Masiakasaurus

2020, digital – Masiakasaurus Headshot, Upper Cretaceous, Madagascar, © Macalester College

This illustration is one of many works resulting from a multi-year collaboration with geologist Raymond Rogers and paleobiologist Kristina Curry Rogers. The series, titled Raising the Dead: Bringing Fossil Ecosystems to Life, aimed to envision ancient environments and long-extinct species with digitally drawn “prehistoric polaroids”.

Kristi, Ray, and Jordan worked through an iterative process to bring these fossil worlds to life.  They began with the hard science of published papers and ongoing research, choosing the animals and plants to feature in vignettes, small scenes that capture messages about the lives of the various animals.  Once the anatomical details for an animal were in place in a sketch, the group would play with color and skin texture to settle on a ‘look’ – occasionally for juveniles, males, and females, and occasionally for just a single individual, often drawing inspiration from living relatives.  Then the scene would come to life, as they considered the time of day, weather, and moment through each season season.  The scientific literature along with recent discoveries by Ray and Kristi provided details on vegetation, and on interactions between animals in different scenes. 

Dive into these fossil worlds, and use your imaginations to continue to bring them to life for yourselves.  What would it have sounded like?  What would the water temperature have been?  What might it have smelled like? These are the unknowns that infuse the pieces with even more life, and more individuality.  

© Macalester College 2021

Masiakasaurus knopfleri is a meat-eating theropod dinosaur. Here, Masiakasaurus is snacking on one of it’s Cretaceous compatriots, the soccer ball-sized, giant frog called Beezlebufo, “the devil frog.”

Ray Rogers

David B. Jones Foundation

2021, digital – DBJ Logo

“The David B. Jones Foundation is a private foundation. It was established in May 1998 to make grants to domestic 501 (c)(3) organizations in furtherance of educational, research, and charitable activities working in the science of paleontology who primarily promote those activities within the United States of America.”

Custom logo design

Completed on May 10, 2021

Don’t Tread on Me

2023, digital – Don’t Tread on Me

Don’t Tread on Me took nearly a year to complete and was made public on the anniversary of the Overturning of Roe v. Wade. As this is a piece layered with visual meaning, the artist invites you to extrapolate using your own research and offers starting resources with the buttons below.

Harris’ featured work explores the unique non-binary female experience in the wake of Roe v. Wade’s overturn. This piece, entitled Don’t Tread on Me, is a visual echo of the artist’s process through anguish, fury, and grief to a point of healing. It provides a guide to decipher these emotions and offers a path for self-recovery and solace in an increasingly politicized world. Harris’ work highlights the duality of inner strife and the quiet of nature, whilst advocating for defiant peace in the face of global turmoil.

Artist’s Statement

Personal Work

Completed on June 24, 2023