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View full screen - View 1 of Lot 215. Blue Waterlily.

Estimate

5,000 - 7,000 USD

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Lot Details

Description

Mia Forrest

Blue Waterlily


♋Hand embroidery, silk thread, cotto🥀n cloth, artwork attached to cotton rag matboard, encased in a Tasmanian Oak Frame, Ultra vue glass

artwork: 19 by 17.5 in. 48.26 by 44.45 cm.

framed: 36.22 by 35 in. 92 by 88.9 cm.

Executed in 2025, this work is unique from the Stitching as Storage series. This work also includes an ordinal 🌊inscriptionꦛ.


Digital:

Inscription 97,599,023

JPEG inscribed on Bitcoin

Executed in 2025, this work is unique


Satoshi 1,977,341,250,000,000

SAT Creation Year: 2024

Inscription Date: June 19th, 2025

Blockchain: Bitcoin

Satributes: uncommon


The artist.

Mia Forrest’s work hones in on the premise that art can be generative by nature - adopting ecolog🦩ical systems and rule-based processes as a collaborative framework. These ideas have become foundational to her practice, leading her to build a practice methodology around natural algorithms within ecological systems.


Blue Waterlily is the third artwork from Mia’s tight quadriptych textiles series Stitching as Storage. The series e𝐆xplores how textiles can store, index, and arrange ecological data, with a particular focus on primordial blooms - modern descendants 🔯of some of the earliest flowering angiosperms that first emerged during the Cretaceous period. 


The artwork is created through a rule-based system, where stochast♐ic plant biodata is notated as rhythmic embroidery. Each of the 7360 hand-embroidered stitched lines, is a registration of the on/off electrical conductivity pulsations from the Blue Waterlily, capturing the intrinsic algorithmic essence of the plant. 


To capture this, sensors are attached t𒉰o the plant to record activity w𓆏ithin the stomata (the tiny pores on a leaf’s surface that respond to environmental conditions). This biodata is then sonified and notated as a rhythmic composition, where each embroidered line signifies the duration of an 1/8th note, encoding the blue waterlily’s internal autonomous rhythms into geometric harmony. 


This data-driven mark-making introduces variability within constraint - a hallmark of systems-based practice. This approach aligns with conceptual art's evolution into systems thinking in the 1960s and '70s; artists like Sol LeWitt, Hans Haacke, and Vera Molnár who used generative processes, logical constraints, and environmental input to define the aesthetics of a piece. In this lineage, Stitching as Storage echoes the same intent: to visualize processes and translate invisible systems into material form. It’s generative, by nature.


“I view the work as an intimate collaboration betw⛄een 🌃nature’s deep time, its hidden intrinsic energetic code, and myself”.