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Gabriel Dawe Plexus Colored Thread Installation 1Light is an amazing part of our universe. It travels faster than anything else in the universe, and can be split, reflected, and bent. Without it we would all be blind and there could be no color. <a href="http://www.gabrieldawe.com" target="_blank">Gabriel Dawe's <em>Plexus</em> series</a> seeks to explore the playful, colorful side of this visible radiation. Using bright gradients of suspended thread, Dawe creates geometric art installations that mimic light's dance through a prism.1
Gabriel Dawe Plexus Colored Thread Installation 2Dawe has created dozens of these site-specific installations all over the world, including London, Denmark, Texas and Louisiana2
Gabriel Dawe Plexus Colored Thread Installation 3Born in Mexico City, Dawe worked as a graphic designer before moving to Montreal.3
Gabriel Dawe Colored Thread Installation 4He soon moved away from the somewhat restrained world of graphic design and started to experiment with free-form art, eventually discovering <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/textiles/">textiles</a> and embroidery.4
Gabriel Dawe Plexus Colored Thread 5Weaving, sewing, and embroidery are all hand crafts reserved for women in Dawe's culture, so he sees his textile-based sculptures as an almost rebellious exploration of masculinity, machismo, and gender norms.5
gabriel-dawe-plexus-6Although these installations are simple, and consist only of taunt <a href="http://inhabitat.com/emil-lukas-makes-ghostly-shadow-paintings-using-thread/">threads</a>, it's amazing how animated they are...just like the light they mimic.6
Gabriel Dawe Plexus Colored Thread 7If you're in or around Baton Rouge, Louisiana, any time soon, you can stop by and see Dawe's work in person at Lousiana State University Museum of Art where it will be on display until April 2013.7







