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Nadia Stieglitz
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Nadia Stieglitz
Recent Work
Topography
Parure
Symbiotic
Making Waves
Venular
Lunar Attraction
Playing with Patterns
City Lights
Magma
News
Teaching
About
Contact
Folder: Recent Work
Back
Topography
Parure
Symbiotic
Making Waves
Venular
Lunar Attraction
Playing with Patterns
City Lights
Magma
News
Teaching
About
Contact
Symbiotic Symbiotic (II)
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Symbiotic (II)

$0.00

Macon Museum of Arts and Sciences permanent collection.

I have been recently fascinated by the research of various scientists on the impacts of climate change on forests and the reliance of these ecosystems on the unseen work of fungus to adapt to it. My most recent work takes inspiration from mycorrhizal fungi – critical members of the plant microbiome that form a symbiosis with the roots of most plants on Earth. In my series “Symbiotic,” the Sgraffito patterns etched onto the surface of mushroom-like shapes recall these complex networks that feed and support the functions of larger organisms. In their dormancy, these works remind the viewer that, despite appearances, there is always growth and circulation—life, ultimately, in stillness.

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Macon Museum of Arts and Sciences permanent collection.

I have been recently fascinated by the research of various scientists on the impacts of climate change on forests and the reliance of these ecosystems on the unseen work of fungus to adapt to it. My most recent work takes inspiration from mycorrhizal fungi – critical members of the plant microbiome that form a symbiosis with the roots of most plants on Earth. In my series “Symbiotic,” the Sgraffito patterns etched onto the surface of mushroom-like shapes recall these complex networks that feed and support the functions of larger organisms. In their dormancy, these works remind the viewer that, despite appearances, there is always growth and circulation—life, ultimately, in stillness.

Macon Museum of Arts and Sciences permanent collection.

I have been recently fascinated by the research of various scientists on the impacts of climate change on forests and the reliance of these ecosystems on the unseen work of fungus to adapt to it. My most recent work takes inspiration from mycorrhizal fungi – critical members of the plant microbiome that form a symbiosis with the roots of most plants on Earth. In my series “Symbiotic,” the Sgraffito patterns etched onto the surface of mushroom-like shapes recall these complex networks that feed and support the functions of larger organisms. In their dormancy, these works remind the viewer that, despite appearances, there is always growth and circulation—life, ultimately, in stillness.

Stoneware. 7”H x 10”Wx 11”D.

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Copyrights © Nadia Stieglitz 2023