Using a wide range of materials, including steel, concrete, books, driftwood, peacock feathers, seashells, and foam, Bove is perhaps best known for her large-scale sculptures, which she has described as "big, heavy, but fragile." Her sculptures are often displayed outside or in public spaces. For example, the steel and petrified wood sculpture
Lingam was installed in
City Hall Park in New York as part of the 2016 summer group exhibition,
The Language of Things, while Bove’s 2013 show,
Caterpillar, featured seven large-scale sculptures specifically created for the
High Line at the Rail Yards in New York. Earlier works by Bove range in form and medium from ink drawings of nude women taken from vintage
Playboy magazines to sculptures composed of curated bookshelves featuring volumes from the 1960s and 70s. In past exhibitions, Bove has also included the work of other artists in her installations. In a 2007 show at Maccarone, she presented work by the artist
Bruce Conner, Berkeley book dealer Philip Smith, and painter Wilfred Lang. Similarly, Bove designed her 2014 installation,
Setting for A. Pomodoro, which features a baroque assemblage of driftwood, peacock feathers, pedestals, and bases, as a setting for a sculpture by the Italian Modernist
Arnaldo Pomodoro. Every time the installation has been exhibited, it has featured a different Pomodoro sculpture. In 2016, after working from a studio in
Red Hook, Brooklyn for many years, Bove moved her practice to a 15,000-square-foot space within a former brick factory near the
Brooklyn waterfront. ==Exhibitions==