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New Nebula

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New Nebula

Artist Eduardo Portillo Venezuelan, Born 1966
Artist Mariá Eugenia Dávila Venezuelan, Born 1966
Date2017
Dimensions74 × 49 1/4 in. (188 × 125.1 cm)
MediumSilk,alpaca, moriche palm fiber dyed with Indigo, rumex spp., onion,eucalyptus, acid dyes, copper and metallic yarns
ClassificationTextiles and Fiber
Credit LineMrs. C. Lockhart McKelvy Fund
Object number
2018.53
Not on View
Published ReferencesBrowngrotta Arts, Still Crazy After All These Years...30 years in art, exhibition catalogue, Wilton, Connecticut, 2018.Label Text"We are interested in representing experiences in materials and processes that bear the imprint of people and places and reveal the relationships between people and their environments." Venezuelan husband-and-wife team Mariá Eugenia Dávila and Eduardo Portillo have taken an experimental approach to their artistic practice with fiber by merging global traditions of color, technique, and material into a unique body of work. The artists spent several years in China and India studying sericulture (silk farming), eventually establishing their own silk manufacture on a rural farm in Venezuela. Their exquisitely rendered textiles are a powerful symbol of the artists’ self-sufficient process that is intertwined with their respect for land, the materials that they utilize, and cultural traditions from around the world. New Nebula is an example of a woven “mosaic” from the couple’s Indigo series. It is intended as a metaphorical meditation on the passing moments of the day represented by the various colors present in the grid pattern. The harmonious blend of blues, yellows, browns, and grays invokes the warm afternoon Venezuelan sun.

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