
Silver Spread (Sovereign)
<p>Barbara Rossi began printing etchings on fabric in the late 1960s. A talented seamstress, she soon started “seeing and sewing these printed images together.” The process of making such quilts was arduous, combining many elements of both fine art and craft. To create <em>Silver Spread</em>, Rossi first printed her images on squares of nylon, a difficult procedure due to the fabric’s slippery and nonabsorbent surface. After filling, backing, and quilting the pieces together, she added fringe and further stitching to emphasize some of the images’ linear elements. As a way of underscoring the resulting object’s hybrid nature, Rossi draped the first quilt she exhibited over a chair, “so it was neither a wall piece or a bed piece or a floor piece. It wasn’t a domestic object. It was something beyond any of those functions.”</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1969
- Dimensions
- largest dimensions: 195 × 162 × 0.5 cm (76 13/16 × 63 13/16 × 1/4 in.); individual printed panel: 36 × 29.5 cm (14 3/16 × 11 5/8 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Barbara Rossi
Artist

Printmaking
Barbara Rossi was an American artist known for intricate linear drawings and prints that combined geometric precision with organic, biomorphic forms. Working primarily in ink and etching throughout her career, she developed a distinctive visual language that bridged abstraction and figuration, often incorporating serial repetition and layered mark-making. Her practice engaged with postwar developments in printmaking and drawing as primary media rather than preliminary stages.
Full artist profile →More
More by Barbara Rossi
Untitled
2004 · Gelatin silver print
Untitled
2004 · Gelatin silver print
Untitled
2004 · Gelatin silver print
Untitled
2004 · Gelatin silver print
Untitled
2004 · Gelatin silver print
Moon Meet May
1993 · Color screenprint on cream wove paper
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Barbara Rossi
- Year
- 1969
- Dimensions
- largest dimensions: 195 × 162 × 0.5 cm (76 13/16 × 63 13/16 × 1/4 in.); individual printed panel: 36 × 29.5 cm (14 3/16 × 11 5/8 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1969-018102
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





