Along the Wrack Line

March 27- May 15 2024 Artist Reception April 30 5:30

A solo show of sea debris weavings by Rebecca McGee Tuck

"Along the Wrack Line," an ongoing sculpture series, emerged to symbolize hope amid the climate crisis. Transforming waste into art, it highlights the consequences of ocean pollution. Each sculpture serves as an important reminder of the fragility of the marine ecosystem, urging renewed commitment to preserve our oceans for future generations.

Short bio:

Rebecca McGee Tuck is a sculptor and an ocean activist. Her work is a visual narrative of what she accumulates from a throw away society and as a result she gives new life to what others discard. Tuck has shown her work in multiple juried shows throughout the Northeast including the Danforth and Fitchburg Art Museums, Viridian Arts Gallery, NYC, and the George Marshall Store Gallery in York, Maine. Her series of work called “Along the Wrack Line” deals with the overwhelming amount of debris and plastic trash that contaminate our local New England beaches. Tuck works among her menagerie of debris from her studio at the Mill Contemporary Art Studios in Framingham