Posts Tagged ‘thread’
Passing Through at Schema Projects in Bushwick
February 26, 2016
Passing Through, curated by Jeanne Heifetz, is a group show of artists who use thread, whether as dimensional line, to embody time, or to map the world’s hidden forces. 4 March – 10 April, 2016 Chris Arabadjis, Takeshi Arita, Emily Barletta, Emily Hass, Daniel G. Hill, Lorrie Fredette, Robert Lansden, Oriane Stender, Audrey Stone, August Ventimiglia, […]
2016 | News | Tags: Jeanne Heifetz, Schema Projects, thread
The Onward of Art at 1285 Avenue of the Americas Art Gallery
January 18, 2016
The Onward of Art: American Abstract Artists 80th Anniversary Exhibition, curated by Karen Wilkin is on view at 1285 Avenue of the Americas Art Gallery, January 18 – March 25, 2016. More info… See more work from this series
2016 | News | Tags: American Abstract Artists, circuit drawings, Karen Wilkin, The Onward of Art, thread
Endless, Entire Reviewed in Hyperallergic
December 11, 2015
Muddying the Circumscribed Myth of Abstraction by Alexis Clements “Daniel G. Hill’s ‘Wheatstone Bridge 7[a]’ (2015) at first seems to describe a simple layering of one form on the other, but soon you see not only the transparent sheets of vellum but also the thread through the surface that created the shapes. For me this realization […]
2015 | News | Tags: AAA, American Abstract Artists, circuit, duralar, Endless Entire, FiveMyles, mylar, polyester film, Rachel Nackman, thread, Wheatstone Bridge
Circuit Drawings, 2015
May 10, 2015
Circuit Drawings, 2015 The Wheatstone Bridge, invented by Samuel Hunter Christie in 1833 and improved and popularized by Charles Wheatstone in 1843, is a bridge circuit originally developed to measure resistance to direct current. It has also been used to measure impedance in alternating current circuits. Typically, the circuit is diagramed showing the bridge as […]
2015 | Work, Works on Paper | Tags: circuit, duralar, mylar, polyester film, thread, Wheatstone Bridge
10 Ways, 2015, a book project
March 23, 2015
10 Ways is a set of ten artist’s books created for an exhibition curated by Lorenza Sannai. Information about the exhibition can be found here. Each book measures 6 ½ x 4 ¾ inches and is made using one piece of thread in a single circuit.