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A stained glass window from Holy Innocents Episcopal Church (Lahaina, Maui), that was lost in the August 2023 fire that destroyed Lahaina, is recreated using footage of light reflecting off of water at locations around Hawaiʻi.
A stained glass window from Lahaina United Methodist Church, that was lost in the August 2023 fire that destroyed Lahaina, is recreated using footage of light reflecting off of water at locations around Hawaiʻi.
This reimagined version of Pendleton Woolen Mills' "Chief Joseph" pattern weaves together video footage of natural light reflecting off of the waters behind various dams on the Columbia River and in the engineered irrigation ditches of Chief Joseph's ancestral lands in Washington and Oregon.
The "Wyeth Trail" blanket design is one of Pendleton Woolen Mills' most popular patterns. For the better part of the company's first century, non-native designers both appropriated indigenous design elements and worked with tribal members in creating new lines of merchandise. This version of the blanket design uses imagery of the waters behind various dams along the Columbia River.
An historic quilt from the collection of Honolulu Museum of Art has been re-imagined using video footage of the waters of Hawaiʻi.
Video footage of the sunset reflecting off of water in the Sunnyside Canal (Zillah, Washington) is duplicated, mirrored, and stitched together to create this trade blanket design.
This video blanket is made up of footage from Sunnyside Canal (Zillah, Washington) and re-imagines the UPC barcode for Pendleton Woolen Mills' "Yakima Camp Blanket."
Light reflecting off of the reservoir at Mount Tabor Park in Portland, Oregon was captured digitally, multiplied, and stitched together to create a trade blanket. This two-channel video has a front and back, both negatives of each other.
Light reflecting off of water at Mount Tabor Park in Portland, Oregon was captured digitally, multiplied, and stitched together to create a trade blanket. This two-channel video has a front and back, both negatives of each other.
Different views of the water at an important cultural site on Hawaiʻi Island are combined in this historic "hala" quilt pattern depicting imagery of an important endemic tree species.
The waters of seemingly disparate areas of the globe are part of a single closed and interconnected system. Here, various images of the world's waters become a single composition, shaped by Islamic geometric patterns that seek to unify the scientific and spiritual worlds through natural phenomena.
Digital video footage capturing the futuristic lighting in a decorative fountain at a mall in Tunis, Tunisia is used to create a modern moving video fabric design inspired by the silk scarves on display in the city's ancient medina (an Unesco World Heritage Site).
Footage captured at a reservoir near Bozeman, Montana takes the form of traditional beadwork.
Footage captured in the irrigation canals of the Yakima Valley (Washington) creates this trade blanket inspired design.
The coastal waters of the Island of Hawai'i are framed by the barcode for Aquafina's 20 oz. water bottle. These are the best selling water bottles in the United States. Water bottles and their caps are the 2nd and 3rd most common flotsam throughout the Hawaiian archipelago.
Inspired by traditional Hawaiian quilt designs, this pattern was created by the artist to commemorate the ohia lehua, an endemic species of tree found on Maui. The water footage was captured in the ohia's natural habitat on Maui.
Inspired by traditional Hawaiian quilt designs, this pattern was created by the artist to commemorate the pohuehue, an endemic species of beach morning glory found throughout the Hawaiian islands. The water footage was captured in the pohuehue's natural habitat on Maui.
Inspired by traditional Hawaiian quilt designs, this pattern was created by the artist to commemorate the loulu (pritchardia forbesiana), an endemic species of palm tree found on Maui. The water footage was captured in the loulu's habitat on Maui.
This digital video stained glass window was created using data captured by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory and made available to the public courtesy of NASA/SDO and the AIA, EVE, and HMI science teams.
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