Christine Domanic is an interdisciplinary artist working primarily with fiber and textile-based sculpture. Her practice incorporates crochet, weaving, stitching, and soft construction techniques to create accumulative sculptural forms that reference geological processes, ecological systems, and material residue.
Drawing from landscapes shaped by time such as caves, reefs, sediment layers, erosion, and invasive growth, her work examines how slow natural processes intersect with human impact, consumption, and waste. Natural and reclaimed materials are favored for their physical memory, while subtle disruptions in color and texture act as quiet signals of environmental imbalance.
Through modular construction and repetitive hand labor, Domanic builds forms that hover between landscape and body, softness and structure, growth and collapse. The work functions as a tactile record shaped by time, pressure, and human presence.
Based in the Hudson Valley and Vermont, she is available for exhibitions, commissions, and collaborative projects.

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Bio
Christine Domanic was born in Bayonne, New Jersey. She received a BFA in Studio Crafts from the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 2007. Prior to focusing fully on her art practice, she worked for over twenty years as a software engineer and web developer, contributing to early large-scale digital platforms in media, education, and public infrastructure, including work at the New York Times and more than a decade at Etsy. She currently maintains a studio practice based in Hudson, New York.
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