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Marina BaiselAtelier MartisThibeau ScarcériauxSfossilsAlena MukhinaSofia KarnukaevaLumi UniNitush-ArooshIra BoykoMomoka GomiZlata KornilovaDROZHDINIAdriana MeuniéAlexandra VolskayaSee allArtists
Marina BaiselAtelier MartisThibeau ScarcériauxSfossilsAlena MukhinaSofia KarnukaevaLumi UniNitush-ArooshIra BoykoMomoka GomiZlata KornilovaDROZHDINIAdriana MeuniéAlexandra VolskayaSee allPrivacy overview
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Momoka Gomi
Nottingham, UK
Momoka is a hands-on maker and textile artist who explores the connections between memory, time, and identity through her intricate woven works. She views the slow process of weaving as a metaphor for life, where the time and care invested shape our unique narratives. Each living thread contributes to the character of her woven fabrics, resulting in pieces rich with personal and collective histories. Inspired by the way memory is recollected and the decay that accompanies time, Momoka uses denim fabric as a symbol of positive time passage. By hand-cutting denim into 5 mm strips, she crafts her weft, allowing the fabric’s inherent qualities to shine through. The subtle colours of her textiles, marked by fading textures and eroded areas, evoke the complexities of life stories and invite viewers to reflect on their own experiences. Through her artistry, Momoka creates a dialogue between material and memory, celebrating the narratives woven into the very fabric of our existence. Each piece serves as a reminder of the beauty found in transformation and the significance of the passage of time.
Momoka Gomi’s woven textiles are meditations on time, memory, and transformation. Grounded in a tactile, intuitive process, she reclaims denim — an everyday material worn by life — as a symbolic weft. Through repetitive hand-cutting and weaving, she constructs layered compositions that echo the erosion and preservation of memory. Her works often carry traces of distress and imperfection — frayed edges, faded blues, and soft textures — imbued with quiet resilience. Gold threads emerge as subtle markers of healing and continuity, inspired by the Japanese art of kintsugi. Balancing structure and emotion, her practice invites viewers into a personal yet universal reflection on the beauty of impermanence and the narratives held within fabric and form.
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