Geometric (4)

Page 1 of 1
Browse 4 Geometric Sculptures artworks for sale. Contemporary artists: Jean Judd, Lisbet Olin-ranstam offering Sculptures artworks. Links to more artworks by these contemporary artists and 1 pages for Sculptures and further artists at the bottom of this page. To view a work by any of these contemporary artists simply click on the image or browse the artist's portfolio. To buy any of the art below click on the image to go to a more detailed page about this work of art.


Contemporary Art / Sculptures / Previous / Next
Jean Judd: 'fractured gello 5', 2018 Textile Art, Geometric. Artist Description: Fractured Gello5 is a continuation of the Fractured aEUR~Gello series referencing the underlying traditional needlepoint embroidery and quilting pattern, called Bargello.  The Bargello name originates from the Bargello Palace1255 , now an art museum, in Florence, Italy where chairs were discovered with a aEURoeflame stitchaEUR embroidery pattern.The fracturing ...
Geometric - Textile Art
48 x 61.2 inches (121.9 x 155.4 cm)
Jean Judd: 'Floral Crossword Puzzle', 2005 Textile Art, Geometric. Artist Description:  One of several textile artworks using a crossword puzzle format. Hand quilted and hand bound. Artwork is accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity signed by the artist....
Geometric - Textile Art
57 x 57 inches (144.8 x 144.8 cm)
Like It   indepth artwork information   Add To Shopping Cart
Jean Judd: 'Art Deco 1', 2009 Textile Art, Geometric. Artist Description:  Constructed of commercial fabrics. Densely hand quilted for visual texture. Artwork is accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity signed by the artist....
, 2009
Geometric - Textile Art
28 x 31 inches (71.1 x 78.7 cm)
Like It   indepth artwork information   Add To Shopping Cart
Lisbet Olin-ranstam: 'Stripes', 2006 Textile Art, Geometric. Artist Description: Pillow, handwoven in Scandinavian double- weft...
, 2006
Geometric - Textile Art
35 x 35 cm (13.8 x 13.8 inches)
(Page 1 of 1) - MORE ARTWORKS

Artists Describing Their Art:

Jean Judd - Every quilt tells a story and every quilt is unique. The common factor in all quilts is that fabric and thread are used to create a piece of art. To many viewers, cutting up perfectly good pieces of fabric into little pieces and then sewing them together again into a totally different looking piece of fabric, is unbelievable. Who would want to do this day in and day out? The dedicated quilt artist and fabric collector! I have always enjoyed putting jigsaw puzzles together and the same person who enjoys jigsaw puzzles (discovering a finished masterpiece constructed of hundreds or even thousands of little pieces) is drawn to the magic of quilt design. Each quilt design is a puzzle waiting to be put together. The design starts in the quilt artist's mind and is eventually transferred into reality with the final stitch in the quilt. Many times the original design is nothing like the finished quilt but this just adds to the excitement and the design potential for the next quilt design. What starts in the mind is often transformed into a bigger, better and more dramatic finished quilt than the artist ever imagined. I prefer to make my ...

Jean Judd -