Studio 203 is pleased to present Memory of Trees, a solo exhibition of new work by Los Angeles-based artist, Eliza Day-Green. Completed over the course of one year, Day-Green’s latest series reflects on her month-long residency at a remote sheep farm in Iceland’s Westfjords. Living in this secluded and foreign environment led the artist to reconnect with her own New Zealand roots and familial traditions in fiber and textiles, revisiting techniques passed along from generations of tailors and sheep farmers. Through felting, crochet, stitching, needle binding and weaving, Day-Green cultivates the implicit memories of family while meditating on her time abroad, recording these ruminations of personal history and placemaking through material exploration.
Day-Green made a point of visiting Iceland during réttir, the annual gathering of sheep, to create work with fleece and wool. Participating in this long standing tradition inspired several pieces, including Rettir, an installation-based work depicting a wandering flock of sheep and Fleece, a tactile piece showcasing raw, unprocessed fleece. Using Iceland's mainstay resource of wool conjured many memories for the artist, especially of her mother working with handicrafts. Playing with the unique properties of this wool “opened the creative floodgates” for Day-Green, revitalizing her natural propensity for fiber art.
Other works include abstracted memory landscapes of Iceland's striking environment, in which Day-Green translates waterfalls, geysers, volcanos, black sand beaches and steaming lava fields into soft sculptures and mixed media works. With the absence of trees creating an otherworldly landscape, the artist imagined the memories held beneath the island's surface. Icelandic folktales fueled these thoughts, resulting in whimsical and dreamy landscapes, including Kintegata, a memory map of the paths Day-Green traveled, Nest, a sculptural allegory of a whooper swan nest, and the Cygnus Cygnus triptych illustrating the trope of swans molting as a metaphor for transformation.
Memory of Trees is the culmination of Day-Green's musings on her time in Iceland, as well as a celebration of her textile roots. This collection of memory-embedded objects marks a growth edge in her practice, with hopefully more fiber and textile-based work included in future series.
About Aneesa Shami Zizzo
Aneesa Shami Zizzo is an artist and arts-based researcher in Los Angeles using recycled materials to create fiber art. Her work references the sublime and world mythologies to evoke a sense of the collective unconscious within her imagery. She is the co-owner and director of Studio 203, an artist-run space in Los Angeles that collaborates with artists to create exhibitions and host workshops and performances.
About Eliza Day-Green
Eliza Day-Green is a British native based in Los Angeles. She spent many years as a textile artist in the fashion industry and teaching textile design to fashion and merchandising students. Her paintings are included in private collections in the USA, New Zealand and Great Britain, and has exhibited her work widely in Los Angeles. Day-Green has served on the Boards of the MOCA Projects Council, the Center for the Study of Political Graphics and Women Painters West. She is also a member of the Los Angeles Art Association, Women’s Caucus for Art, and Textile Arts Los Angeles.
www.elizadaygreen.com
@elizadaygreen