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Media: Thread, Silk, Natural & hand-dyed Shetland wool

This textile drawing utilizes a sewing machine as a drawing tool to create a thread work that incorporates a thin layer of silk and natural, as well as hand-dyed, Shetland wool from the artist's family farm. This approach reflects a contemporary approach to Midwestern regionalism by combining historical and modern textile practices.

Through the use of wool from her rural farm, these works become acts of labor not only of the artist, but of multiple generations that have cared for the animals and have passed on knowledge of how to prepare and work with wool fibers. Thus, this style of work includes a true cradle-to-grave material and process, rare in our modern age.

The imagery references memories and the environment of the artist's rural upbringing in Missouri. Phrases like "mind's eye," and "window to the soul" were references in titling this series. 

Actual textile dimensions are 26 x 26 x 1/16," 27 x 27 x 2" framed in a float frame with a distressed gold front and black sides.
Media: Thread, Silk, Natural & hand-dyed Shetland wool

This textile drawing utilizes a sewing machine as a drawing tool to create a thread work that incorporates a thin layer of silk and natural, as well as hand-dyed, Shetland wool from the artist's family farm. This approach reflects a contemporary approach to Midwestern regionalism by combining historical and modern textile practices.

Through the use of wool from her rural farm, these works become acts of labor not only of the artist, but of multiple generations that have cared for the animals and have passed on knowledge of how to prepare and work with wool fibers. Thus, this style of work includes a true cradle-to-grave material and process, rare in our modern age.

The imagery references memories and the environment of the artist's rural upbringing in Missouri. Phrases like "mind's eye," and "window to the soul" were references in titling this series. 

Actual textile dimensions are 26 x 26 x 1/16," 27 x 27 x 2" framed in a float frame with a distressed gold front and black sides.
There is a companion piece available if a diptych effect is desired.
Media: Thread, Silk, Natural & hand-dyed Shetland wool

This textile drawing utilizes a sewing machine as a drawing tool to create a thread work that incorporates a thin layer of silk and natural, as well as hand-dyed, Shetland wool from the artist's family farm. This approach reflects a contemporary approach to Midwestern regionalism by combining historical and modern textile practices.

Through the use of wool from her rural farm, these works become acts of labor not only of the artist, but of multiple generations that have cared for the animals and have passed on knowledge of how to prepare and work with wool fibers. Thus, this style of work includes a true cradle-to-grave material and process, rare in our modern age.

The imagery references memories and the environment of the artist's rural upbringing in Missouri. Phrases like "mind's eye," and "window to the soul" were references in titling this series. 

Actual textile dimensions are 26 x 26 x 1/16," 27 x 27 x 2" framed in a float frame with a distressed gold front and black sides.
Media: Thread, Silk, Natural & hand-dyed Shetland wool

This textile drawing utilizes a sewing machine as a drawing tool to create a thread work that incorporates a thin layer of silk and natural, as well as hand-dyed, Shetland wool from the artist's family farm. This approach reflects a contemporary approach to Midwestern regionalism by combining historical and modern textile practices.

Through the use of wool from her rural farm, these works become acts of labor not only of the artist, but of multiple generations that have cared for the animals and have passed on knowledge of how to prepare and work with wool fibers. Thus, this style of work includes a true cradle-to-grave material and process, rare in our modern age.

The imagery references memories and the environment of the artist's rural upbringing in Missouri. Phrases like "mind's eye," and "window to the soul" were references in titling this series. 

Actual textile dimensions are 26 x 26 x 1/16," 27 x 27 x 2" framed in a float frame with a distressed gold front and black sides.

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View In My Room

Mind's Window: GROW No. 2 Drawing

Rachelle Gardner-Roe

United States

Drawing, Textile on Soft (Yarn, Cotton, Fabric)

Size: 68.6 W x 68.6 H x 5.1 D cm

Ships in a Crate

SOLD
Originally listed for $3,550

413 Views

23

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link - Artist featured in a collection

Artist featured in a collection

ABOUT THE ARTWORK
DETAILS AND DIMENSIONS
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Media: Thread, Silk, Natural & hand-dyed Shetland wool This textile drawing utilizes a sewing machine as a drawing tool to create a thread work that incorporates a thin layer of silk and natural, as well as hand-dyed, Shetland wool from the artist's family farm. This approach reflects a contemporar...

Year Created:

2019

Subject:
Mediums:

Drawing, Textile on Soft (Yarn, Cotton, Fabric)

Rarity:

One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:

68.6 W x 68.6 H x 5.1 D cm

Ready to Hang:

Not Applicable

Frame:

Gold

Authenticity:

Certificate is Included

Packaging:

Ships in a Crate

Delivery Cost:

Shipping is included in price.

Delivery Time:

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

Returns:

14-day return policy. Visit our help section for more information.

Handling:

Ships in a wooden crate for additional protection of heavy or oversized artworks. Artists are responsible for packaging and adhering to Saatchi Art’s packaging guidelines.

Ships From:

United States.

Need more information?

Need more information?

Artist Statement My work melds my Midwestern rural roots with a multi-media practice including fibers, sculpture and drawing. The intention is to foster a curiosity and love of the natural world through exuberant color and imagery. Often resulting in a maximalist “where’s Waldo” smorgasbord of the natural world, I entice the viewer to keep exploring. This opens the door to conversations around native species, conservation, and caring for the Earth. In the face of the crippling effect of apocalypse fatigue, I hope to start that conversation from a point of love and awe. My work also embraces the figure, as the goal is ultimately to reposition our sense of being “of nature,” as opposed to the modern sense of being separate from it. This work is also indelibly impacted by a long-standing meditation practice, and a desire to integrate a deeply personal practice with the day-to-day work in the studio. In terms of process and technique, drawing is most often the primary act, even if executed outside the route of traditional pencil on paper. Despite using layered processes, I want the viewer to be able to connect to my work on a fundamental level and drawing acts as both an accessible and primal point of entry. In some work, I write poetry with a 3D printing pen, building layers to create sculptural works, so that words become drawing. In my fiber work, I describe creating imagery with thread and a sewing machine as the inverse of drawing, stitched on a painterly field of hand-dyed wool from the Gardner family farm. This melding of drawing and sculpture with fibers is also a means of recontextualizing “women’s work.” Blending historical craft and the generational passing down of knowledge with contemporary practice grounds my work, connecting my rural roots with the here and now. Artist Biography Rachelle Gardner-Roe has been working as an artist in the Kansas City area since the mid-2000s. She grew up in the rural countryside outside of Adrian, MO, on the native land of the Osage, Kickapoo, Kaskaskia and Sioux tribes. She received a Bachelors in Interior Architecture from Kansas State University in 2004. This background in design allowed her to explore various media through a lifelong interest in the fine arts. Her emphasis in furniture design influenced her path in sculpture while her family’s fateful adoption of three sheep in the 1990s led to a herd and eventually a journey down the road of fibers and a practice rooted in the land.

Artist Recognition
Artist featured in a collection

Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection

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