Title: Sheila Hicks
1Sheila Hicks
- Sheila Hicks is an internationally recognized
artist. She was born in Hastings, Nebraska and
received her BFA and MFA degrees from Yale
University. Upon completing her studies at Yale
Hicks received a Fulbright scholarship in 1957 to
paint in Chile.
2- While studying painting under the Bauhaus
professor Josef Albers, but when a pre-Columbian
textile course captured her attention, he took
her home to meet his wife, Anni, a noted weaver.
At his suggestion, she applied for a Fulbright
scholarship to South America and spent the first
few years of her weaving life journeying through
Venezuela, Bolivia, Peru and Chile, and back
north to Mexico. It was in Chile where she began
her passion for working with fibers. In India she
worked in a handloom factory producing commercial
textiles.
3- Since then, Hicks has founded several production
facilities which use traditional methods in
Mexico, Chile and South Africa and has set up a
studio in Paris, the Ateliers des Grand
Augustins. She divides her time between Paris and
New York while teaching and working worldwide.
Over the past fifty years, she has produced a
number of large art commissions - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vSTX5tdW6A4ofeature
related
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5Sheila Hicks, Saint-Jean-de-Dieu. 1973.
Wrapping of linen with cotton and silk, 5 x
63.
6Sheila Hicks The Silk Rainforest ca. 1975 silk,
linen, and cotton 96 x 270 x 3 in. (243.8 x 685.8
x 7.6 cm) Smithsonian American Art Museum
7Sheila Hicks. Macro-Tissage. 1974. White linen
9 x 9
8- Although she is best known for her role in the
international fiber revolution that transformed
textiles into a 3D art during the 1960s and 1970s
Sheila Hicks contribution extends far beyond
that historical moment. The book, Weaving as a
Metaphor, examines a singular aspect of her
practice, situating her small weavings in the
context of philosophy and of contemporary art and
design, explain the authors in the books
foreword. With their distinctive colors,
thoughtful compositions and narrative, Hicks
miniature creations reveal the emergence and
continuity of the artists approach to her work.
9- For 50 years Ms. Hicks has taken a small wooden
frame around the globe to create notebook size
weavings of the intimate kind. These pieces
started when she was an art student at Yale. By
her own estimate she has made more than 1000 of
them. Ms. Hicks has referred to the miniatures as
personal expressions, private investigations
and also to lighten matters, ramblings. These
pieces have informed her conceptual ideas,
material explorations and large scale
commissions. Sheila Hicks, 2004
10Rue des Marronniers, Made in Paris, 1973Alpaca
and Silk, Collection of Monique Levi-Strauss
- "I found my voice and my footing in my small
work. It enabled me to build bridges between art,
design, architecture, and decorative arts." -
Sheila Hicks
11What at first glance appears to be a simple woven
sample, is anything but. There a number of
different weaving strategies and scales at work
in these misleadingly small pieces.
- Sheila Hicks Cicatrices 1968
- Silk, mohair
12Much of her work deals with weaving inspiration
that she has accrued from a number of different
cultures around the world. This does not mean
that she merely copies the traditional work of
these cultures. She uses the style and
construction of a particular culture as a
starting point in which to pursue her own
individual and personally creative work.
- Sheila Hicks Olympic Bravery 1979
13- Grand Portal
- Cotton, Linen SIZE h 9.5 x w 8.5 in / h
24.1 x w 21.6 cm 1945-present) Made in morocco
1972
14- Nina Nina,
- Made in Cour de Rohan, Paris, 2005Cotton and Wool
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16- In Weaving as a Medaphor, Arthur Danto discusses
the kingly art of weaving and what one might
call the art of justice, as discussed by Plato in
The Republic, there aim was to find what kind of
virtue justice was harmonizing the other virtues
in the interest of producing unity.
17Now we have reached the appointed end of weaving
of the web of the state. It is fashioned by the
statesman's weaving the strand run true, and
these strands are the genital and the brave. Here
these strands are woven into a unified character.
For this unity is won where the kingly art draws
the life or both types into a true fellowship by
mutual concord and by ties of friendship. It is
the finest and best fabric.
- Sheila Hicks, Phare dAcier
- Made in Brittany, France 2003
- Linen, cotton , stainless steel
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19- Linen Lean-To', Sheila Hicks, tapestry
bas-relief, 196768.The artist conceived the work
in 196768 after a winter trip to Normandy,
France, where she saw houses with snow piled high
on the roofs. She successfully re-creates the
effect of this compelling sight with a totally
unsuspected material.
20- Sheila Hicks was one of the early artist to
introduce the idea of using masses of clothing to
stand in for human counter parts. Hicks laid out
her work in in an orderly configuration creating
a social wall of cloth, a social commentary. The
unit of cloth are her building block, the
commonality of the human experience.
21Shelia Hicks, Street Environment, 1978.
Montreuil, France, Shirts and rope.
- Hicks began her environments installations in
1974 using mended sheets and darned socks. - Hicks used emotional charged, ready-made items of
daily use hospital gowns, cotton army shirts,
old womens blouses. - She used recycled material to suggest recycled
lives.
22Shelia Hicks with Khaki Uniforms Immobilized
(United States, Europe, and Middle East),
1985-86. Cotton army shirts, 252 x252. Installed
at the Milwaukee art Museum, Wisconsin. These
uniforms suggest the ordered world of
multinational forces- or the world made orderly
by multinational forces.
23The Four Seasons of Fuji 1999Fuji City
Cultural Center, Japan2.60 x 103 meters, five
tons of linen thread
24- Known for her use of distinctive colors,
experimental and natural materials, and personal
narratives, these intriguing weavings reveal the
emergence and continuity of the artists
inventive approach to textile media, and aunique
connection between the artistic and design
aspects of textiles. Her work is diverse,
switching between miniatures and gigantic. Using
a portable frame loom of her own design, Hicks
employs a remarkably broad range of materials as
well, such as cotton, wool, linen, silk, goat
hair, alpaca, paper, leather, stainless steel,
and found objects. All of which she turns into
woven works of considerable beauty and intricate
detail.
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