Studio Tour: Julia Roshkow of Cartesian Graphics
Today we’re excited to welcome an artist with a very distinct (and precise) point of view. Julia Roshkow started Cartesian Graphics back in 2003 as a home business designing and producing handmade greeting cards. Making these cards involved gluing crystals and fabric swatches onto pre-printed grids, a rather meticulous and extremely labor intensive process. The […]
Today we’re excited to welcome an artist with a very distinct (and precise) point of view. Julia Roshkow started Cartesian Graphics back in 2003 as a home business designing and producing handmade greeting cards. Making these cards involved gluing crystals and fabric swatches onto pre-printed grids, a rather meticulous and extremely labor intensive process. The business grew steadily over the next decade with hundreds of customers all over the world and a Best New Product Award win at the National Stationery Show. Julia was commissioned to create designs for some venerable New York City institutions like The American Museum of Natural History, The Hayden Planetarium, and The New York Botanical Garden. As her business grew, she relocated to a studio in Long Island City, Queens, a formerly industrial area of New York City, which she now shares with photographer David Gonsier. In 2016, after making thousands of greeting cards individually by hand, Julia felt the need to move on. A new incarnation of Cartesian Graphics began with Julia?s need to create wall art for her own home. Julia still works in...
Today we’re excited to welcome an artist with a very distinct (and precise) point of view. Julia Roshkow started Cartesian Graphics back in 2003 as a home business designing and producing handmade greeting cards. Making these cards involved gluing crystals and fabric swatches onto pre-printed grids, a rather meticulous and extremely labor intensive process. The business grew steadily over the next decade with hundreds of customers all over the world and a Best New Product Award win at the National Stationery Show. Julia was commissioned to create designs for some venerable New York City institutions like The American Museum of Natural History, The Hayden Planetarium, and The New York Botanical Garden. As her business grew, she relocated to a studio in Long Island City, Queens, a formerly industrial area of New York City, which she now shares with photographer David Gonsier. In 2016, after making thousands of greeting cards individually by hand, Julia felt the need to move on. A new incarnation of Cartesian Graphics began with Julia?s need to create wall art for her own home. Julia still works in...
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