My textile based work “Drowning Dress” is included in a book titled Unravelling Women's Art: Creators, Rebels, & Innovators in Textile Arts by P.L. Henderson and published by Supernova Books.
The author unpicks the threads that link female textile artists and the arts they produce, revealing a global and historic patchwork of assorted roles, identities and representations. Entertaining as well as informative, this book offers a unique overview of female-centric textile art production including embroidery, weaving, soft sculpture and more. Includes over 20 interviews with contemporary textile artists, providing fascinating insights into their practices, themes and personal motivation. Tells us: How knitting became a spying device in wartime Why dress design was so important for the Suffragettes Why spiders were emblems in ancient times and now How women's arts and crafts moved from the backroom to the gallery showroom.
I made “Drowning Dress” as an homage to the feminist author Virginia Woolf who suffered with mental illness throughout her life. On March 28, 1941 she filled the pockets of her overcoat with rocks and walked into the River Ouse behind her home tragically ending her life.