Dianna Frid

Dianna Frid
Public, Private, Secret, 2024
Diptych
Muslin, embroidery floss, graphite, coloring pencil, gesso, board
Each panel measures 22 × 14 inches

DIanna Frid
Love With Abandon, 2022
Diptych
Muslin, embroidery floss, graphite, coloring pencil, gesso, board
Each panel measures 22 x 14 inches

Dianna Frid
Artist-in-Residence
November 2025

Dianna Frid is an artist working at the intersection of material texts and textiles. Her artist’s books and mixed-media works make visible the tactile manifestations of language. In her work, thread is a vehicle for exploring the relationships between writing and drawing, and the overlaps of transcription, translation, and legibility.

In his formidable yet brief book, How Are Verses Made? (1926), poet Mayakovsky refers to “the material of the rhymes” as “stronger than the other lines.” What is this material of rhymes and rhythms that Mayakovsky alludes to? The recognition of meaningful, nonverbal components of language resonates with Frid’s understanding of words as part of a larger puzzle. While her practice intersects with and borrows from written language, it also wrestles with language and its limits across the less linguistic aspects of art.

Frid was born in Mexico City where she was first exposed to textiles as complex codes of material writing. At the age of fifteen she immigrated, with her family, to Vancouver, Canada. These and other points of reference help her situate her work alongside lineages that embrace art and needlework without placing them in hierarchical opposition. Time, Rhythm, Process, and Matter are never in opposition.

Frid is Professor in the Art Department at UIC. Her work has been exhibited nationally and internationally. She has received various grants including a 3Arts Award and support from the Canada Council for the Arts. 

English is Dianna Frid's stepmother tongue.

diannafrid.net
@dianna.frid.studio

Dianna Frid
The River, Twice, after translations of two Heraclitus fragments:
left, Brooks Haxton, 2001; right, G.T.W. Patrick, 1889
Diptych, 2023
Canvas, paper, ink with mica, acrylic paint, embroidery floss, copper leaf, gold leaf, aluminum foil strip

Each panel: 52 × 34 inches

Books Chosen for the Lab Library by
Dianna Frid

Checkout 19 by Claire-Louise Bennett

Winter Recipes from the Collective by Louise Gluck 

What You have Heard is True by Carolyn Forché

The Hour of the Star by Clarice Lispector

The Taiga Syndrome, by Cristina Rivera Garza

Signs Preceding the End of the World by Yuri Herrera

Louise Glück Poems 1962-2012

Three Steps in the Ladder of Writing by Helene Cixous

Pedro Paramo by Juan Rulfo