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Reading: Elodie Blanchard Revitalizes Fabric Scraps into Vivid Patchworks of Trees, Bouquets, and Goddesses — Colossal
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BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Artists > Elodie Blanchard Revitalizes Fabric Scraps into Vivid Patchworks of Trees, Bouquets, and Goddesses — Colossal
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Elodie Blanchard Revitalizes Fabric Scraps into Vivid Patchworks of Trees, Bouquets, and Goddesses — Colossal

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 30 June 2025 18:13
Published 30 June 2025
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The garments we wear often hold stories about our lives. A hole in the knee of a well-loved pair of jeans recalls hours spent bent down to tend to a vegetable garden, while a greasy oil stain condemns a T-shirt once worn to a family barbeque.

For Elodie Blanchard, textiles hold boundless narrative potential. Working with fabrics gathered from friends, stoops around her Brooklyn neighborhood, and secondhand shops, the French-American artist and designer stitches patchwork sculptures that transform materials otherwise destined for the landfill into vibrant forms. When searching for something more specific—say, Lycra, leather, or fur—the artist taps her friends in the industry and organizations like Materials for the Arts and FabScrap.

“Forest.” Image © Randy Duchaine

The resulting pieces take many shapes. There are Blanchard’s spindly trees that layer stripes of fabrics upward, creating visible rings encircling the trunk. Stretch is essential in these arboreal constructions, and the artist shares that she tends to alternate the amount of give a material has, allowing for small bulges and curves that resemble organic life.

For her sprawling bouquet series, Blanchard finds inspiration from Green-Wood Cemetery near her home. She scours the trash cans for polyester scraps, tattered flags, and other materials that once honored the dead. “Remembrance Happy Birthday,” for example, came to fruition after the artist found a balloon bearing those words.

Whether creating a figurative goddess or a three-dimensional vessel, the material guides the form. “It may look spontaneous, but I carefully consider color and pattern when sewing the strips together,” Blanchard says. “If I want to make a ‘fancy’ tree, I’ll seek out haute couture fabrics; if I’m creating a trophy urn meant to show excess, I’ll look for bright gold poly materials.” Whatever the form, though, Blanchard has a central goal: “Each time, I try to create a unique universe or personality.”

If you’re in New York, you can see some of Blanchard’s works in Soft Structures, on view through August 8 at Jane Lombard Gallery. She’s currently working toward an open studio and exhibition as part of New York’s Textile Month, and you can find more from the artist on her website and Instagram.

a collection of textile masks on a wall above colorful ceramics
“Portraits,” installation view at SEEDS
a floral like display made of colorful textiles
“Remembrance Happy Birthday.” Image © Randy Duchaine
a detail of an abstracted figure's ear and eye
Detail of “Goddess 11”
a vessel made of pink, black, and blue fabrics
“Urn VI” (2024), fabric, leather, Mylar balloon, 18 x 16 x 22 1/2 inches
a floral like display made of colorful textiles
“Bouquet 5.” Image © Paul Plews
a floral like display made of colorful textiles
“Bouquet 23”
detail of a floral like display made of colorful textiles
Detail of “Remembrance Happy Birthday.” Image © Randy Duchaine
a vessel made of pink, red, and orange fabrics
“Urn I Love You” (2025), fabric, leather, mylar balloon, 28 x 19 x 17 inches
a floral like display made of colorful textiles
“Remembrance Ninja Turtles.” Image © Randy Duchaine
detail of a floral like display made of colorful textiles
Detail of “Remembrance Ninja Turtles.” Image © Randy Duchaine
a white woman in jeans and a black top stands amid a cluster of vibrant textile structures
Elodie Blanchard with trees (2022). Image © Randy Duchaine

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