Galaxy Assembly |
Galaxy Assembly, detail 1 |
The telescope in my quilt is made of hand stitched gold silk hexagons, with a gray silk depiction of the sun shield. The telescope and shield were engineered to fold up in order to fit in the rocket for launching, and once deployed it will slowly unfold and get set up for observation.
Galaxy Assembly, detail 2 |
The gold coating on the beryllium mirrors is a stunning example of form following function.
Galaxy Assembly, detail 3 |
The telescope will use infrared to see further, and further back in time, than is currently possible, so I was able to freely visualize the type of imagery that will be transmitted back to earth once it begins its missions.
Galaxy Assembly, detail 5 |
The telescope and vignettes are surrounded by handstitched hexagon shapes. I spent a lot of my pandemic anxiety obsessively stitching hexagon "flowers" in three different colorways and two different sizes, which I then auditioned on the background before joining them into the large panels for the quilts.
After the hexagons are all painstaking joined, it's time for the fast and fun paper removal process.
I've been obsessed with hexagons ever since working on my first JWST quilt, Luminosity.
In November of 2016 I was one of a group of 22 wonderfully diverse artists selected nationwide to attend the James Webb Space Telescope Artist Event at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, MD.
I had the opportunity to meet and interact with engineers, technicians and other team members from NASA's James Webb Space Telescope, the world's next-generation space observatory, tour Goddard's Integration and Test facility, see the world's largest clean room facility, and see the James Webb Space Telescope itself. I had time to sit in front of the mirror and create, which I spent hand stitching silk hexagons for my representation of the mirror. Back in the studio, I worked on creating a large art quilt, and documented the visit and the process on my blog. You can read about all things JWST in reverse chronological order by clicking the tab in the top header.
And in a nod to Luminosity, I had one of my images from that day printed up for the backing of the quilt.
Sue Reno, with Galaxy Assembly |
Galaxy Assembly is 40" square; I'm posing with it here to give you a sense of scale.
So what lies ahead for the artwork? The excitement will continue, as the artists involved in the original project are planning a virtual reality gallery, with scheduled tours and artists talks. I've played around the beta gallery, and it's really quite wonderful. I will update with dates and times, etc., in the new year as plans become available.
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1 comment:
Love your Galaxy Assembly art work!!! Hexes are wonderful and very relaxing to work on...your video's were interesting too! Love the paper removal!
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