Lighthouse Keeper
The words of the first verse of Sea Fever, a poem by John Masefield, can be seen eerily floating in the stormy sky and tossed in the turbulent ocean waves, and the ghostly transparent image of the lighthouse keeper becomes a part of the seascape. Reference Photo by Alan Kingsbury. Publication History: Fiber Art Now magazine, Summer 2018. Received Viewers’ Choice award at the Art Gallery of Burlington, 2018.
36 x 46 inches (90 x 118 cm)
Cheesecloth sculpted with PVA adhesive, machine-stitched with monofilament thread to hand-painted canvas, backed with eco-felt.
Sold
The words of the first verse of Sea Fever, a poem by John Masefield, can be seen eerily floating in the stormy sky and tossed in the turbulent ocean waves, and the ghostly transparent image of the lighthouse keeper becomes a part of the seascape. Reference Photo by Alan Kingsbury. Publication History: Fiber Art Now magazine, Summer 2018. Received Viewers’ Choice award at the Art Gallery of Burlington, 2018.
36 x 46 inches (90 x 118 cm)
Cheesecloth sculpted with PVA adhesive, machine-stitched with monofilament thread to hand-painted canvas, backed with eco-felt.
Sold
The words of the first verse of Sea Fever, a poem by John Masefield, can be seen eerily floating in the stormy sky and tossed in the turbulent ocean waves, and the ghostly transparent image of the lighthouse keeper becomes a part of the seascape. Reference Photo by Alan Kingsbury. Publication History: Fiber Art Now magazine, Summer 2018. Received Viewers’ Choice award at the Art Gallery of Burlington, 2018.
36 x 46 inches (90 x 118 cm)
Cheesecloth sculpted with PVA adhesive, machine-stitched with monofilament thread to hand-painted canvas, backed with eco-felt.
Sold