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Blade Skeins

Primary (Bryan, Texas, 1918–Houston, Texas, 2000)
Date1987
MediumCollage
DimensionsOverall: 30 × 20 in. (76.2 × 50.8 cm)
Framed: 26 1/2 × 37 1/4 in. (67.3 × 94.6 cm)
Credit LineBlanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas at Austin, Bequest of John A. Robertson, 2017.170
Collection AreaPrints and Drawings
Object number2017.170
On View
Not on view
Label Text

Dorothy Hood began to make collages after returning to Houston from a trip to Egypt in 1981. She saw collage as a way to maintain her creative spontaneity and a connection to the world during the long periods she spent isolated in her studio. Hood made thousands of collages in the last two decades of her life, incorporating a wide range of materials such as decorative paper, gold leaf, National Geographic photographs, art historical reproductions, newspaper clippings, and bits of her own watercolors and canvases. 

 

Hood is best known as a painter of large-scale abstractions that often suggest a deep space—intergalactic, mental, or primordial. In the more intimate medium of collage, the associations between the layered fragments and images she selected likewise remain mysterious. Some collages, like Blade Skeins, hover on the verge of abstraction, harmonized and unified in tonality and texture. In others, the images retain their individuality and their juxtaposition suggests new meanings or realities. “A collage flatly says where we have been,” Hood stated. “Each chosen and found scrap of paper represents a social history, and picking out a paper sample corresponding to our experience and spirit strung together, make[s] a narrative memory.”   

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