By the Sea

Copied Adela Akers, By the Sea, 1987, sewn and woven sisal, linen, and wool, 96 1247 125 34 in. (244.5120.614.7 cm.), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of KPMG Peat Marwick, 1993.54.1

Artwork Details

Title
By the Sea
Artist
Date
1987
Dimensions
96 1247 125 34 in. (244.5120.614.7 cm.)
Credit Line
Gift of KPMG Peat Marwick
Mediums Description
sewn and woven sisal, linen, and wool
Classifications
Subjects
  • Landscape — coast
  • Abstract
Object Number
1993.54.1

Artwork Description

My interest was in creating something that would hang on the wall but project beyond the wall, involve my viewer. But I didn't want to paint. . . . I really wanted the loom to help me produce that.
--Adela Akers

Adela Akers grew up by the sea in Havana, Cuba. She developed this interactive woven structure to set into motion the choreography of color, light, and shadow across a seascape over time. When By the Sea is viewed from the right, the grey glow of morning light radiates across the deep turquoise water and the mountain peaks of a distant island. When viewed from the left, an evening sky absorbs much of the light, except the faint glow of a jutting rock and its reflection on the inky sea surface. As you walk from one end to another, only the purple horizon line remains constant. Each of the thirty-two panels was individually woven in Akers's signature dense style--with a rigid sisal warp (the vertical threads) and tightly pulled wool wefts (the horizontal threads)--and sewn together into the accordion form.

Exhibitions

Media - 2019.15 - SAAM-2019.15_1 - 137377
Subversive, Skilled, Sublime: Fiber Art by Women
May 31, 2024January 5, 2025
The artists in Subversive, Skilled, Sublime: Fiber Art by Women mastered and subverted the everyday materials of cotton, felt, and wool to create deeply personal artworks.