![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjcYsziS5hc3wQKQHDZICDIc4NDhceVjlsH1eFi5leRZLCvfxTjvlHt5Ig5cnZf2IXuq12-6XyznkwdiE2wfAzxeHZ3EfGkvg1TxcW_4CotrVDbhZEcheJWmesLr_OjruVdt6VeDUI-yWQ/s400/valerieh1.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhz0X1FNi3jVPRLJsu4vOhFB-BUnVCF95Jgb1v5pGYJh5ndcWW3BwAV4qECOxbdZ1hnqq1o_UaZFifvXQDU3sq8EKIBAUb9MWMru-g4chXpulggmS4fUuJESh0SV5NfLI_JsRgyhYghyos/s400/valerieh2.jpg)
Valerie Hegarty's artwork is undergoing a transformation. Rather than simply depicting an experience - such as a landscape - her work is undergoing its own destructive experience, from shipwrecks to blazing fires. With every disaster there is a resilient fragment that remains, and it serves as the foundation for reconstruction and rebirth - and for a new experience to begin.
Above: Cracked Canyon 2007, Rothko Sunset 2007, Niagara Falls 2007
via designboom and MUSEO Magazine
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