Emilie Gossiaux lost her sight after a bike accident, but that didn’t stop her from painting and sculpting. Emilie says that she is now able to connect with art on a deeper level and think about her craft in a different way than before. Talk about a change in perspective. Watch the video above!
See also a video about her from Cooper Hewitt: Innovative Brainport Vision Technology helps an artist express herself through art
See more of her art on her website.
15
JAN
2020
JAN
2020
About the Author:
Since losing her vision in 2010, Gossiaux’s altered experience of the world has seen her practice grow - finding inspiration in dreams, memories, sensuality, and non-visual sensory perceptions. Relying solely on her sense of touch and proprioception, she demonstrates a profound sensitivity towards texture, space, and material. Alongside her studio practice, Gossiaux works as a museum educator at The Metropolitan Museum of Art with Access and Community programs. She co-teaches a studio class for blind and visually impaired visitors in the Met’s Seeing Through Drawing program and has led gallery tours for general audiences exploring cross-sensory themes with the museum’s permanent collection. Gossiaux’s work has featured in numerous shows at The Cooper Hewitt (New York, NY), Pippy Houldsworth (London, UK), The Smithsonian Institute of Art (Washington, DC), The Interlochen Center for the Arts (Interlochen, MI), Recess Art (New York, NY), StoreFrontLab (San Francisco, CA), Maw Gallery (New York, NY), and the Dedalus Foundation (Brooklyn, NY), among others. She has won several honors and awards, including The John F. Kennedy Center’s VSA Prize for Excellence in 2013, the Elliot Lash Memorial Prize for Excellence in Sculpture in 2014, a Wynn Newhouse Award in 2018, and attended the Dumfries House Residency in Scotland, selected by the Royal Drawing School, in 2018. -From False Flag Gallery