Art
#chains
#ribbon
#rope
#sculpture
#tapestry
#textiles
Industrial Materials and Rugged Topographies Converge in Jacqueline Surdell’s Knotted Tapestries
July 29, 2021
Grace Ebert
Chicago-based artist Jacqueline Surdell sutures lengths of rope, fabric, and silky ribbons into sprawling abstract tapestries that hang from walls and standalone armatures in textured, colorful masses. Swelling clusters of knots and ties, loose weaves, braided tunnels, and dangling strands compose her three-dimensional compositions that are disrupted by sporadically used items like steel chains, volleyballs, and polyester shower curtains. Because of the scale of the pieces and the hefty materials, the artist often uses her body as a shuttle to weave the brightly colored fibers together on massive hand-built looms.
Surdell embeds parts of her Chicago upbringing in her wall sculptures, especially childhood memories of her grandmother’s landscape paintings and her grandfather’s job in South Side steel mills. These two experiences converge in her textured works by evoking vast terrains and the city’s industrial history through her use of commercial materials. Each piece offers further reflections on today’s world, with energetic and chaotic pieces like “We Will Win: Our Banner in the Sky” (shown above) responding to the fraught political landscape in the U.S. and destructive events like wildfires and loss of coral reefs sparked by the climate crisis.
You can find more of Surdell’s large-scale tapestries on her site, and head to Instagram to see her latest work-in-progress.
#chains
#ribbon
#rope
#sculpture
#tapestry
#textiles
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This article comes from the Internet:Industrial Materials and Rugged Topographies Converge in Jacqueline Surdell’s Knotted Tapestries