

This Thought Can Take Strange Shapes In An Empty Room
HAND EMBROIDERED TAPESTRY
Work Details:
This Thought Can Take Strange Shapes In An Empty Room, 2023
Silk, glass beads, freshwater pearl, woven jacquard in sapele frame
8 3/4 x 19 3/4 in (22 x 50 cm)
The Inexpressible is Contained
Charlotte Edey & Azadeh Elmizadeh
Sea View, Los Angeles
September 16 – October 21, 2023
Sea View is pleased to present The Inexpressible is Contained, a two-person exhibition of new works by Charlotte Edey (b.1992, Manchester, UK) and Azadeh Elmizadeh (b. 1987, Tehran, IR). For their Los Angeles debut, artists Edey and Elmizadeh explore selfhood by disembodying their subjects, examining instead the shifting historical, spiritual and environmental realms that shape and inform their layered identities. Rather than pursuing gendered forms or figures, both artists opt for intangible spaces and mutable forms, such as water, fire, earth and air suggest notions of porosity and luminosity – as well as containment and darkness.
Charlotte Edey’s ethereal works move between intricate soft pastel drawings on paper and weavings that incorporate satin-stitch embroidery and beadwork. Often sewing freshwater pearls and glass beads by hand throughout her pieces, Edey’s exacting materials emulate the faintest glow of moonlight or the flicker of a water’s edge. Light and shadow function as psychological and narrative metaphors for the unknowable and certain and the internal and external. Interiors and rooms evolve into emotive structures, reflecting on the architecture of the human body as it reconciles with its outer environment.
Inspired by Ovid’s Metamorphosis and hydrofeminist texts that combine feminist, queer, and ecological thinking, Edey emphasizes the inseparable relationship between the female body and bodies of water by weaving aquatic imagery through her interiors. In works such as “Breathwork,” the floor doubles as an expansive lake, glistening with strewn opalescent beads. In “Dollshouse,” the windows of a room start to resemble heavy-lidded eyes, with billowing curtains that run like tears. By encasing these drawings and weavings in found frames – some that date as far back as the Edwardian period – Edey presents a terraria of dreamlike worlds that play between the domestic and metaphysical.