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Strand 01, 2021, Silk and plant fibers on repurposed fishing net, 84 x 31 x 4 in.
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And Through the Wood, 2021, Plant and animal fibers
on repurposed leather horse fly nets with hames,
90 x 56 x 17 in.
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To Grandmother’s House, 2020, Plant and animal
fibers with mixed media on repurposed leather horse
fly nets with hame, 85 x 35 x 18 in.
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Portrait of A Woman in Love, 2021, Wool on repurposed rope
and canvas horse fly net, 54 x 17 x 6 in.
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Down Canyon, 2019, Wool on repurposed rope horse fly net,
32.5 x 22 x 5 in.
⬿Back to exhibition
Amy Usdin
Minnesota
Through needle-weaving and knotting, I create abstract mental and physical landscapes on
aging fiber artifacts—fly nets for horses and, more recently, fishing nets. The rope structures of these
nets act as warp, their ragged imperfections woven into the new. This transformation becomes part of a
continued narrative, informed by the familial moments and unexpected associations that their previous
lives evoke. By giving these once-functional nets new volume, I honor the revolving intersections of
past and present.
- Excerpt from artist statement
Click works to the left (on desktop) or below (on mobile) to view full-screen.
amyusdin.com︎ @amyusdin︎
Inquire︎
What
is your selection process like for the materials you choose for these works? Is
there anything you look for in a material or its previous use that makes it
particularly attractive for incorporating into a work?
I
look for worn nets that evoke a visceral
response, ones that hint at life
in their ropes in a way that draws out my own stories. Horses as social
creatures are capable of human-like feelings and, for me, their nets can hold
that emotion. Tattered
cotton fishing nets, reminiscent of those
made and mended for thousands of years, remind me past is woven to present. I
weave fine plant and animal fibers into these nets as an act of mending but
also to extend their narratives.
When
you began weaving, you were caring for your elderly father whose health was in
steep decline, and the act of tending to worn materials paralleled your
experience of caring for an ageing body. Do you consider your works to be
bodily in their forms?
I do. Much of my work is vaguely
garment-like, vaguely anthropomorphic. While my suspended pieces, grounded by dangling
rope, present bodily in scale and form, Portrait of a Woman in Love is my
most literal representation.
How
would you describe the way feelings of longing or nostalgia are part of these
works?
I
first began weaving as a teen in my parent’s basement. Reengaging after a
forty-year break—this time on nets—made me nostalgic. As muscle memory kicked
in, slowly moving the needle around the fixed ropes gave me space to begin to
process and reconcile a lifetime of memories, often with opposing degrees of wistfulness
and disillusionment. That dichotomy is present in my work—sometimes it’s
longing, sometimes the dissonance of nostalgia.
My
mother was selfless, sacrificing her health to care for my father. I see her in Portrait of a Woman in Love.
And
Through the Wood and To Grandmother’s House begin to dismantle that
joyful song about a holiday sleigh ride to grandma’s house. Holidays can be
rough in any case, but the pandemic pretty much ensured grandma was going to be
alone and that winter was going to be dark and cold.
These are the sorts of stories my fly nets carry.