Work samples
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Refusing to Give Up Hope, Triptych
Refusing To Give Up Hope, triptych, mixed media on wood panels, left panel 30"x64”, center panel 36"x36”, right panel 30"x52”, 2023.
“Refusing To Give Up Hope,” is connecting the dots between the vulnerable feelings that I experience daily as a teacher, woman, and mother at the hands of harmful systems of power and a culture that continues to accommodate violence and it was born out of personal frustration with how we (as a culture) fall short when it comes to protecting women and children.
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Lessons from Eve: A Reimagined Origin Story
Lessons from Eve: A Reimagined Origin Story, Mixed media on wood panel, 36"x48", 2022.
What if women were the storytellers?
I think about this question all the time and especially in my role as a mother and a teacher. I feel an urgency to encourage my children and students to look well beyond the narrow lens in which much of our history is still being taught.
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Finding Liberty: A Portrait of My Daughter
Finding Liberty: A Portrait of My Daughter, mixed media on wood panel, 24"x36”, 2022.
When the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, my daughter and I took the train to DC to participate in the “Summer of Rage” direct action protest organized by the National Women’s March. The march to the White House was planned for the day following Biden’s signing of an executive order aimed at protecting reproductive health services and protecting access to abortion care. My artwork is both a response to my outrage at the Supreme Court’s decision and a reflection of the pride that I felt as a mother to walk hand-in-hand with my teenage daughter who made the choice to use her voice and stand up for something she believes in.
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Whitewashing
Whitewashing, Mixed media on wood panel, 2021
This artwork was a response to Nicole Cardoza's January 25, 2021 Anti-Racism Daily Newsletter, "Unpack This Land Is Your Land." The article spoke specifically to how "the use of "This Land is Your Land" at the inauguration failed to recognize the violence against Indigenous communities in this nation's history. In some ways, while I was initially feeling more hope with the possibilities of our newly elected President this speaks to how much work we still have to do as a country and specifically as white people.
About Andrea
Andrea Downs
she/her
Andrea is a social practice and mixed media artist and educator who has been teaching art in public and independent schools since 2004. She earned her BA and MA in Art Education summa cum laude… more
There's Too Many Of You Crying
My linocut prints in this series each begin with "There's Too Many Of You Crying," and I'm utilizing Marvin Gaye's song lyrics to respond and bring attention to injustices in our country.
In "There's Too Many Of You Crying: With Liberty and Justice for All," I am responding to the ever present threat to our democracy that has been a part of our reality in the United States since Trump was first elected in 2016.
“There’s Too Many Of You Crying: Bans Off Our Bodies,” is a series of ongoing linocuts that were born out of personal frustration with how we (as a culture) fall short when it comes to protecting women’s reproductive rights and bodily autonomy. I printed the repeating phrases of “What’s Going On” and “Don’t Look Away” directly onto the first fourteen pages of the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade. I chose green ink as my printing color to stand in solidarity with others in the abortion rights movement. Political leaders are not doing enough if our lives and liberties are consistently threatened in the place in which we are told that we should feel the most safe–our own bodies.
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There's Too Many of You Crying: Bans Off Our Bodies
36"x84" mixed media linocut on the first 14 pages of the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade
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Bans Off Our Bodies - detail
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Bans Off Our Bodies - detail
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Bans Off Our Bodies - detail
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There's Too Many Of Your Crying: With Liberty and Justice for All
36"x48" mixed media linocut on an American flag
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What Happens When We "Leave It Up To The States?"
28"x40" mixed media linocut on a map of the United States
Butterfly Waystation
When we create space in our lives and our work to love, listen to, connect with, and care for others, we create the possibility of having an immeasurable positive impact on the health and sustainability of our communities. Beginning in 2016, much of my social practice and mixed media work centers and amplifies collective stories with an emphasis on women’s experiences and the value of relationships and connectivity. In my mixed media work, I use found and personal heirlooms and objects, depictions of nature, text, and symbolic imagery to create work that explores identity, sense of place and belonging.
My artwork is both inspired by nature and fueled by my commitment to create work that inspires and encourages care for others and for the places, relationships, and liberties that are sacred to us. I believe that art has the power to uplift, transform, elevate, and restore community members who interact in a shared space.
Utilizing flowers as a subject, my mixed media artwork Butterfly Waystation is a symbolic representation of the positive, loving, and uplifting energy that sustains, supports, protects, and deepens friendships, relationships, and connections within a community. Each painted flower was carefully selected to communicate strength, healing, hope, resistance, joy, adaptability, justice, positive change, rebirth, transformation, and courage.
The concept of a waystation is borrowed from the idea of a Monarch Waystation–an outdoor garden space that provides food, shelter, and other resources necessary for monarchs to produce successive generations and sustain their migration. When we call attention to and intentionally provide the energy, love, and support that we and others need to live and thrive, we create the possibility to provide a level of community care that encourages growth and positive change.
