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Marina BaiselAtelier MartisThibeau ScarcériauxSfossilsAlena MukhinaSofia KarnukaevaLumi UniNitush-ArooshIra BoykoMomoka GomiZlata KornilovaDROZHDINIAdriana MeuniéAlexandra VolskayaSee allPrivacy overview
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Wild Waterfall
Adriana MeuniéPrice upon request
Textile artist Adriana Meunié works with natural, often raw materials, allowing their inherent wildness and fragility to shape the form.
The wall piece Wild Waterfall was born from her close observation of the carritx — a wild grass that grows abundantly across Mallorca, where the artist was born and continues to work. Long cherished by local craftsmen for its strength, flexibility, and remarkable ability to hold shape, this plant inspires Meunié’s practice.
Amid the rocky and sandy soils of the Mediterranean, it grows freely, forming fluid, almost streaming layers. The artist reflects these qualities in her work: the leaves, interlaced with esparto rope, create a flowing, tectonic structure reminiscent of a waterfall. Here, the primal energy of nature is tamed, weaving movement and volume into forms where raw strength meets delicate grace.
Details
Material
Carritx, esparto rope
Dimensions
170x 330 cm
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Wild Waterfall
Price upon request
Have questions? Contact us
Textile artist Adriana Meunié works with natural, often raw materials, allowing their inherent wildness and fragility to shape the form.
The wall piece Wild Waterfall was born from her close observation of the carritx — a wild grass that grows abundantly across Mallorca, where the artist was born and continues to work. Long cherished by local craftsmen for its strength, flexibility, and remarkable ability to hold shape, this plant inspires Meunié’s practice.
Amid the rocky and sandy soils of the Mediterranean, it grows freely, forming fluid, almost streaming layers. The artist reflects these qualities in her work: the leaves, interlaced with esparto rope, create a flowing, tectonic structure reminiscent of a waterfall. Here, the primal energy of nature is tamed, weaving movement and volume into forms where raw strength meets delicate grace.
Details
Material
Carritx, esparto rope
Dimensions
170x 330 cm
About Artist
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Adriana Meunié is a textile artist, she grew up in Mallorca, where she currently works and lives. Her studio is based in Felanitx. She specialized in tapestry techniques, where she often plays with the textures, volumes, and shapes. She works with raw, organic materials such as wool and raffia to create weavings and garments loaded with richly sensorial, tactile properties, asking us to consider their roots as organic products fresh from the field.
She does so by tampering as little as possible with the materials, allowing their innately wild, textural qualities to dictate the nature of what she makes; dried grasses fan outwards from her wall hangings, swishing this way and that, while wool left in uneven, shaggy clumps becomes rugged clothing or three-dimensional tapestries.
The artist discovered tapestry techniques bound to the very primary essence of textiles, which she finds especially attractive given her lifelong immersion in them. It presents an incredible opportunity to create what she loves most: wild textures, volumes, and shapes—a fundamental pursuit in her work as she seeks a monstrous elegance.
She combines this technique with raw materials from her surroundings, finding in them a wealth of interesting symbols such as tradition, handcrafted and artisanal work, and links to ancient occupations like shepherding (with wool from the sheep she helps to shear) and cultivation, all of which she strives to valorize. She selects these materials for their intrinsic beauty, allowing them to express their raw, pure allure. Wool, esparto, carritx, and rafia (among others) in their primary forms are irresistibly attractive to her; although they are typically processed for use in baskets, sweaters, or chairs, she cherishes their natural state and wishes to share that sentiment.
Her themes include the challenge of introducing into a space elements that appear to originate from the outside—such as vegetal fibers reminiscent of grass or wool that clearly references the animal—while some pieces are designed to recreate the sensation of a landscape. Driven by a pursuit of clean rawness, she meticulously balances natural materials to present them with clarity and precision, and although conventional emotions like sadness, joy, or anger hold little appeal for her, she embraces the challenge of creating works that evoke sensations of calm, alertness, and even discomfort.