These Eerie Crocheted Skeletons Are Full Of Meaning And Mystery


We certainly have a fascination with the macabre here at ViralNova. Luckily for us, many artists are drawn to the dark side as well — and they always manage to make something hauntingly beautiful out of it.


One such artist is Caitlin McCormack. Among her other work, McCormack crafts intricate and unsettlingly lifelike skeletons using crocheted thread. The thread is then hardened with glue so that it can hold a position. Her works resemble model skeletons and scientific specimens of old, but their fraying ends and floating tendrils make them ghostly and ethereal.




World Before the World II




The skeletons, all created using white and off-white threads, are displayed pinned against black backgrounds or under glass specimen jars. Her pieces range from partial to complete skeletons, and even to entire skeleton “families.” Her skeletons take on the forms of small, delicate animals such as birds, bats, and rodents.






Aeturnum



Crocheting is seen as a quaint craft used to make cozy items and cute toys, but McCormack’s reinterpretation turns it into something darker, though no less intricate and fascinating.




Bound, As It Were




Here, McCormack pays homage to traditional crocheting by including a dainty glove whose threads are slowly unraveling to create the bird skeleton. This also gives the piece a darker edge and speaks to decay and transformation.











To help the threads maintain their shape and in some cases stand upright, McCormack coats each strand of thread with glue. Not only does this give her creations form, but it also gives them a texture similar to actual bones.




Lacewilds



In keeping with the theme of death and dissolution, the creatures are inspired by McCormack’s own deceased relatives, and the passage of time that eventually reclaims all living things. Even the crochet tools she uses are heirlooms, and belonged to her late grandmother.




Crawlspace



While they’re contemplations on death, they are also about transformation and memory. Using her grandmother’s tools and her grandmother’s craft keeps McCormack’s memory of her grandmother alive. While the threads remind us of decomposition, they also remind us that through this process, life can begin again.










Humor Survived to the End












(via deMilked, Colossal)



McCormack’s work has been on display in various places, and can currently be seen at the Museum of Morbid Anatomy in Brooklyn. You can also see the rest of her crocheted skeletons, along with her other bodies of work, on her website. Be sure to check out her online shop, as well. You can also keep up with her latest projects on Instagram and Twitter.


McCormack’s work will be shown around the country over the next year, at Paradigm in Philadelphia in October, Antler Gallery in Portland, Oregon, in March 2016, and in La Luz de Jesus in Los Angeles during the summer of 2016.




McCormack isn’t the only artist unafraid of looking into the morbid side of things. Check out these other creeptastic artists:




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