RUTH TABANCAY: (UN) NATURAL ORDER
July 28 – September 2, 2023
The work in Ruth Tabancay’s (Un)Natural Order illustrates natural earth systems impacted by interactions with human or other species. The burning of fossil fuels and their use in plastic manufacturing are among the causes of global warming. The ocean’s coral reef systems can be affected by an increase in temperature as small as 2° Fahrenheit. Corals form a mutualistic relationship with the algae zooxanthellae. Warmer temperatures cause the corals to expel the algae and instead of stunning colors, a skeleton is left behind. Beehives are adversely affected by other species. Varroa destructor are parasitic mites that attack honey bees and have been named as one of the causes of Colony Collapse Disorder. Waxworm larvae, Galleria mellonella, are beehive pests that chew through beeswax. A mushroom in the forests is a visible indication of the underground mycorrhizal networks that form connections between trees, transferring water and nutrients. Tabancay renders these points of interaction in assemblage and a variety of textile techniques. The repetitive hand motions used to create the stitches are both meditative and singular to the artist.
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Ruth Tabancay
Ruth Tabancay’s passion for science led her to study microbiology in college. Following a stint as a hospital laboratory technologist, she went on to medical school. After 11 years in private practice, she left medicine to study art. She uses textile techniques such as embroidery, crochet, knitting, felting; sculptural processes such as cast sugar and assemblage; and sculptural explorations of hyperbolic geometry. Concepts range from microbiological depictions to global warming to plastic accumulation on the planet. She is a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley; University of California School of Medicine, San Francisco; and California College of the Arts. Her work has been exhibited regionally and nationally, including The Textile Museum, Washington, DC; Museum of Craft and Design, San Francisco; World Financial Center, New York City; California College of the Arts, San Francisco; and San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles. She lives in Berkeley, California. She has been a member of Mercury 20 since 2012.