Artist Marianne Ro pays tribute to her Mexican heritage in her colorful Yarn Painting and Ceramics
When moving to a new country it’s easy enough to become so integrated that you forget where you come from. It’s also very easy to go the opposite way and hold on to your roots so much it becomes impossible for you to take flight.
While still in Mexico, Mariana studied arts and spent a few years teaching in Puebla, before a change in personal circumstances brought about a career shift. “I started working in tourism in Playa del Carmen, and I’m actually very grateful for that because that’s where I met my husband. But the seven years I spent away from art was so hard at times. I thought my head would explode with all the ideas and the creativity I was keeping bottled up in there!”
The passion and pride for her roots that exude from Mariana’s eyes when she talks about her art is palpable in her bright, almost hypnotic yarn pieces, which illustrate abstract reinterpretations of the natural world. With the clever juxtaposition of geometric patterns mixing straight and curved lines, and bold, often complementary, colors, Mariana’s paintings acquire an incredible depth that draws you into her mesmerizing world. The use of cotton or wool strings of varying thicknesses and lengths gives the drawings an almost three-dimensional feel, making her fantastical characters jump out at you.
“Every piece I create is an opportunity for me to pour a bit of my heart, feelings, and emotions out, to perpetuate my Mexican identity, and to engage the final viewer or customer in a dialogue that I hope will make them reflect on the issues I find important.”
A jack of all trades since her beginnings in bookbinding in Puebla, Marianne soon realized she would need to zone into one or two artforms when she decided to start her brand
MarianneRo.
While yarn painting was a given because of the strong connection she had been feeling to the artform all her life, ceramics was a secondary addition to her practice.
“What I love about ceramic is how versatile it is: I can make jewelry, plates, bowls, home decor. It’s a very gentle, very delicate practice, and I love the way colors can suddenly transform a plain white or cafè piece into something completely new.”
What both art forms have in common is the painstaking amount of patience needed to complete a piece. While yarn painting is a simpler technique than ceramics, it takes a really long time to assemble a fully finished picture with individual bits of strings, especially with Mariana’s complex designs.
In the future Mariana definitely sees herself continuing her yarn and ceramic work, but is looking forward to moving to bigger formats and to hosting her first solo show in the US, hopefully, this year.