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23 Images That Reimagine History And Memory Through Destruction
Valerie Hegarty builds her work on that fragile edge between beauty and decay, creating sculptures and paintings that appear to be crumbling, melting, or collapsing right before your eyes. At first glance, her pieces resemble historical artifacts or classical artworks, but look closer, and you’ll find them unraveling, as if time itself had accelerated just for them.
Based in New York City, Hegarty explores memory, place, and history through a deeply tactile process. Using materials like wood, canvas, papier-mâché, and epoxy, she reconstructs familiar forms only to disrupt them, turning preservation into transformation. Her works don’t just reference the past; they question how we remember it, how we preserve it, and what happens when those structures begin to fall apart.
More info: valeriehegarty.com | Instagram
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Tulips In Vase With Branches
Sunset Ship Shell
A Conch shell appears to be turning into a painting of a boat sailing into the sunset, or the painting appears to be deteriorating and turning into a shell. I thought of this sculpture as being about the end of an empire, as the boat sinks into the dark hollow of the shell, it's history of colonization imprinted on the environment and archived in this hidden interior.
Moon Shell With Clipper Ship
A moon shell reveals the bow of a clipper ship, the ship’s sails matching the striations on the shell. The interior of the shell reveals a swirling blue sea where a clipper ship is circling as if going down the drain.
Hegarty’s practice often begins with something personal, but it quickly expands into a broader conversation with art history and current events. Her pieces echo traditional American paintings and antique objects, yet they are deliberately altered—burned, cracked, or overtaken by natural forces. This tension creates an uncanny effect, where viewers are caught between recognition and surprise.
One of her most intriguing approaches is what she calls “reverse archaeology.” Instead of digging into the past, Hegarty builds up layers, covering walls and surfaces with painted paper, only to scrape them away. The result is a kind of material memory, where traces of what once was remain embedded in the space, like echoes refusing to disappear.
Unique Handmade Edition Of 10 Of Reclining Shells
Clipper Ship With Conch Shell
A painting of a clipper ship appears to be turning into a conch shell or a conch shell is unraveling into a painting of a clipper ship. The beauty of the form belies a more sinister message about manifest destiny and colonization.
There’s also a quiet poetry in the way her materials behave. Foamcore bends, paint peels, structures sag—everything feels alive, as though the artwork itself is participating in its own undoing. In Hegarty’s world, nothing is fixed. Meaning shifts, surfaces deceive, and history becomes something fluid rather than permanent.
Emily Cole And Her Father, My Mother And Me
Cracked Canyon With Wall
Fog Warning With Barnacles
Fresh Start
Basket Of Flowers With Branches And Spiderwebs (Unravel)
First Harvest In The Wilderness With Woodpecker
Secrets Of The Sea Series: Conch Shell
George Washington Melted
Sinking Ship
Inspired by the current political climate and Edgar Allen Poe’s short story “The Malestrom”, half a clipper ship painting seems to have hit a storm and is falling off the edge of the painting frame (or the world) dripping water or paint on the floor. The materials of the painting are now turning into the structure of the boat, with the canvas becoming sails and the stretcher bars becoming a mast.
