The Wildcrafting Our Queerness ProjectMain MenuThe Wildcrafting Our Queerness ProjectMain PageArtExplore the art of queer AppalachiansTheory BlogSome major theories grounding queer Appalachian artQueer Appalachian Reading ListResources for further learningAboutLearn more about the project, oral histories, and the project's creator, Maxwell CloeMaxwell Cloed8840c620fc20aeee2b1f40a1e54c0e3967fa30d
Tangibly Yes Portrait
1media/tangibly_yes_portrait_thumb.jpg2020-11-06T04:37:31+00:00Maxwell Cloed8840c620fc20aeee2b1f40a1e54c0e3967fa30d11Photo by @yahzay on Instagramplain2020-11-06T04:37:31+00:00FBMD2300096a010000fe3a00001e670000478f00004b290100e27101002fab010090f80100323d0200c57b0200Maxwell Cloed8840c620fc20aeee2b1f40a1e54c0e3967fa30d
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1media/tangibly_yes_portrait.jpg2020-09-30T22:38:44+00:00Tangibly Yes13Painter from Sylva, North Carolinastructured_gallery2024-02-20T20:45:09+00:00Tangibly Yes is a self-taught painter from Sylva, North Carolina and currently working out of Atlanta, Georgia. Using a novel form of "fluid folk art," Tangibly Yes drips and swirls wet paint across her canvas to create evocative and textured abstract pieces reminiscent of landscapes, plants, and other aspects of the natural world. Their emphasis on fluidity, environmental consciousness, and constant interaction with the artistic process creates a body of work which challenges traditional boundaries between humans, nature, and artistic depictions of each.
Click the title of each piece to view the full image and listen to an audio recording of Tangibly Yes describing their inspiration and process behind the work of art.