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Fabricating Nature...

Wearable Art and More
Virtual Tour
Feb 19, 2022
LAUNCH
25th February
18:00 - 20:00
VENUE

Artizan Gallery

CLOSES
Mar 12, 2022

Featuring works of Rose Elliott

Fabricating Nature...

EXHIBITED ARTWORK
Fabricating Nature...

Artizan Gallery welcomes Rose Elliott to the gallery for a solo show in their Basement Gallery. Rose is a textile designer and artist, who has always tried to combine printed fabrics with unique paintings. She uses disperse dyes to paint on paper and then sublimates them onto fabric using a heat press - the result is a one-off full colour painting on fabric. Unique, malleable, colourfast, and durable.

Rose’s subject matter often comes from the natural world. The sheen achieved working on satins accentuates the surface of shells and fish, petals, wings and even a frog’s skin. She loves to grow plants and has a pond too, images of which she uses as reference – eg .the 'Oriental Poppies',' The Frog', 'The Tank', 'AKA Fish', 'Clematis' etc

The watercolours in the show: ‘Petalscape Pink’ and ‘Petalscape Blue 2’ are an exploration of some of these images, using a much larger scale and focussing in on detail, using paint much as she uses the dyes, working on wet paper to form hard edges which merge into soft highlights and deep shadows. There is also a series of more abstract images on fabric using sprays and cut out images looking at how that medium can be stretched: 'Gulls on Black Waves', 'Zig-Zag', 'Sea Haze' etc.

Rose will have her portfolio on display in the exhibition which gives insight into previous work from when she lived in London, with a studio for many years in Camden Lock. There she designed garments, footwear, ties and more, often hand painted and handprinted - ‘Wearable Art’. It’s a theme that Rose has returned to in the last couple of years. The pandemic inspired the making of masks, working with colleague Kristina Coles - see ‘Mask Story So Far’ and the two ‘Mask Collages’.’ The size limitation allowed me to paint mini paintings - plus they are useful which I love - ‘Wearable Art’.’

The ‘Seascape’. ‘Poppy’ and ‘Koi’ silk tops evolved after experimenting painting wet silk direct - again using photographs as reference. ‘The process is quite liberating but scary as each brush stroke is immediately permanent, but the result is more ‘Wearable Art’.’

Exhibiting Artists

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