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Renae Barnard

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Mindful and Meaningful: Exploring the Synergetic Relationship of Textile Waste and Fine Art Practice

Sarah Barnard December 18, 2019

I'm excited to share with you a special evening event of artist lead conversations, cocktails, and hors d'oeuvres at the historic Helms Bakery District Design Center hosted by Textile Arts Los Angeles.


Join us on Wednesday, January 29th, from 7:00 - 9:30pm for Mindful and Meaningful a panel discussion featuring presentations by fiber artists whose works utilize recycled or repurposed materials.


I will be discussing the synergetic relationship of textile waste and fine art practice alongside fiber artists Aneesa Shami and Chuck Hohng. Together we will explore the many ways in which artists and designers can work together to create a more sustainable future.

Aneesa Shami
Aneesa Shami
Chuck Hohng
Chuck Hohng
Renae Barnard
Renae Barnard
textile-arts.jpg

Wednesday, January 29th

7:00 - 9:30pm

Purchase Tickets

HELMS DESIGN CENTER

8745 W Washington Blvd

Culver City, CA 90230

Mindful and Meaningful: Exploring the Synergetic Relationship of Textile Waste and Fine Art Practice

Artists and Designers can work together to create a more sustainable future. Three Los Angeles based artists share their diverse practices and individual experiences, creating responsible objects that honor the past and endure in the future.

Chuck-Hohng.png

Chuck Hohng is a Korean American artist, born in Long Beach California. Chuck spent fourteen years of his early life in his family's native South Korea. He received his undergraduate degree in Fine Arts from the University of Southern California and received his Master of Fine Arts degree from Art Center College of Design. His early childhood exposure to Catholic practice and a bicultural household furthered interests in vanitas, identities, symbols, and rituals. Chuck makes a range of fiber artworks from teddy bears to haute couture hanbok. Exploring salvaged textiles connections to love and loss, Chuck's artworks give a physical body to intellectual and emotional experiences. He believes we can always grow out of the mud, lift ourselves above the murky water and bloom. www.chuckhohng.com

Aneesa-Shami.jpg

Aneesa Shami received her Bachelor of Fine Arts degrees in both Fiber and Art History from the Kansas City Art Institute. Aneesa's work speaks to a broader understanding that we are all fundamentally human. She tries to utilize universal themes that are inclusive, referencing the sublime, and an otherworldly sense of the human conscious and subconscious. A love for repetitive mark-making drives her practice. Multiple strands of yarn, strips of felt, and even pen strokes build depth and density in each piece. Layers of material and process combine to lend the impression that there is more than what the eye sees. She recently completed a residency at the Helms Design Center, is currently researching textile and fiber history and is completing large sculptural pieces in her current body of work, Syndication. www.aneesashami.com

Renae-Barnard.png

Renae Barnard is a multi-disciplinary artist interested in exploring the network of interactions between environment, perception, and well-being. Using found materials and waste from the furniture manufacturing industry, Barnard received her Master of Fine Arts from Claremont Graduate University and her BA from California State University, Los Angeles. Barnard 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. www.renaebarnard.com

Tags textile arts los angeles, Textile Art, textile artist, textile slam, helms design center, renae barnard, sustainable art, sustainable artist, fiber art, recycled art materials, recycled art, sustainable design, ecological art, ecological artist, artist talk, textile sculpture, los angeles textile arts, culver city arts district, responsible art, reclaimed materials, mindful and meaningful, aneesa shami, chuck hohng, los angeles textile artist, fiber artist, fiber sculpture, Los Angeles fiber artist, fiber installation art, Los Angeles Installation art, artist talks, artist talks los angeles, artist talks los angeles 2020, California textile artist, california fiber artist, california sculptor, california installation artist
TextileSlam-043sm.jpg

Special Dinner Event: Textile Slam!

Sarah Barnard October 19, 2019

I'm excited to share with you a special evening event of artist lead conversations, cocktails, and dinner at the historic Helms Bakery District hosted by Textile Arts Los Angeles.

Join us on Tuesday, October 29th, from 6:30 - 9pm for Textile Slam! a community conversation featuring presentations by artists, designers, architects and educators to talk about their work, ideas that interest them, or projects they are exploring.


I will be discussing the synergetic relationship of textile waste and fine art practice alongside fiber artists Aneesa Shami and Chuck Hohng. Together we will explore the many ways in which artists and designers can work together to create a more sustainable future.
I hope to see you there!

textile-slam.jpg
Textile-Photo.jpg
textile-arts.jpg

Tuesday, October 29th

6:30 - 9:00pm

PURCHASE A TICKET

HELMS DESIGN CENTER

8745 W Washington Blvd

Culver City, CA 90230

Mindful and Meaningful: Exploring the Synergetic Relationship of Textile Waste and Fine Art Practice

Artists and Designers can work together to create a more sustainable future. Three Los Angeles based artists share their diverse practices and individual experiences, creating responsible objects that honor the past and endure in the future.

Chuck-Hohng.png

Chuck Hohng is a Korean American artist, born in Long Beach California. Chuck spent fourteen years of his early life in his family's native South Korea. He received his undergraduate degree in Fine Arts from the University of Southern California and received his Master of Fine Arts degree from Art Center College of Design. His early childhood exposure to Catholic practice and a bicultural household furthered interests in vanitas, identities, symbols, and rituals. Chuck makes a range of fiber artworks from teddy bears to haute couture hanbok. Exploring salvaged textiles connections to love and loss, Chuck's artworks give a physical body to intellectual and emotional experiences. He believes we can always grow out of the mud, lift ourselves above the murky water and bloom. www.chuckhohng.com

Aneesa-Shami.jpg

Aneesa Shami received her Bachelor of Fine Arts degrees in both Fiber and Art History from the Kansas City Art Institute. Aneesa's work speaks to a broader understanding that we are all fundamentally human. She tries to utilize universal themes that are inclusive, referencing the sublime, and an otherworldly sense of the human conscious and subconscious. A love for repetitive mark-making drives her practice. Multiple strands of yarn, strips of felt, and even pen strokes build depth and density in each piece. Layers of material and process combine to lend the impression that there is more than what the eye sees. She recently completed a residency at the Helms Design Center, is currently researching textile and fiber history and is completing large sculptural pieces in her current body of work, Syndication. www.aneesashami.com

Renae-Barnard.png

Renae Barnard is a multi-disciplinary artist interested in exploring the network of interactions between environment, perception, and well-being. Using found materials and waste from the furniture manufacturing industry, Barnard received her Master of Fine Arts from Claremont Graduate University and her BA from California State University, Los Angeles. Barnard 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. www.renaebarnard.com

Tags textile arts los angeles, Textile Art, textile artist, textile slam, helms design center, renae barnard, sustainable art, sustainable artist, fiber art, recycled art materials, recycled art, sustainable design, ecological art, ecological artist, artist talk, textile sculpture, los angeles textile arts, culver city arts district, responsible art, reclaimed materials, los angeles textile artist, fiber artist, fiber sculpture, Los Angeles fiber artist, fiber installation art, Los Angeles Installation art, artist talks, artist talks los angeles, artist talks los angeles 2020, California textile artist, california fiber artist, california sculptor, california installation artist, waste reduction, low waste artwork, sustainable sculpture, sustainable textile, sustainable art practice, Los Angeles art event, artist talk artist lecture

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