The artist's first monograph, this vibrant book looks at Sarah Crowner's playful engagement with the history of abstraction as well as her transformative appropriations of the colours, rhythms, and forms that populate our everyday lives as well as art history. Known for graphic sewn paintings-which she makes by stitching together pieces of painted and raw canvas-as well as patterned tile structures which transform architecture into painting, Crowner works in a variety of media spanning the fine and applied arts. Her work from the past decade comes alive through installation shots, studio views, and source images which have inspired her and which pay homage to many lesser- known artists, designers, and performers of the 20th century. An interview with Crowner accompanies essays discussing her practice and her exhibition at MASS MoCA. With a bold and colourful design that echoes Crowner's sensibility, this book examines the artist's inclusive, yet singular vision. AUTHOR: Susan Cross is Curator of Visual Arts at MASS MoCA in North Adams, Massachusetts. Suzanne Hudson is a critic and art historian and is currently Associate Professor of Art History and Fine Arts at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. Bartholomew Ryan is an independent curator and writer based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. 165 colour illustrations