Tag: Taylor De Cordoba Gallery

  • Threaded Fabrications: Jen Pack

    When I was taking painting courses in college, we were required to stretch our own canvases.  At first, I was pretty horrible at canvas stretching.. as in there were about a gazillion staples in each side of the canvas!  But eventually, I got my hands on a decent staple gun and came to appreciate the act of stretching a canvas as part of the creative process.  The stretching of textile collages over deep, geometric-shaped frames transforms stitched fabric and threads into strong and delicate sculptures for Colorado artist Jen Pack.

    I am a Cube by Jen Pack
    I am a Cube!, chiffon, thread, and wood, 58.5×58.5×3.5

    Some of Pack’s work, such as I am a Cube! ( above ) have a seemingly hard-edged sleekness to them, yet upon closer inspection, we see soft lines and gradations in the colored fabrics, giving the work a painterly feel.

    Domesticated Thread by Jen Pack
    Domesticated Thread, thread, chiffon, and wood, 59.5×35.5×3.5
    Scrap 1 by Jen Pack
    Scrap 1, chiffon, thread, and wood, 31.25x10x3.5

    Then in other pieces, Pack’s purpose seems to be one  of deconstruction, as in Domesticated Thread ( above ) and Purple, Yellow, and Green Toadstools ( below ).  Here, what we are met with seems to be an unraveling of the more “finished” and “structured” pieces. It’s almost as if someone pulled a loose thread, which caused the slow unraveling of each piece.

    Purple, Green, and Yellow Toadstools by Jen Pack
    Purple, Green, and Yellow Toadstools, thread, moshi fabric, cardboard tubes or pvc pipe, dimensions vary

    To see more of Jen Pack’s work, please visit her website.  If you’re in the Los Angeles area, you can see her solo show, UnQuiet Chroma at Taylor De Cordoba Gallery until December 15th!  Oh how I wish I was going to be able to get myself to L.A. this weekend!

  • Interconnected Brilliance: Hadley Holliday

    Interconnected Brilliance: Hadley Holliday

    I am not a knitter.  Nor do I crochet, weave or macrame.  I tried crocheting in my middle school Home Economics class and, let’s just say, I didn’t get it.    And all that knit 1, purl 2 stuff?  Just sounds like math to me, which is to be avoided at all costs.  But I love woven textiles.  There is such an innate beauty in the patterns and texture create.  Los Angeles artist Hadley Holliday’s exhibtion, Warp and Weft at Taylor De Cordoba Gallery is weaving together a caliedoscope of color and pattern.

    Sun Vault, acrylic on canvas, 63×63 ( via Taylor De Cordoba Gallery )

    She is exploring the worlds of space and depth and the illusions created by overlapping shapes and patterns.  There is a fantastic sense of movement and prismatic expanse to her paintings.

    Blissed Out, acrylic on canvas, 54×60 ( via Taylor De Cordoba Gallery )
    Zero Hour, acrylic on canvas, 36×42 ( via Taylor De Cordoba Gallery )

    They seem optically illusional in nature, yet there is also an organic quality to them, reminding me of the intersecting lines and orderly nature of a spider’s web.

    Sunshine Day and Night, acrylic on canvas, 54×60 ( via Taylor De Cordoba Gallery )

    To see more of Hadley Holliday’s work, please visit her website.  If you happen to be in Southern California, you can see Warp and Weft at Taylor De Cordoba Gallery only until this Saturday, April 7th.  So get moving and see it this week!

    Featured image is Sun Vault ( detail ), acrylic on canvas, 63×63.  All images are via the Taylor De Cordoba website.