Any special request, contact us
Worldwide shipping, including insurance and customs management
Worldwide shipping, including insurance and customs management

AKABA N°139

Référence :


700,00 incl.VATVAT on margin included according to article 297-A of the French General Tax Code

These Waga scepters created by Aude Wagner and Lise Garrig, with their obvious femininity, were imagined as a vector allowing them to celebrate the women they admire. These sculptures are also made up of elements of the living world allowing the artists to honour nature. They have also integrated materials from the other side of the world, brought back from their travels in order to highlight places that are emblematic for them.

Length : 11.81 in / 30 cm

Height : 65.35 in / 166 cm

Width : 11.81 in / 30 cm

Weigth : 6.61 lb / 3 kg

Available
Secure Payment
Delivery Cost

Designer: Aude Wagner and Lise Garrig

Aude WAGNER and Lise GARRIG are two multidisciplinary artists who express their sensitivity through textile art by composing with elements from nature or gleaned during their travels.

Materials: Dried rushes, oval lagoons and dried oat stems, rooster feathers, rooster tail, meleagris, pheasant and ostrich, pompom braid, Japanese fabric, fabric, Alpaca wool, Angora wool, velvet ribbon, leather, jade yarn, cotton, recycled wool, lurex wool, fabric finish.

Inspiration: “Enchanting city bordered by the waters of the Red Sea, a mix of fascinating desert and underwater landscapes.”

Edition: One-of-a-kind, signed piece

Height with base: 189 cm

 Aude WAGNER and Lise GARRIG


france

Aude WAGNER and Lise GARRIG are two multidisciplinary artists who express their sensitivity through textile art by composing with elements from nature or gleaned during their travels.

It is therefore with four hands that they create their textile works of art. They chose bamboo as their primary material, for its qualities of strength as well as resilience. “The WAGA is the perfect support for us: its verticality expresses life. He looks up. It highlights women, tutelary figures, as well as places or elements of nature. » The two artists in fact designed the WAGA sculptures, with their obvious femininity, as a vector allowing them to celebrate the women they admire.