
SILKY WAY
(Sold)
~ Acquired by the permanent collection of Malmø Kunstmuseum, in Sweden
~ Sculpture No. 9 by Signe Emdal
~ Touch tech
~ Created in February 2023, at Artist residency: Statens Værksteder in Copenhagen
~ Part of the Solo show: FANTASIA, at Galerie Maria Wettergren 2023. More info, follow this link
-------------------------------
About Silky Way ( words by Galerie Maria Wettergren ):
The comet-like Silky Way was created in between Emdal’s travel studies in Majorca, Paris and Rome, succeeding her studies of the Majorcan Ikat textile tradition, and during her investigations into Coptic Roman textiles ahead of her journey to Italy.
Coptic textiles particularly flourished when the Roman Empire ruled Egypt and imported silk from China. Emdal is fascinated by the way that Coptic weavers made textile interpretations of the mythical ornaments, flowers and animals they saw on ceramic tiles and other objects.
Both Ikat weaving and Coptic textiles point towards the Silk Road – the important trade route for silk and other valuable items, exchanged between Chinese and Roman emperors. The abundance of exchanges in the field of textiles, precious items and knowledge, travelling through time and history, is a great source of inspiration for Emdal, and her sumptuous Silky Way is, in the words of the artist,
“…created in a symbiotic flow with this ancient universal knowledge"...
With its purple heart, the work equally reveals the artist’s fascination with the color, initiating a series of work in which purple is a fundamental element. Historically, purple is of great symbolic importance, adopted by the Romans as a symbol of imperial authority and status, and at times reserved exclusively for the emperor, as shown in the mosaic portrait of Justinian I in the Basilica of San Vitale, Ravenna.
A single gram of the prestigious purple dye was extracted from the glands of thousands of crushed sea snails; it was even more valuable than gold. In times when it was not restricted to just the emperor, people wore “copies” of the color in an attempt to appropriate this symbol of power.
-------------------------------
© Image rights: Kristine Funch & Signe Emdal

















