head stands in silent stillness—expressionless, unmoving, inevitable. Around it bloom felted poppies, ancient symbols of both death and renewal in Mexican tradition.
Together, they embody the paradox: loss and life entwined, beauty in what fades.
This is a crossing that cannot be undone. A chapter closes. Though it may bring sorrow or resistance, it also offers renewal. As trees return after winter, so too will you rise—changed, but alive.
Message: Let go. Grieve if you must, but don’t look back. What ends now is clearing the way for something far more true to who you are becoming.
XI Justice
Casted resin with bronze paint, ceramic sculpture, 5h x 13d x9w in
While Justice is often portrayed as a blindfolded woman with sword and scales, this piece draws upon ancient Egyptian myth to explore a deeper vision of balance and truth.
Here, the sculpture evokes the ritual of the afterlife—where the heart of the deceased is weighed against a feather from the wing of Isis, goddess of Justice. Outstretched arms offer both heart and feather to the cosmic scale, asking: Did this soul live in truth? May they pass into the afterworld?
This Justice is not of punishment, but of sacred measure—an eternal reminder that what we carry within must be light enough to rise.
Message: Own your choices. Act with integrity. Justice is being served, and you are being called to learn, to align, and to grow from what is revealed.