Minuscule Landscapes and Tiny Creatures Nestle Inside Painted Pennies and Other Coins
Art
#coins
#landscapes
#miniature
#mushrooms
#oil painting
#painting
February 15, 2022
Grace Ebert More
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Art
#coins
#landscapes
#miniature
#mushrooms
#oil painting
#painting
February 15, 2022
Grace Ebert More
113 Shares159 Views
in Art
Art
#coins
#embroidery
#metal
#money
#politics
#sculpture
#social commentary
March 18, 2021
Grace Ebert
From Insurrection Bills. All images © Stacey Lee Webber, shared with permission
Throughout 2020, Stacey Lee Webber developed Insurrection Bills, a revisionary collection of United States currency overlaid with subversive stitches: flames envelop monuments, a wall is left unfinished, and an eclectic array of face masks disguise Abraham Lincoln’s portrait. Contrasting the muted tones of the paper, the vibrant embroideries stand in stark contrast and as amended narratives to those depicted on the various denominations. “The series references feelings of anger, turmoil, and frustration during the tense political climate while recontextualizing and questioning the beloved iconography we see on our money,” she tells Colossal.
Currently working from her studio and home in Philadelphia’s Globe Dye Works, Webber is formally trained in metalsmithing—she has an MFA from the University of Wisconsin, where she initially began using currency as the basis of her projects—and sees the two mediums as an ongoing conversation. Embroidery “allows me to work in a quieter setting outside of my metal shop acting as a sort of ying to the yang, soft and hard, masculine and feminine,” she says.
Many of Webber’s sculptures involve soldering coins, including the copper penny works that make up The Craftsmen Series and question the value of blue-collar labor in the U.S. Comprised of hollow, life-sized tools, the collection visualizes “putting endless amounts of work into a single cent,” the artist says.
Webber has multiple exhibitions this year, including at TW Fine Art Palm Beach Outpost in April, Philadelphia’s Bertrand Productions in October, and Art on Paper Fair in New York City this November. If you can’t see the currency-based projects in person, head to Instagram, where the artist shares a larger collection of her works and glimpses into her studio.
“Masked Abes,” from Insurrection Bills
From Insurrection Bills
Detail of “Masked Abes,” from Insurrection Bills
A ladder from The Craftsmen Series, soldered pennies
From Insurrection Bills
Jewelry made from coins
#coins
#embroidery
#metal
#money
#politics
#sculpture
#social commentary
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