time flies

Quilting and fabrics connect to a rich history of fem makers. This piece, Time Flies, references work by the hand, and imagination as a form of freedom from bodily limitations. Specifically, the hourglass quilt blocks refer simultaneously and materially to the quilting tradition, to the passage of time, and to the expectations of female bodies in society. The reflective fabric symbolizes my childhood pool where I experienced a desire to escape from societal expectations. Time Flies addresses aspects of fem existence in culture as a material and temporal reality.

Medium
Iridescent fabric, quilt batting, weights, yarn

Year
2020

symbolism

The initial idea for the construction of these large wings came from a recurring dream, based on a memory from my childhood. In the dream, I am in my backyard, looking down into my grandma’s swimming pool – the water is blue-green and rippling – I want nothing more than to jump into the water. Suddenly, I'm looking down upon my home with the ability to propel forward, upward and downward at will. This dream is where I have experienced my closest feeling to true freedom, and the pool a catalyst for discovery, reflection, and rebellion.

Wings

For me, wings are a symbol of freedom in life and in death. I grew up in a Christian town and around representations of angels as figures that were meant to guide us - and as representations of what we would become when we passed on. I find significance in using a symbol based in reality (a wing) to represent a (human) experience that does not exist - the experience of flying, or of death. 
 
Quilting

I find agency in quilting because it has historically been a medium in which women express creativity and views (from a home space), especially in times when we had very little say in anything. During my time in quarantine and throughout this pandemic, I have begun to think more critically about the passing of time, how quickly or slowly things can change, and the relationship that I have with my home space; past and present.  ​

As a queer feminine person and a contemporary artist, I have received discrimination using my body as a means to belittle my accomplishments and ability to succeed; suggesting that I need to get married, have a child before the age of 35, and that I would never be able to sustain an art career while taking care of a “family." I was to “enjoy it while it lasted.” 

Hourglass

When I began to research quilting, I became drawn to many of the traditional quilt blocks that have a long history in American quilting and quilting around the world. I wanted to use the general idea of the traditional “Hourglass” block design.The hourglass refers simultaneously to time within the human experience - individual and public, and to a womxn’s "preferred" shape (within society) as well as symbolize the “preferred” “time-window” for childbearing that is sometimes connected to the worth of a fem body.world. Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.

PROCESS

PROCESS