Exhibit and Wayside Design
From million-dollar exhibits to one-off waysides, I find stories that speak and create exhibits that connect.
I have over a decade of experience in crafting indoor and outdoor exhibits for a wide range of organizations and at a variety of price points. I can help you find the story and bring it to your audience, no matter what the scope.
For the 150th anniversary of Lincoln’s assassination, Ford’s Theatre reunited the objects that became infamous that night, from Lincoln’s top hat to Booth’s gun, to the flag that cradled the President’s head for a landmark exhibit titled Silent Witnesses. I coordinated exhibit development and negotiated loans.
Scattered around the National Mall, a series of thirteen waysides explores the changing landscape of the nation’s capital. Working for the National Park Service, I wrote the content of each wayside and worked closely with both a graphic designer and a custom illustration to create stunning visual designs that married content to form.
A series of waysides in downtown Cloquet was a new partnership between the City of Cloquet and the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe. We put Ojibwe language first by using Ojibwe in the main text and English below, creating the need for visitors to seek out meaning for themselves.
The City of Red Wing added interpretation of the historic lime kiln built into the base of the beloved City landmark known as He Mni Can or Barn Bluff. I ensured a Dakota presence was incorporated into this very Western piece of the site’s history.