While perusing Lost At E Minor, I came across the work of Agustina Woodgate. More specifically, I found her rugs, which are hand design and sewn from recycled stuffed animal skins.
I have always been intrigued by oriental rugs, and the intricate techniques used to construct them. Via her website, there is explanation to her project:
The rugs not only reference the personal histories of the toy’s owners, but investigate the rug as an object organizing and displaying memories and lineages. In Eastern Cultures, the oriental rug centralizes the living space in pattern, operating beyond utility to depict the spiritual and mental world in woven form. Woodgate is particularly drawn to the specific meanings in the arrangement of rug designs, and how different histories of the rug represent stories of the past and ways of tracing archetypes in physical and material forms.
Augustina’s use of old toys adds another level to the act of rug construction. She is taking discarded items, ones with history, and creating a whole other chapter in the life of these old toys. It’s also making something that could be silly (like a stuffed bear) and suddenly turning it into something that is very utilitarian, and toning down the playful nature of what it once was.
All images from her website.