Gerrymandering the Marsh
Detail view of three green herons in Gerrymandering the Marsh installation. © 2021 Eve Jacobs-Carnahan
Installation size varies depending on arrangement, roughly 43 inches high, floor space roughly 9 x 12 feet
Available for exhibition. Contact eve@evejacobs-carnahan.com for details.
Materials: Wool and linen yarns, felted wool, leather, linen, cotton fabric, wire mesh, day lily leaves, grapevines, rubber inner tubes, plastic bags, mulberry paper, rocks, wood, rigid foam, stone clay, acrylic paint, wire, hardware, custom printed cardboard cubes
In this installation, the marsh is inhabited by knitted green herons and cool, smooth salamanders. Alert birds crouch quietly, ready to snatch their prey. The herons’ richly textured folded wings stand out against their soft felted breasts and fabric underbellies. The repetition of diamonds and scallops on their backs evoke feathers. Multi-hued yarns capture the way bird feathers change color with the light.
The birds and salamanders represent citizens in legislative districts. There are three voters in each district, on each set of pedestals. Who will capture more districts, the 6 herons or 9 salamanders? The district boundaries control the result. The groupings echo actual maps of Congressional districts that pack one type of voter into a district or crack large voting blocs into slivers.