January 1, 2026
Sabrina Gschwandtner
Absinthe, Smoke, Sugar, Choice
Shoshana Wayne Gallery
November 1, 2025 - January 10, 2026

Sabrina Gschwandtner
For Absinthe, Smoke, Sugar, Choice, Sabrina Gschwandtner assembles blank sections of 35 mm film that have been hand tinted red, blue, green or yellow. She interlaces these with reproductions of footage from Madame's Cravings (1906) by Alice Guy-Blaché and The Forgotten Frontier by Marvin Breckinridge (1931). Together they become 'film quilts' — sections of film strips that are sewn into squares and composited into geometric patterns that resemble traditional fabric quilts. These pieces are backlit and evoke the luminance of films in the dimly lit gallery.
Gschwandtner has done extensive research on women in early film and her works often allude not only to the materiality and transparency of the actual film stock, but also to the challenges of being a female director in the early twentieth-century. For this body of work, she searched for films that depicted women confronting and challenging social norms. For example, in Madame's Cravings a pregnant protagonist is seen smoking, drinking, eating, and letting her husband tend to another child in a baby carriage. The Forgotten Frontier documents the long treks nurses in Frontier Nursing Service made to care for rural patients in Kentucky. Both films were produced before the 1934 "Hays Code" which banned explicit depictions of sex and violence, as well as footage of abortion and childbirth. This protocol was enforced for more than thirty years as a form of Hollywood self-censorship.
While Gschwandtner's practice is issue based, the formal aspects of her film quilts tend to overshadow this content. The actual footage is present within each work, however the imagery is tiny and could use a magnifying glass (not provided) to help scrutinize the facial expressions, gestures and interactions of those depicted. Gschwandtner presents an actual film in the back gallery titled Absinthe, Smoke, Sugar, Choice (2025). This work more didactically elucidates Gschwandtner's concerns as it informs the static pieces. In Absinthe, Smoke, Sugar, Choice, Gschwandtner divides the frame into a grid of diamonds within which she places hand written texts, as well as clips from the two films. Her text-based narration as well as the soundtrack mimics the cadence of early silent movies while providing context and commentary.
Gschwandtner's labor intensive process involves researching film as well as quilt history and she implements recognizable designs and patterns into her quilted work. The Forgotten Frontier (all works 2025) juxtaposes footage from the documentary coupled with black, white and gray toned imageless leader assembled in the Kentucky Star pattern which won an award at the 1933 Chicago World's Fair. The choice of this specific pattern links the imagery to the location where it was shot.
The concentric diamonds in Madame's Cravings (Red Lollipop), (Blue Lollipop) and (Yellow Lollipop), as well as Madame's Cravings (Absinthe) juxtapose colored film leader (red, blue, yellow or green) with close-ups of the films protagonist licking a lollipop or drinking absinthe. Although it is difficult to make out the specifics of each tiny frame, Gschwandtner indulges in associations while asking viewers to imagine colored lollipops and green absinthe. For Madame's Cravings (color), Gschwandtner composites twenty-four square panels to create an expansive work that incorporates her entire color palette — red, yellow, blue, green and gray. The eye oscillates between image and color as it deciphers this complex and evocative work.
Within the darkened gallery the pieces shimmer, demanding close scrutiny. Gschwandtner continues to refine her methodology while expanding what is possible through her unique coupling of quilting and film history. The works resonate both conceptually and visually. The inclusion of her own film brings the project full circle.
Click here for Sabrina Gschwandtner on its own page.