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Still Water, Circling Palms

Still Water, Circling Palms, which runs through August 3, is a frankly trippy look at how blurred lines get when it comes to natural disasters (like hurricanes) in the digital age. Now that I’ve probably confused you, like how the fuck does she turn screenshots into stretched linen?, keep reading to hear the artist explain her process, herself. 

 

Loom weaving is a very old art form, and internet trends are, of course, new. What first inspired you to merge digital and tactile art making processes to create your work? 

 

I first fell in love with weaving’s relationship to the hand, then fell in love with it’s relationship to the digital. The smallest unit of woven cloth where one single thread crosses another is like a pixel and operates on a gridded logic with a horizontal and vertical structure at its core. Weaving also has a direct link to early computing. The earliest computer maker borrowed a punch card system from the industrial Jacquard loom to store and process information. So there are already established links between computing and weaving. I’m playing with that even further in my work by looking at contemporary digital culture through a slow and tactile lens, using hand weaving and printing processes combined with commercial inks and synthetic materials that are common in advertising, marketing and fast-fashion industries.

 

It’s interesting that you use random algorithms to create your images. What part of your process is planned, or structured?

 

I search specific hashtags and geotags or browse websites and take screenshots of images and text I want to work with. This is a slower process, but allows more specificity in my collection strategies than sifting through huge dumps of images that I was amalgamating with the automated process. So the way I gather source material is relatively structured, but also unplanned in that I don’t go into a specific category or hashtag with an expected result. I let trends reveal themselves and find repeating motifs or unexpected images. The final weaving process is where I control how much of the source files are left legible or are distorted and erased.

 

Is social media fun for you, do you use it for research, or both? How would you have made your work before hashtags?

 

Social media is a part of my daily routine. I use it for convenience and to keep up on things. I also keep a critical eye on it and question the way it’s changing our self-image and public presentation of ourselves. Social media is a part of our national conversation now--our president uses it incessantly and unpredictably. It’s pretty crazy that a tweet has the power to spread fear of a nuclear attack. I’m interested in how social media is affecting us personally, emotionally and politically. Before I started collecting images through hashtags and geotags a lot of my work looked at language and the ways we communicate online. So I’ve been interested in digital culture for quite some time and feel compelled to respond to it.

 

Speaking of digital culture, what was your AIM screen name? And if you had to make up an away message right now, what would it be?

 

happymargo and ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 

 

Would you rather live in the past or the future?

 

I’d love to get a glimpse of the future. Technology is definitely progressing more slowly than I thought it would growing up, especially after witnessing the birth of the internet. I’d like to see it go somewhere radical like 100% sustainable energy across the planet, or accurate yearly flu vaccines.

 

As a Detroit-based artist, how has the water crisis in Flint  another Michigan city  impacted your environmentally-minded work? Is this the “still water” the title of your show refers to?

 

The water crisis in Flint has been such a huge disaster and it is still not over. In Michigan water is always a big topic, especially the levels of toxicity and contamination in our waterways. The chemical and algae levels in the Great Lakes are common conversations, and I grew up hearing stories of the Rouge River, a major waterway in Metro Detroit, catching fire in the 60’s from huge levels of oil and pollution. We are very connected to water here. Detroit’s infrastructure, like Flint’s, is aging and we lack funding and political support to update things. These issues are very present on my mind and water is a big theme in the work I’m currently making.

 

Do you think the internet has desensitized us or empowered us with regard to the issue of climate change?

 

I think it has empowered us. Both to act, as so many social media campaigns help raise money and effect real change, and to empower through knowledge. The internet connects us in ways that make it easier to empathize and understand others. But it’s also a double edged sword. It puts up a wall of anonymity that can spread fear, misogyny and hate.

 

Yeah, social media is necessary, but so exhausting too. We all need to unplug from time to time, honestly. Is your ideal vacation: in a city, on a beach, or off the grid?

 

On a beach with plenty of shade, SPF30, and good WiFi.

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