Weaver’s Passage
Artist copyright held by the artist
Artwork Information
Artist:
Judith Poxson Fawkes (1941-2019)
Date:
1998
Media:
Linen Tapestry, Textile / fiber / organic materials
Size:
42" x 79"
Location:
AA-4, Upstairs on west end by the stairs
About the Artist:
Portland, Oregon-based textile artist Judith Poxson Fawkes (1941-2019) created elaborate,
hand-woven tapestries that explore architectural and geometric forms, as well as the
interplay of light and color.
Poxson Fawkes' tapestry artworks highlight the figurative possibilities of loom weaving.
She designed her compositions using gridded drawings on graph paper. She often used
a bird's eye viewpoint and played with the illusion of three-dimensional space on
a flat surface by showing multiple sides and shadows of objects.
Poxson Fawkes earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from Michigan State University
in 1963 and a Master of Fine Arts degree from the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan
in 1965. She moved to Portland, Oregon in 1972, with her husband, artist Tom Fawkes.
She taught weaving at four colleges in the Portland area, including Lewis & Clark
College. In 1984, she became a full-time studio artist. Her tapestry artworks have
been exhibited all across the United States and are in many collections, including
the American Crafts Museum in New York City.
Artwork Description: Weaver's Passage is an elaborate hand-woven tapestry by the late textile artist Judith Poxson Fawkes. It is part of her series of tapestries of imagined spaces based on Italian Renaissance palaces of the 1200s that are occupied by groups of imaginary weavers.
The artwork is also commenting on the increasing rarity of tapestries and the shrinking community of weavers. Poxson Fawkes noted with envy that “Like linen thread, weavers and tapestries are growing increasingly rare. Weaver's Passage is a romantic recreation of a world where weavers worked together in sumptuous spaces on large series of tapestries financed by wealthy patrons – in contrast to my own solo pursuits to find buyers and commissioners of large tapestries.”
Acquisition Information:
This artwork was acquired for the State Art Collection in partnership with Clark College. WSAC2000.125.000
Geo Coordinates:
45.632796, -122.651148
Related Links:
https://www.arts.wa.gov/artwork/?request=record;id=10722;type=101