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Renae Barnard

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Love > Shelter : Sculpture, Bowerbirds and Gender Performance

Sarah Barnard October 18, 2021

"Love is Greater Than Shelter" is a multimedia piece by Renae Barnard that explores the search for comfort and security through romantic love.

Inspired by bowerbirds, Barnard uses found materials to build a nestlike structure. However, like the structures created by a bower bird, the form is not for shelter but serves a more ornamental purpose, fostering connection, communication, and relationship building.

Bowerbirds are known for their decorative structures, that while somewhat resembling nests, are used as a backdrop for the males' performative mating displays. Bowerbirds are known for their discerning use of materials, selecting a range of objects in like colors that vary depending on the region of the birds. In several cases, Bowerbirds appear to utilize forced perspective, laying larger objects in the back and smaller in the front, a creative visual tool rarely observed among animals.

This optical illusion is a natural form of visual trickery, a theme that resonates with Barnard and her work. Humans often look to forms of self-deception to perform an illusion of security, frequently during unstable times. Creation may offer a sense of control, whether building a space for comfort, a work of art, or a relationship. At times of distress, security, or the sensation of security, can be constructed with whatever is at our disposal, creating emotional shelter from readily available components of our lives.

Barnard's use of yarn and twine is not only a nod to repurposing often discarded or overlooked materials to build something new, but the pathways and sense of control many seek over their lives. Considering the Greek Moirai, Barnard's use of string offers an illusion of control over fate, destiny, and the flow of life. The soft material is then covered with layers of paints and hardened into place, removing all flexibility and solidifying any decisions or pathways. The hardened external materials immobilize and protect the string, rendering it nearly unidentifiable in its newly constructed form.

Barnard considers the tangling forces of gender norms and the friction of power structures against the day-to-day experience of moving through the world.

Renae Barnard is a multidisciplinary artist. Barnard received her Master of Fine Arts from Claremont Graduate University and her BA from California State University, Los Angeles. 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.

Tags Fiber art, fiber artist, textile artwork, textile art, textile sculpture, custom textile art, multimedia art, multimedia artist, women artist, los angeles textile artist, custom textile work los angeles, custom art installations, custom art installations los angeles, woven textile artwork, bowerbird, bowerbirds, bower birds, bowers, bower bird sculpture, salt sculpture, salt sculptures, fiber art, california fiber artist, yarn sculpture, sculpture of yarn, salt art, salt artwork, living art, feminist sculpture, feminist art, gender art, gender performance, experimental visual art, los angeles artist, los angeles artists, los angeles sculptor, experimental sculpture, salt artist, salt artists, desert palette art, 80s color palette art, women artists, Textile Art, textile art exhibition, textile arts la, textile arts los angeles, la textile arts, textile sculptures, textile artist
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Love > Shelter: S.C.R.A.P. Gallery's Art of the Shack + Smithsonian Museum Day

Sarah Barnard September 21, 2019

There’s No Place Like Home

So said Dorothy Gale, famously, in The Wizard of Oz. Nothing could be truer.

No matter the address, from mansion to humble dwelling - urban to rural, it’s more about individuality, determination and soul. The Art of the Shack, explores and celebrates the concept of home and is inspired by the work of American artist Beverly Buchanan (1940-2015) who was influenced by the sharecropper shacks she experienced in the Deep South and the do-it-yourself builders and architects around the globe.

Opening on Smithsonian Museum Day and developed by the S.C.R.A.P. Gallery and the Coachella Valley Art Center, The Art of the Shack showcases work incorporating reused and recycled materials.

Love > Shelter. 14”W x 16”L x 8”D. Found Alderwood scrap, wire hangers, yarn, water based paint, magnesium sulfate (2019).

Love > Shelter. 14”W x 16”L x 8”D. Found Alderwood scrap, wire hangers, yarn, water based paint, magnesium sulfate (2019).

Renae Barnard’s sculpture, Love > Shelter will be on view in The Art of the Shack exhibition at S.C.R.A.P. Gallery. This work was inspired by the Bowerbird’s use of construction and ornamentation as courtship and considers the ways in which beauty, presentation, and perception influence romance, opportunity, and acceptance. Recycled and found materials such as Alderwood scrap, wire hangers, and yarn are used to create the structural form. A combination of water-based paint and magnesium sulfate creates the colorful crystalline covered surface texture.

A detailed look at the crystalline textured surfaces in Love > Shelter.

A detailed look at the crystalline textured surfaces in Love > Shelter.

The S.C.R.A.P. Gallery is an innovative program that addresses two of today’s most urgent issues – the environment and the education of our youth. Conservation and reuse through hands-on exploration with discarded materials is promoted at the S.C.R.A.P. Gallery. Arts and science workshops help students understand complex environmental issues. Materials donated by local businesses and manufacturers are available for reuse by teachers, artists and community programs.


Tags S.C.R.A.P. Gallery, The Art of Shack, environmental art, upcylced art, recycled materials, Environmental Museum, Environmental Gallery, wall scupture, environmental art exhibition, sustainable art, recycled art materials, upcycle, home exhibition, love shelter, salt sculpture, salt art, soft sculpture, fiber artist, salt sculptures, recycled art, recycled artists, environmental artist, conservation artist, conservation art, ecological art, ecological artist, responsible art, sustainable artist, renae barnard, smithsonian, smithsonian museum, Smithsonian museum day, smithsonian musuem art, love is greater than shelter, contemporary sculpture, feminist art, feminist sculpture, women artist, women's art, abstract sculpture., abstract sculptures, bowerbird, courtship, beauty, salt artwork, magnesium sulfate, magnesium sulfate art, los angeles textile artist, fiber sculpture, Los Angeles fiber artist, fiber installation art, Los Angeles Installation art, textile sculpture, 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

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