Skip to content
Rusty Scruby | Clouds, 2.18.23 - 3.25.23

Rusty Scruby | Clouds

2.18.23 - 3.25.23

Rusty Scruby | Clouds, 2.18.23 - 3.25.23

Rusty Scruby | Clouds

2.18.23 - 3.25.23

Rusty Scruby | Clouds, 2.18.23 - 3.25.23

Rusty Scruby | Clouds

2.18.23 - 3.25.23

Rusty Scruby | Clouds, 2.18.23 - 3.25.23

Rusty Scruby | Clouds

2.18.23 - 3.25.23

Rusty Scruby | Clouds, 2.18.23 - 3.25.23

Rusty Scruby | Clouds

2.18.23 - 3.25.23

Rusty Scruby, Thanksgiving, 2022

Rusty Scruby

Thanksgiving, 2022

hand-knit indie dyed wool using the intarsia technique

23h x 31w in

Framed: 27h x 35w in

RS235

Rusty Scruby, Walking Stick, 2022

Rusty Scruby

Walking Stick, 2022

hand-knit indie dyed Highland wool using the intarsia technique

47h x 36w in

Framed: 51h x 40w in

RS236

Rusty Scruby, Couds 2022, 2022

Rusty Scruby

Couds 2022, 2022

hand-knit indie dyed Highland wool using the intarsia technique

51h x 73w in

Framed: 55h x 77w in

RS237

Rusty Scruby, Neon Clouds, 2022

Rusty Scruby

Neon Clouds, 2022

hand-knit indie dyed Highland wool using the intarsia technique

24.50h x 20w in

Framed: 28.50h x 24w in

RS238

Rusty Scruby, Array, 2023

Rusty Scruby

Array, 2023

archival photographic reconstruction on Canson Mi Teintes paper, framed with Optium glass

46h x 59w in

Framed: 50h x 63w in

RS239

Rusty Scruby, Continuum, 2023

Rusty Scruby

Continuum, 2023

archival photographic reconstruction on photo paper

36h x 54w in

RS240

Press Release

Knitting—which the artist has practiced since childhood—moonlights as fiber paintings in Rusty Scruby’s new body of work. This one picks up where his knitted series stretched over wooden armatures left off. To both, he brings a mind trained in engineering and music composition, allowing new lexicons to emerge. He achieves tonal range by commissioning a local dyer or employs yarn gathered from across the state; all bow to memory, as familiar photographs dwell behind the patterns. Pixelation knots the past into new constellations, and the slippages between imagination and reality are like dropped stitches retrieved again. Scruby is interested in seeing how far he can delve into abstraction—information loss—while retaining figurative sense, leaving room for nostalgia. His patterned, hexagonal compositions—which employ the organic building blocks that echo honeycomb or wasps’ nests—deceive: heterogeneity of color and homogeneity of pattern creates a tension (also a code). As intimate as they are objective, his fiber paintings exist between the supple loop of memory and the hard needle of fact.

 

Rusty Scruby has exhibited both nationally and abroad including exhibitions in Miami, Houston, Dallas, Los Angeles, Santa Fe, Philadelphia, Chicago and Seoul, South Korea. Scruby received a National Endowment for the Arts Grant in 2010. His work is held in private and public collections, including the Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas, Stephen Pyles Restaurant, Microsoft Corporation, Capital One, Lamar University, the Art Museum of Southeast Texas, and The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

Back To Top