
Offering to the Lost Ones
Theda Sandiford
42x10x5”
Recovered marine line, sea tumbled, woven and knotted with eyelash yarn, acrylic yarn , deconstructed line, glass beads, shells, chain and hand made bells.
2024
Offering to the Lost Ones is a sacred beacon of remembrance, crafted to honor the spirits lost during the transatlantic slave trade while reflecting on humanity’s ongoing disruption of the natural world. Using recovered marine line, sea-tumbled and woven with eyelash yarn, acrylic yarn, deconstructed line, glass beads, shells, chains, and handmade bells, this work becomes a poignant bridge between memory and materiality, life and loss.
The materials themselves—objects shaped by the violence of tropical storms and hurricanes—carry dual histories. They embody the enduring impact of environmental devastation and echo the turbulent seas that bore witness to unimaginable human suffering. Each knot, bead, and bell in this piece holds space for reflection, transforming debris into a solemn offering to the lost ones whose names and stories dissolved into the depths of the Atlantic.
This work evokes the fractured journey of the Middle Passage, where bodies cast into an ocean that became both a witness and a grave. The fragile interplay of synthetic and organic elements—chains and bells against shells and glass—mirrors the tension between bondage and liberation, death and resilience.
Offering to the Lost Ones calls us to remember the past while confronting the present. It reminds us that the sea, a vast expanse of life and mystery, carries both the weight of ancestral grief and the scars of modern neglect. In this offering, I seek not only to mourn but to inspire a dialogue about healing and reconciliation— between humanity and the natural world.



Just watched your video interview with Fibre Arts-Take Two. Wow! You spoke about so many things that I have thought about and experienced. When people ask what I do and I respond “I’m an artist.” they often respond, oh, so you’re retired? No I’m not retired my art is who I am as well as what I do. If you ever teach near Orlando, Florida I would love to meet you and share thoughts with you! All the best to you, Deborah Sims
Just saw your interview! Wow loved emotional baggage carts. I am a therapist in NYC and appreciate the image in all their iterations.I am a gardener and lose myself in that meditative practice. Been to st Croix for vaca and it is an amazing place with so many cultural influences :Danish, I indig etc. . Always am struck by the symbolism of the sugar mills and all the implications fr that era of island history. My patients and I are dealing with ourselves around the difficult political climate here trying to manage rage not as divisive but as energy for change , social justice and what it means to be an American. Many blessings!
Ann BurkeLCSWR
Trauma and Recovery Therapy
NYC