ORDOVAS Stitched Press-Release
ORDOVAS Stitched Press-Release
ORDOVAS Stitched Press-Release
London
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Stitched, on display at Ordovas on Savile Row from 7 June until 30 July 2022, explores the ambitious,
versatile and radical use of stitches in works by twentieth-century and contemporary artists including
Alighiero Boetti, Tracey Emin, Sheila Hicks, Do Ho Suh, Henry Moore, Joana Vasconcelos and Francesco
Vezzoli.
The exhibition presents sixteen artworks executed in a range of mediums and with a variety of
techniques, from modernist practices that challenge hierarchies of high and low, to fibre art that
transforms weaving into a sculptural endeavour, to feminist works that challenge stereotypes around
craft and domesticity.
The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue with an essay by art historian Maddy
Henkin. Stitched is the first in a series of exhibitions to be held at Ordovas that explores different
techniques in twentieth-century and contemporary art, often used in unexpected ways.
The two earliest works in the show were both inspired by applications of thread to new technologies. In
Henry Moore’s Stringed Figure, conceived in 1939, yellow threads weave through a biomorphic object
creating complex shapes that twist and bend. The artist began creating stringed sculptures in 1937 after
seeing mathematical models at the Science Museum in London. These provided a new way of seeing
for Moore, who had long been exploring abstract forms with careful manipulation of intersections,
abutments, and negative spaces between figures. In the 1960s, Moore recalled ‘[…] it wasn't the
scientific study of these models but the ability to look through the strings as with a bird cage and see
one form within the other which excited me.’
Lenore Tawney’s Untitled, 1965, focuses specifically on textile technology while also exploring the
connection between weaving and computers. In 1964, Tawney visited a textile factory where she first
encountered and was enchanted by a Jacquard loom, a nineteenth-century invention which used punch
cards to mechanise the weaving process, and which was critical in the development of computer
programming. Her meticulous ink drawings capture the exploded three-dimensional threads of the
industrial loom. Tawney translated these drawings into threaded sculptural works some forty years later
with the 'Drawings in Air' series, including Drawing in Air VIII, which is featured in the exhibition.
Tracey Emin knowingly embraces the personal, domestic, and feminine hobbyist practices of
needlepoint and appliqué in the creation of her textile works. Sewing and quilt-making have been
integral to the artist’s practice since her first solo show at White Cube in 1993.
Sheila Hicks is one of the most innovative and accomplished artists in the medium; her first major
UK retrospective is currently on view at the Hepworth Wakefield (until 25 September 2022). Having
originally begun her career as a painter, she started to explore textiles in the 1950s and has since
become renowned for her sculptural works which display her fascination with colour, form and texture.
The exhibition includes Treasured Moments which was executed in linen, cotton and synthetic fibres in
2021.
The exhibition includes works by Alighiero Boetti and Joana Vasconcelos, both of which display
meticulous needlework and refined craftsmanship that has been outsourced to skilled artisans. Boetti
employed Afghan embroiderers to produce works such as Tra l’Incudine e il Martello, developing the
concept of a work and entrusting its execution to others, continuing the legacy of 1960s conceptualism
that is the foundation of his career. In Haendel, Vasconcelos used famed crochet rosettes made by
Azores lacemakers to cover a ceramic lizard by Rafael Bordallo Pinheiro. Each represents a high point
of national artistic pride, and together they are transformed into resplendent sculpture. While both
Boetti and Vasconcelos effectively celebrate the handmade, it is in the context of economic value,
labour costs and internationally circulating goods that these fineries take on their full symbolic meaning
beyond a celebration of the artisanal.
The American critic Arthur Danto argued that weaving is a foundational metaphor in Western philosophy
dating to the classical Greek tradition. Nina Katchadourian’s 'Mended Spiderwebs' series echoes Ovid’s
tale of Arachne, the proud mortal who challenges the goddess Athena at her own art of weaving;
jealous of Arachne’s superior product, Athena transforms her into spider. In 1998, Katchadourian
searched for damaged spiders' webs in the forest around her house and repaired them with red sewing
thread and glue. Within hours, the threads could be found left lying on the ground as the spiders
rejected her efforts and made their own repairs. Katchadourian’s photographs document the ephemeral
installations, while the exhibition also includes a Do-It-Yourself Spiderweb Repair Kit.
In Do Ho Suh’s celebrated 'Specimen' series, the Korean-born artist creates intricately detailed
sculptures of household objects from translucent coloured polyester fabric, including chairs, fridges,
sinks and ovens, exploring our connection to physical space. The exhibition will include Bathtub,
Apartment A, 348 West 22nd Street, New York, NY 10011, USA, a striking sculpture executed in
diaphanous blue polyester fabric in 2013, which meticulously recreates the bathtub from his New York
City apartment.
Francesco Vezzoli’s An Embroidered Trilogy is from a celebrated series of short films that connect
the history of cinema and embroidery. Layered with in-jokes for the Hollywood-obsessed, the artist
makes a cameo appearance in each video, stitching a portrait of the film’s subjects (Mario Praz, Silvana
Mangano, and Douglas Sirk, respectively). Placed within his own scenes, Vezzoli undermines his
authority as an auteur, becoming a hobbyist. Vezzoli developed each film around an avid embroiderer,
using needlework as a structuring device.
The exhibition also includes Untitled, 1992, one of the celebrated series of knitted wool paintings by
Rosemarie Trockel; Myrrha, 2022, by Koushna Navabi, the Iranian-born artist whose work includes a
strong emphasis on textile, embroidery and knitting; and Untitled (red coat, construction) and Untitled
(plaid pattern, construction) by James Castle, the self-taught American artist who was born deaf and
used art as a key medium of expression, creating artworks from found materials.