In January-March of 2022, I created The Balsa Butterflies–a series of 76 painted and linocut printed 4”x4” wood panels that honored and celebrated important women who have loved, challenged, healed, and stood next to me and each other in community. After sharing the collection at a community arts event in Charlotte, I individually mailed the panels to each of women along with a pre addressed and stamped flower postcard and the invitation to “write, collage, draw, or paint your love and gratitude for a woman that is important to you on the postcard and send it to me.” The envelopes that are sewn to the bottom of Butterfly Waystation hold the postcards that were sent back to me by the women who chose to participate. Their messages further value and emphasize the exchange of energy in the form of communication, love, and care that supports and sustains strong communities.
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Butterfly Waystation
36"x48" mixed media watercolor painting on canvas
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Detail photo
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Blue Sage - Strength + Wisdom + Resilience + Sacred
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Amaryllis - Rebirth + Transformation + Courage
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Black-Eyed Susan - Justice + Positive Change + Adaptability + Resilience
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Marigold - Strength + Joy + Positivity + Cycle of Life
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Echinacea - Strength + Resilience + Healing
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Zinnias and Sunflowers - Friendship + Endurance + Positivity + Strength + Loyalty
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Swamp Milkweed - Hope + Transformation
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Butterfly Weed - Hope + Resilience + Balance
Refusing To Give Up Hope
Refusing To Give Up Hope, triptych, mixed media on wood panels, left panel 30"x64”, center panel 36"x36”, right panel 30"x52”, 2023.
In “Refusing To Give Up Hope,” I am exploring and making connections between themes that I have been addressing in my artwork since 2016: identity, community care, and social justice. This artwork is connecting the dots between the vulnerable feelings that I experience daily as a teacher, woman, and mother at the hands of harmful systems of power and a culture that continues to accommodate violence and it was born out of personal frustration with how we (as a culture) fall short when it comes to protecting women and children. Political leaders are not doing enough if our lives and liberties are consistently threatened in the places in which we are told that we should feel the most safe–our homes, our schools, and our own bodies.
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Refusing to Give Up Hope, Triptych
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Refusing To Give Up Hope - Detail of the right panel
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Refusing To Give Up Hope - Detail of the right panel
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Refusing To Give Up Hope - Detail of the middle panel
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Refusing To Give Up Hope - Detail of the middle panel
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Refusing To Give Up Hope - Detail of the left panel
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Refusing To Give Up Hope - Detail of the left panel
For...
This is a small selection of the artwork that I have made for the people that I love and care for.
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For Eleanor, watercolor, 2024.
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For Joanie, watercolor and pen, 2022.
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For Terry, watercolor, 2024.
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For Eleanor and Maggie, watercolor, 2024.
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For Broc, watercolor on wood panel, 2023.
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For Uncle Steve, watercolor and pen, 2023.
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For Megan, watercolor and pen, 2023.
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For Holly, watercolor, 2023.
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For Hannah, watercolor, 2024.
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For Joan, watercolor and pen, 2023.
My Balsa Butterflies
In January-March of 2022, I created The Balsa Butterflies–a series of 76 painted and linocut printed 4”x4” wood panels that honored and celebrated important women who have loved, challenged, healed, and stood next to me and each other in community. After sharing the collection at a community arts event in Charlotte, and beginning on January 2, 2023 I individually mailed the panels to each of women along with a pre addressed and stamped flower postcard and the invitation to “write, collage, draw, or paint your love and gratitude for a woman that is important to you on the postcard and send it to me.” The envelopes that are sewn to the bottom of Butterfly Waystation hold the postcards that were sent back to me by the women who chose to participate. Their messages further value and emphasize the exchange of stories, love, and care that supports and sustains strong communities.
Text on the Balsa Butterfly Poster Print:
“You are part butterfly,” Grandma Motil used to say. While I felt the warmth of her words as a child, I didn’t realize at the time that she was actually sharing a part of our Czech family history in that our name motyl, means butterfly, a symbol of growth, transformation, and renewal.
Each butterfly is painted on a wood panel. Spanish for raft, balsa is a strong, soft, flexible, fast-growing tree, considered a “nurse tree” for how it protects the trees that surround it in the humid rainforests of South and Central America.
The panels are linked through the repeated pattern of printed growth rings. Growth rings serve as indicators of a tree’s age and experience during each year of a tree’s life.
Each butterfly honors one of many women and nonbinary people who have loved, challenged, healed, and stood next to me and each other in community.
Together we feel seen.
We are all part butterfly.
