Los Angeles Times

Thread wraps art in many layers

- Offramp Gallery, 1702 Lincoln Ave., Pasadena, (626) 298-6931, through March 29. Open Friday through Sunday. www.offrampgal­lery.com

Thread lines are the through lines in “Sampled,” an enjoyable group show at Offramp.

Anita Bunn guest-curated the selection of works stitched, woven and wrapped. All 10 artists are based in Southern California, but resonate with a broader trend toward incorporat­ing processes and materials traditiona­lly associated with craft or women’s handwork.

At last, in this poly-disciplina­ry moment, such practices are moving from margin to center.

In many of the works here, thread joins forces with sculpture, painting, or photograph­y to create hybrid forms, richly textured and resourcefu­l. Tree bark shows up, as does bubble wrap, stone, wax paper, and what looks like a section of rusted lawn furniture.

Meg Madison handstitch­es fragmented lines into her photograph­s, accentuati­ng directiona­l movement or echoing some shape within, forcing a simultaneo­us read of each print as both image and surface. The bits of printed text embedded in Joan Weinzettle’s small, hauntingly delicate thread grids seem like trawler’s catch, compromise­d but also precious.

Echiko Ohira forges dense marriages of paper and thread, secrets and their binding. In one stirring piece, she tucks a plethora of folded, bundled scraps into a paper box, itself wrapped in thread and mounted on the wall, open side out, a seductive, private archive.

Melanie Ciccone’s two embroideri­es on tea-stained squares of linen are quiet, little heartaches. One bears a loose scatter of stitched, colored lines and the other a constellat­ion of sewn dots in white, blue, flamingo. Against the shroud-like, stained fabric, the markings read as intimate maps, notations stitched into memory.

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