• portfolio
  • artist statement
  • curriculum vitae
  • story
  • contact
Menu

Renae Barnard

  • portfolio
  • artist statement
  • curriculum vitae
  • story
  • contact
×

WTP Central Studio Tour: Renae Barnard

sarah@sarahbarnard.com May 14, 2018

Studio Tour: Renae Barnard

The Studio Tour series offers an inside peek into the work environments of WTP artists, as well as insight into their creative process within these resonate spaces.

By Jennifer Nelson, WTP Feature Writer

Renae Barnard is recognized by the United States Green Building Council (USGBC) as a Leadership in Energy Accredited Professional (LEED AP) and by the International Institute for Bau-biologie® & Ecology as a Building Biologie Practitioner. She has recently completed projects in cooperation with the National Immigration Law Center and the City of Santa Monica Department of Cultural Affairs. She is a recipient of the Sue Arlen Walker and Harvey M. Parker Memorial Fellowship, the Armory Center for the Arts Teaching Artist Fellowship, The Ahmanson Annual Fellowship, Lincoln Fellowship Award, and Christopher Street West Art and Culture Grant.

For Renae Barnard, her studio is on the go. She weaves in her lap; bowls of salt mixture are evaporating on her front porch; she may rent out temporary spaces around Los Angeles as her projects require. For her most recent public work, at Bergamot Station, Santa Monica, California, she shared space with other artists in a large commercial building in Boyle Heights. “Sharing space with other artists on a short-term basis allows me the access to equipment I may need,” she says, “like a spray room, wood shop, or kiln without the financial burden of permanent overhead.”

Nevertheless, she faces challenges when sharing space, the main one in Los Angeles, not having a parking space. This meant that Barnard had to haul sculpture materials down a sidewalk to a metered parking space. “It’s not always the most convenient, but it’s manageable,” she says.

For two years, her studio was a tiny white box in Claremont, a city thirty miles east of Los Angeles, where she kept weaving and sewing materials, as well as tripods for her photography. Many of the materials were incorporated into works such as “Displaced Tinder,” a sculpture of twisted medical exam paper wound around school chairs.

With time, she has realized form through repetitive movements like weaving, sewing, and twisting motions. Now she is experimenting with other modes of accumulating form, including a series of fiber sculptures of cotton batting, upholstery foam, and polyester fiberfill scraps discarded by furniture manufacturers. These materials are supplemented with water-based paints by Dunn Edwards, salt, water-based glues, and vinegar. “I’m interested in the ways in which basic chemistry might create form beyond those achievable with my hands,” says Barnard.

To work, Barnard requires silence and solitude. She doesn’t want music, visitors, or lingering clutter. Her process is generally exploratory, allowing room for discovery along the path and at the finish. There’s an undercurrent of chaos that she’s always wrestling with. The outcome is not a literal display of the problem, nor is it offering a solution. It is a record of the thought process and the struggle: “I’m interested in examining our situations and hopefully moving beyond the place where we stand now.”

See Renae Barnard’s work in 

Vol. VI #4

. 

Copyright 2018 Woven Tale Press LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Tags fabric sculpture, fiber artist, knotted sculpture, paper art, queer art, soft sculpture, textile artist, women art exhibition, women art show, women artist, women artists, women's art los angeles, women's art, fiber art, fiber work, fiber art exhibition, recycled artists, recycled art, recycled art materials, recycled sculpture, recycled art practice, ecological artist, ecological art, eco-friendly art, sustainable art, sustainable artist, responsible art, responsible artist, environmental art, environmental artist, textile art, textile arts los angeles, textile sculpture, textile slam, textile sculptures, los angeles textile arts, bowerbird, love is greater than shelter, los angeles textile artist, fiber sculpture, Los Angeles fiber artist, fiber installation art, Los Angeles Installation art, artist talks, artist talks los angeles, California textile artist, california fiber artist, california sculptor, california installation artist, waste reduction, low waste artwork, sustainable sculpture, sustainable textile, sustainable art practice, site specific art installation, site specific sculpture, site specific textile artwork, site specific art los angeles, social engagement, textured art, textured paintings, Studio visit, studio tour, los angeles studio tour
← The Woven Tale Press Art Spotlight: Renae BarnardRenae Barnard Open Studio - May 27, 2018 →

Search Posts

 

Featured Posts

Featured
Oct 18, 2021
Oct 18, 2021
Love > Shelter : Sculpture, Bowerbirds and Gender Performance
Oct 18, 2021
Oct 18, 2021
Oct 18, 2021
Oct 18, 2021
Aug 27, 2021
Aug 27, 2021
Tricksters and Transformations: Textile Arts Los Angeles Exhibition
Aug 27, 2021
Aug 27, 2021
Aug 27, 2021
Aug 27, 2021
Aug 23, 2021
Aug 23, 2021
Opening Reception: The Happiness You Deserve at Adams Square Park
Aug 23, 2021
Aug 23, 2021
Aug 23, 2021
Aug 23, 2021
Aug 20, 2021
Aug 20, 2021
Fiber-based Artwork: Connections Between Environment, Perception, and Well-being.
Aug 20, 2021
Aug 20, 2021
Aug 20, 2021
Aug 20, 2021
Jun 2, 2021
Jun 2, 2021
The Happiness You Deserve: A site specific installation at Adams Square Mini Park
Jun 2, 2021
Jun 2, 2021
Jun 2, 2021
Jun 2, 2021
Nov 10, 2020
Nov 10, 2020
Creativity and Activism—How We Are Growing the Green New Deal
Nov 10, 2020
Nov 10, 2020
Nov 10, 2020
Nov 10, 2020
Dec 18, 2019
Dec 18, 2019
Mindful and Meaningful: Exploring the Synergetic Relationship of Textile Waste and Fine Art Practice
Dec 18, 2019
Dec 18, 2019
Dec 18, 2019
Dec 18, 2019
Nov 21, 2019
Nov 21, 2019
Mindful and Meaningful Preview at Textile Arts Final 2019 Textile Slam
Nov 21, 2019
Nov 21, 2019
Nov 21, 2019
Nov 21, 2019
Oct 19, 2019
Oct 19, 2019
Special Dinner Event: Textile Slam!
Oct 19, 2019
Oct 19, 2019
Oct 19, 2019
Oct 19, 2019
Sep 21, 2019
Sep 21, 2019
Love > Shelter: S.C.R.A.P. Gallery's Art of the Shack + Smithsonian Museum Day
Sep 21, 2019
Sep 21, 2019
Sep 21, 2019
Sep 21, 2019

Powered by Squarespace