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Bronwyn Downs - Queen
4"x4" watercolor painted and linocut printed wood panel
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Amy Rogers - Pipevine Swallowtail
4"x4" watercolor painted and linocut printed wood panel
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Rebby Kern - Blue Triangle
4"x4" watercolor painted and linocut printed wood panel
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Emily Harris - Blue Pansy
4"x4" watercolor painted and linocut printed wood panel
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Corley May - Peacock
4"x4" watercolor painted and linocut printed wood panel
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Hannah Hasan - Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
4"x4" watercolor painted and linocut printed wood panel
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Eva Crawford - Painted Lady
4"x4" watercolor painted and linocut printed wood panel
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Meredith Connelly - Magnificent Owl
4"x4" watercolor painted and linocut printed wood panel
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Jennifer Williams - Western Pygmy Blue
4"x4" watercolor painted and linocut printed wood panel
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Karen Spears - Red-spotted Purple
4"x4" watercolor painted and linocut printed wood panel
Airing Out the "Dirty" Laundry - Ongoing Community Art Project
Some of us live much of our lives feeling invisible–unseen and unheard.
Airing Out the “Dirty” Laundry is an ongoing participatory community art project that responds to the silencing of women* by creating and holding space for all women to share experiences through visual storytelling.
Laundry Day Workshops are a call for women to gather together, to listen, to be heard, to feel love and the understanding that resists hate and injustice.
All are welcome and no prior art skills are required.
Connect with the project at www.aotdl.org and IG @womenslaundry before the workshop where you will become a part of the ever-growing collection of more than 400 women’s stories. Women’s signed or anonymous stories are collected and then joined together on laundry clotheslines in ongoing installations in the Baltimore community and beyond.
*Airing Out the “Dirty” Laundry holds space for all women across the intersections of race, age, color, ability, faith, religion, ancestry, national origin, citizenship, social class, economic class, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender identity and gender expression.
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Pop Up Installation at Hart Witzen Gallery, Charlotte, NC
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Pop Up Installation in Collaboration with Project Enough
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Pop Up Installation at CreativeMornings Charlotte
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Pop Up Installation at Johnson C. Smith University, Charlotte, NC
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Pop Up Installation at Resident Culture Brewing Co. for International Women's Day Event
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Pop Up Installation at Comfest in Columbus, Ohio
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Pop Up Installation at SouthEnd ARTS monthly art exhibit, South End Charlotte, NC
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Installation of the full collection of women's stories at The Mint Museum Uptown Charlotte, NC
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Installation of the full collection of women's stories at The Mint Museum Uptown Charlotte, NC
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Installation at UNC Charlotte
Welcome to The Laundry Room
The first Laundry Days took place in the warm space of Andrea’s family room in Matthews, North Carolina. Since then, Laundry Days have been hosted in homes, kitchens, classrooms, community centers, outdoor spaces, and more recently through virtual meetings. Through partnerships with individuals, community groups, institutions, and organizations Laundry Days have occurred in neighborhoods and communities throughout the country.
The energy of the space changes and reflects the diversity of the women in the room, but each Laundry Day begins with centering community intentions around creating a safe, loving, brave space for all participants.
Artist, Educator, and Creator of Airing Out the “Dirty” Laundry, Andrea Downs will provide art making materials and lead the workshop by creating a brave, supportive, loving, and safe space for all to create pieces of visual storytelling. Participants are invited and encouraged to bring a personal article of clothing or other textile to use as the “base layer” for their story. If you feel any hesitations, Andrea will help you to correct the voice in your head that says your story is not important to share.
Andrea welcomes the opportunity to work collaboratively and in partnership with individuals, groups, organizations, and institutions that are equally passionate about the purpose and mission of Airing Out the “Dirty” Laundry--to hold space for women’s stories.
Please contact Andrea directly to chat about the possibilities. [email protected]
Community Partners:
Ann Turiano and Iron Crow Theatre
Free Fall Baltimore and Baltimore Office of Promotion and The Arts
Charlotte Pride
Charlotte Reproductive Action Network
Charlotte Lit
Charlotte Women's Movement
Guerilla Poets
Charlotte Mecklenburg Library
Independent Artist, Bree Stallings
CLTextile
Epoch Tribe
Project Enough
Trans Day of Remembrance event partners at Time Out Youth
Winthrop University Galleries
Pink Boots Society of North Carolina
UNC Charlotte's Triota WGST Honor Society and Tales from Down There
Girls Rock Charlotte
The Mint Museum Uptown
Wells Fargo
BOOM Festival
Comfest - Community Festival in Columbus, Ohio
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Laundry Day in Partnership with Charlotte Lit
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Laundry Day in Partnership with Guerilla Poets and The Charlotte Mecklenburg Library
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Laundry Day in Partnership with Nikki Eason at Resident Culture Brewing Co
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Laundry Day in Partnership with Tales from Down There and the UNC Charlotte Women's and Gender Studies Dept.
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Laundry Day in Partnership with CLTextile Group
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Laundry Day in my Family Room
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Laundry Day in Partnership with Charlotte Pride at The Bechtler Museum of Art
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Laundry Day in Partnership with The Levine Museum of the New South
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Laundry Day in Collaboration with the Black Mama Endangered event - Epoche Tribe and Charlotte Reproductive Action Network
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Laundry Day on my back porch