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Created and Sold by visceral home

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visceral home
centeredness | Macrame Wall Hanging in Wall Hangings by visceral home
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centeredness | Macrame Wall Hanging in Wall Hangings by visceral home
centeredness | Macrame Wall Hanging in Wall Hangings by visceral home
centeredness | Macrame Wall Hanging in Wall Hangings by visceral home
centeredness | Macrame Wall Hanging in Wall Hangings by visceral home
centeredness | Macrame Wall Hanging in Wall Hangings by visceral home
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centeredness | Macrame Wall Hanging in Wall Hangings by visceral home

centeredness - Wall Hangings

Price $250

Handmade

Reclaimed Materials

Upcycled Product

Made in USA

Natural Materials

Locally Sourced

10 w x 10 h x 2 d - linen canvas detailed with ground crystal quartz, ground selenite,
plaster, concrete, sand, oil then embroidered with 100% organic cotton. housed in a handcrafted rainbow poplar natural frame.


c e n t e r e d n e s s.

a piece to focus on while grounding. breathe. count the yarn, feel the texture, what colors do you see?, where is the concrete?, how many tones of purple can you spot on the poplar?

learning new grounding tools and techniques has been a saving grace for me while dealing with anxiety attacks. it’s a skill that requires repetition, so your body/mind can even remember to use the grounding techniques you’ve learned, all while in a heightened state.

i use my own paintings as grounding points, analyzing each stoke. finding new paths and emotion within the works. counting. touching. using my senses to bring me back down to earth. my favorite compliment was hearing that a collector uses my art to meditate, and since then i have been focusing on fueling my fiber works with a handful of different grounding points to offer a therapeutic experience within the artistic structure.

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Item centeredness
Created by visceral home
As seen in Creator's Studio, Charleston, SC
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visceral home
Meet the Creator
Wescover creator since 2022
handcrafted paintings blurring the lines between art, poetry, and sculpture.

visceral home is a husband and wife team who create therapeutic textured art inspired by their mental health recovery journey. Taylor and Connor Robinson use a variety of natural and unnatural materials to story-tell within their works, including but always expanding: plaster, concrete, rock pigment, exotic wood, driftwood, embroidered or hanging hand-spun yarn, healing crystals, iron, gemstone minerals, oil, rust, sand, and stone. Connor Robinson builds each canvas that his wife Taylor Robinson (maiden name Redler) unfolds her artistic vision upon. Connor finishes each project by housing each painting in a hand crafted frame using a wide variety of wood species and woodworking techniques to best honor their work. Their art is partnered with vulnerable poetry/biographies in hopes to de-stigmatize mental health and addiction recovery.

The team chose to use their surname, visceral home, to avoid conforming to a particular artform. They find themselves consistently expanding and evolving their technique, process, style, and concepts. In addition to sculptural wall art/installations, the team has been experimenting with building new conceptual furnishing designs. Expanding into furniture design is a goal for the couple, and will be launching in the near future.

With a deep love of interior design and architecture, they find themselves constantly inspired by innovative spaces that merge together raw, textured, natural influenced organic concepts with accents that outlast fast design trends in this new social media era. They often consider industrial modernism and organic soft scandinavian + asian influences while designing/preparing art projects. Keeping in mind the spaces their art lands will continue to morph into new personalities, they focus on creating art that can be everlasting through many design changes.

Taylor is most drawn to earth tone palettes, and minerals found in nature, highlighting the natural healing beauty of the color palettes found outdoors. Using art to provoke conversation they have a mission to illustrate vulnerability, aiming to cultivate positive change in the stigma revolving mental health. The hope being to take uncomfortable conversations that are rarely had, and using abstract expressionism as a euphemism. Art is their way of artistically transmuting trauma, releasing and transforming pain into meaning. The couple has a personal mission of keeping their primary purpose to build a platform large enough to impact the stigma around mental health.