Gabriel Dawe

Gabriel Dawe (born 1973) is a Mexican-born artist living in Dallas, Texas whose work is based on investigations of the visible spectrum of light. He has gained renown for his large-scale Plexus series of installations of sewing thread, though he also creates works on paper as well as other media. His work has been exhibited in the US, Canada, Belgium, Denmark, and the UK.[1]

Background

Originally from Mexico City, Dawe initially trained as a graphic designer, but during his studies at the University of Texas at Dallas, he began to investigate the connection between fashion and architecture.[2] His use of materials related to textiles stems from a childhood frustration of not being allowed by his grandmother to learn traditional needlework because of societal expectations for boys.[3]

Education

He received his bachelor's degree in Graphic Design from Universidad de las Américas, Puebla, Mexico and his MFA at the University of Texas at Dallas, where he was an artist in residence at CentralTrak for the final two years of his degree.[4]

Plexus Series

Gabriel Dawe, Plexus a1, 2015, Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.

Named for the network of blood vessels or nerves that run throughout the body and form connections, Dawe's Plexus series are large-scale networks of sewing thread that are investigations of the visible spectrum of light. They are often site-specific, temporary commissions that the artist transforms into compacted displays of thread he calls relics when the exhibitions are over.[5]

Most notably, the artist's work was part of the reopening of the Renwick Gallery in the exhibition Wonder.[6] He has also installed Plexus works at the Amon Carter Museum of American Art,[7] Brigham Young University,[8] and the Denver Art Museum,[9] among others.

Selected Solo Exhibitions

2016

Plexus No. 34 : Amon Carter Museum of American Art : Fort Worth, TX

Plexus c18 : San Antonio International Airport : San Antonio, TX

2015

Plexus A1 : Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum : Washington, D.C.

2014

Plexus No. 29 : Brigham Young University Museum of Art : Provo, UT 

Requiem for a Fallen Structure : Conduit Gallery : Dallas, TX

Plexus No. 28 : Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art : Virginia Beach, VA 

Plexus No. 27 : Crystal Bridges : Bentonville, AR

Plexus No. 26 : Blue Star Contemporary Art Museum : San Antonio, TX 

Plexus No. 25 : Contemporary Art Museum, Raleigh : Raleigh, NC

2013            

Plexus No. 23 .1 : Museum Rijswijk : Rijswijk, Netherlands 

Threading Light : Zadok Gallery : Miami, FL

Light Paradox : Gutstein Gallery : Savannah College of Art and Design : Savannah, GA

2012 

Blinding Pain : Conduit Gallery : Dallas, TX

Plexus No. 15 : LSU Museum of Art : Baton Rouge, LA

The Density of Light : Galerie Lot 10 : Brussels, Belgium

Plexus No. 12 : The Juanita Harvey Art Gallery, MWSU : Wichita Falls, TX

2011

Plexus No. 9 : Peel Gallery : Houston, TX

Plexus No. 8 : The Luminary Arts Center : St. Louis, MO

2010            

Plexus No. 4 : Dallas Contemporary : Annex North Gallery : Dallas, TX

Plexus No. 3 : Guerrilla Arts : Dallas, TX

Plexus No. 2, Convergence : Conduit Gallery : Project Room : Dallas, TX

2007            

Luz Gallery : Montreal, Canada 

2004            

Luz Gallery : Montreal, Canada 

2002            

The Light Within The Shadow : Rad’a Gallery : Montreal, Canada

References

  1. "gabriel dawe + mixed media and installation artist". www.gabrieldawe.com. Retrieved 2017-04-06.
  2. "gabriel dawe + mixed media and installation artist". www.gabrieldawe.com. Retrieved 2017-04-06.
  3. Adler, Maggie (2016). Embodied Light. Amon Carter Museum of American Art. p. 7.
  4. "gabriel dawe + mixed media and installation artist". www.gabrieldawe.com. Retrieved 2017-04-06.
  5. Adler, Maggie (2016). Embodied Light. Amon Carter Museum of American Art.
  6. Ault, Alicia. "Artist Gabriel Dawe Made a Rainbow Out of 60 Miles of Thread". Smithsonian. Retrieved 2017-04-06.
  7. "Gabriel Dawe: Plexus no. 34". Amon Carter Museum of American Art. 2016-08-23. Retrieved 2017-04-06.
  8. "Plexus No. 29 | McKay School of Education". education.byu.edu. Retrieved 2017-04-06.
  9. "Mi Tierra Artist Gabriel Dawe". Denver Art Museum. Retrieved 2017-04-06.
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