Embodying Vibrance and Joy, Gio Swaby’s Patterned Portraits Celebrate Blackness and Womanhood
Categories: Art | Beauty | Design and Architecture | People
By Vika https://pictolic.com/article/embodying-vibrance-and-joy-gio-swabys-patterned-portraits-celebrate-blackness-and-womanhood.html“New Growth Second Chapter 11” (2021), thread and fabric sewn on canvas, 16 x 20 inches. All images © Gio Swaby shared with permission courtesy of Claire Oliver Gallery
In Bahamian artist Gio Swaby’s colorful sewn portraits, an invisible yet integral thread comes in the form of an invitation to celebrate Blackness and womanhood. Through the language of textiles and patterns, her practice centers on accessibility and facilitating connection with the viewer. “I think about people like me and how I didn’t get into art or museums or anything until I was 19,” she tells Colossal, sharing that the historical exclusion of Blackness in art motivates her to make pieces that reflect individuality and joy in a mirror-like way.
The Toronto-based artist began working with sewing and textiles around ten years ago, and her use of the medium acknowledges the intersection of traditional craft and fine art, viewed through the lens of personal relationships. “My mother was a seamstress,” she says. “I grew up in that world, but I didn’t come back to it as an art medium until around 2013. I associated it with a special love between us, and I wanted to share that with the viewer, too.”
8 PHOTOS
1. “Seated Figure” (2022), thread and fabric sewn on canvas, 55 x 66 x 1 inches
Sharing in connection and conversation is central to Swaby’s process, which involves sitting down with her subjects prior to beginning each piece. Most of the portraits represent women in her immediate circle of family and friends. “I already have a sense of who they are, but I learn more about them, and they learn more about me,” she says. The conversations lead to the selection of fabrics, which the artist chooses based on the individuals’ stories and personalities, with an emphasis on exuberant hues and bold designs. In self-portraits, she considers family histories and memories. She says, “I picked out a hummingbird print for my dad because I heard a story that when he was a kid, he was the only one in the neighborhood who could run fast enough to catch a hummingbird.”
In her larger portraits, Swaby incorporates sewing directly onto canvas as a drawing tool, outlining the contours of faces, hands, and hair. Loose threads dangle from the surfaces, suggesting the reverse—typically unseen—side of embroidery and the individuals’ sense of self-being perpetually in progress. The titles of her concurrent, ongoing series imply dualities and connections. In New Growth, vibrant silhouettes celebrate Black hair while also alluding to a person who is thriving; Love Letter references a sentiment passed from one person to another—or perhaps even to oneself; and Another Side To Me recognizes the innumerable, intersecting facets of every identity.
Recently exhibited at the Museum of Fine Arts in St. Petersburg, Florida, Swaby’s solo exhibition Fresh Up travels to the Art Institute of Chicago and will open on April 8. Find more of her work at Claire Oliver Gallery, on her website, and follow updates on Instagram.
2. “New Growth Second Chapter 8” (2021), thread and fabric sewn on canvas, 16 x 20 inches“New Growth Second Chapter 8” (2021), thread and fabric sewn on canvas, 16 x 20 inches
3. “Another Side To Me Second Chapter 3” (2021), cotton fabric and thread sewn on muslin, 28 x 36 inches
4. Left: “New Growth Second Chapter 10” (2021), thread and fabric sewn on canvas, 16 x 20 inches. Right: “New Growth Second Chapter 9” (2021), thread and fabric sewn on canvas, 16 x 20 inches
5. “New Growth Second Chapter 7” (2021), thread and fabric sewn on canvas, 16 x 20 inches
6. Left: “Love Letter 10” (2021), thread and fabric sewn on canvas, 38 x 84 inches. Right: “Love Letter 5” (2021), thread and fabric sewn on canvas, 38 x 84 inches
7. “Seeing You Through Her and Me: Carissa” (2022), cotton fabric and thread sewn onto canvas, 62 x 78 x 2 inches
8. “Another Side To Me Second Chapter 5” (2021), cotton fabric and thread sewn on muslin, 28 x 36 inches
Keywords: Joy | Portraits | Patterned portraits | Illustrations | Designs | Canvas | Exhibition
Post News ArticleRecent articles
The case was in October 1972. The Uruguayan youth rugby team flew to Chile with friends and relatives, a total of 45 people with ...
In the Olympic 1980, Japanese extreme tourists traveled through the entire Soviet Union. In this collection of photos you will see ...
Related articles
Perhaps all of us have encountered caricature artists at some point—whether online or in real life, while strolling during ...
Love Nicholas is an artist that helps parents to 'record' the childhood of their child. Talented Russian artist masterfully turns ...
Trung Dong is a photographer based in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, who captures the beauty of everyday life in his country. His ...
We believe that the famous saying "Bad dancer interfere with eggs" not quite decent. Someone even sure this is paraphrased folk ...