[Ge]wand I, 2012
Group exhibition: ‘A House is Not A Hotel’, Pi Artworks Gallery, London, United Kingdom, 2014
Two-person exhibition: ‘[HYPHENATED]’, The North Wall Gallery, Oxford, United Kingdom, 2012
Publication: The State of Art – Sculpture & 3D #1, Edited by Andy Laffan, Chris Hodson and Robin Laffan. Softcover, 10.8″ x 8″ (27.6cm x 20.3cm)
Installation
White cotton fabric, ink and mixed media
Dimensions variable
Wand (German): Wall (English)
1. An upright side of a room inside a building: On the opposite wall hung a valuable old painting. She felt along the wall for the light switch. 1a. an upright outer surface of a building: The walls of the factory had been covered with graffiti. 2. a very tall strong structure that is built to defend a place or to keep people inside a place, for example, a prison, castle, or city. 2a. an upright structure made of stone or brick that surrounds or divides someone’s land or garden. 2b. a strong upright structure that protects an area from the sea or from flooding : a sea wall
Gewand (German): Dress (English)
1. a piece of clothing that covers a woman’s body and part of her legs:a blue cotton. dress. I’d never seen her in a dress before. 2. the clothes that are typical of a particular place, Time in history, or occasion: The children were wearing traditional Norwegian dress.They performed the play in the Victorian dress. 2a.The clothes that someone usually wears: He has an unusual style of dress.
(Macmillan English Dictionary, 2007)