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Book of Days - 12 worm spun discs Installation

Elsabe Johnson Dixon

United States

Installation, Fabric on Carbon Fibre

Size: 12 W x 12 H x 1 D in

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About The Artwork

The installation consists of 12 disc's ( 12 inches round) initially spun by silkworms. Some layers were added by "fusing" silk spun fibers to the original silk spun ground. To spin a disc like any one of these represented in THE BOOK OF DAYS requires training three silkworms to spin flat over a period of three days and three nights. The silkworm survives the process. The pupa is carefully stored in a clean cardboard box and undergoes the full metamorphoses to moth. This process has been passed down in my family through French silk guilds dating back to the Middle Ages. This was a way in which silk growers could determine which silkworms spun a consistent silk filament. Those who spun consistent and even layers were held to the side for reproduction while inconsistent spinners were terminated. Participating in this coded process reminds me of generations of knowledge and the formats used to pass it down to today ( the digital age). Silk is stronger than steel and does not become brittle when frozen.

Details & Dimensions

Installation:Fabric on Carbon Fibre

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:12 W x 12 H x 1 D in

Shipping & Returns

Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

ARTIST STATEMENT: Elsabé Johnson Dixon Using new media, which often include live insects or insect detritus, opens up a powerful ecological dialogue in a postmodern world. Using research, fieldwork, and audience engagement, art objects produced in context can be witness to environmental change, disruption and actual physical data. All plant, organic, and artificial substances today reveal the DNA of our postmodern existence. Data, and lifecycle systems, pollutants, as well as disruptors, can all be discovered while working with a specific material at a specific time period in history. The work I produce in collaboration with silkworms, bees and now the Spotted Lanternfly, will provide ways of seeing – first and foremost- data and information about our environment at this time. I investigate the potential of object making or interactive environments, to record and hold specific data regarding disruptive events such as the invasive Spotted Lanternfly (which entered the United States in 2014 and systematically wreaks havoc on local agricultural food industries). The Spotted Lanternfly – Zones of Syncopation Project involved over 400 people, 12 community partners and offered a sustainable audience involvement. The only material used to build this project are wooden disks in built in Fibonacci sequence from 1 foot to 8 feet in diameter rounds/disk platforms and Lanternfly wings – collected by many over various stages of infestation from 2019 to 2023. Simple expandable structures like this have the ability to imbed a compelling eco story and the detritus that bears witness to these infestations and the destruction they cause, offer an environmental impact story that extends beyond the objects produced.

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