Hand-built Archival Framing
Each Tappan frame is custom built out of solid wood, using archival materials. Our framers have years of experience framing and preserving artworks for museums and other cultural institutions.
Learn more about our framing types of frames and matting.
Not sure what looks good? Want a different style of framing?
WebChat or text us at: 310-388-3425






Little By Little
Fabric, wadding, and thread
Held in Part is a series by Jarnah Montersino that explores how meaning is shaped through accumulation, memory, and the act of reassembly over time. Working with textiles and remnant fabrics, Montersino creates compositions that carry traces of touch, wear, and lived experience. Fragments imbued with their own histories are gathered, disassembled, and reconstructed, allowing new forms and relationships to emerge from existing materials. Through processes of stitching, stretching, and repair, the work approaches making as an act of holding — both physically and emotionally.
Throughout the series, tension and softness exist simultaneously, with subtle shifts in tone, texture, and structure revealing a balance between fragility and resilience. Repetition and care become central gestures within the work, reflecting a quiet persistence that runs through each piece. In Held in Part, Montersino examines how acts of mending, continuation, and transformation can preserve memory while creating space for renewal.
About our custom frames
YOU HAVE VIP EARLY ACCESS TO THIS ARTWORK | VIEW MORE
This service is currently unavailable,
sorry for the inconvenience.
Pair it with a frame
Frame options are for visualization purposes only.
FRAME STYLE
MATTING SIZE
BUILDING YOUR EXPERIENCE
powered by Blankwall
Take a few steps back and let your camera see more of the scene.
powered by Blankwall
Was this experience helpful?

Held in Part is a series by Jarnah Montersino that explores how meaning is shaped through accumulation, memory, and the act of reassembly over time. Working with textiles and remnant fabrics, Montersino creates compositions that carry traces of touch, wear, and lived experience. Fragments imbued with their own histories are gathered, disassembled, and reconstructed, allowing new forms and relationships to emerge from existing materials. Through processes of stitching, stretching, and repair, the work approaches making as an act of holding — both physically and emotionally.
Throughout the series, tension and softness exist simultaneously, with subtle shifts in tone, texture, and structure revealing a balance between fragility and resilience. Repetition and care become central gestures within the work, reflecting a quiet persistence that runs through each piece. In Held in Part, Montersino examines how acts of mending, continuation, and transformation can preserve memory while creating space for renewal.
Artwork Information
Materials
Fabric, wadding, and thread
Authentication
COA provided by Tappan
The work comes with a Certification of Authenticity signed by the Co-Founder of Tappan.
Dimensions
ARTWORK DIMENSIONS
13 x 11 inches
FRAMED DIMENSIONS
13 x 11 inches
Reveal: 14.75 x 12.75 x 1.5 inches
Unframed: 13 x 11 inches
This artwork is custom-framed in hand-built solid wood framing with archival materials. Custom framed artworks will ship in 1 - 3 weeks.
Custom Orders
We offer a wide variety of custom framing options, please reach out for more information.
Shipping times vary per artwork, text, email, or chat with us to expedite shipping.
text: 310-388-3425
email: info@thetappancollective.com
Art Advising Services
Complimentary art advising services available on request. More info here
“My work explores memory, connection, and the quiet search for hope. Each piece is built through a slow, intuitive process, creating space for reflection and a sense of shared experience.”
About the Artist
Jarnah Montersino
Jarnah Montersino is an Australian multidisciplinary artist whose practice explores materiality, memory, and connection. Working primarily with textiles and everyday materials, she employs processes of transformation to reveal the narratives embedded within the ordinary. Informed by a background in social science, human rights, art, and design, her work moves between personal and collective experience, engaging themes of care, resilience, and repair. Montersino's practice is defined by a sustained focus on material sensitivity and process, contributing to contemporary conversations around form, meaning, and shared experience.
Montersino has exhibited in solo and group exhibitions, with work held in private collections in Australia and internationally. She is the recipient of The Ian Potter Cultural Trust emerging artist grant and has recently completed a residency with Etesian Gallery in Menorca, Spain (2026).

Choose options






This service is currently unavailable,
sorry for the inconvenience.
Pair it with a frame
Frame options are for visualization purposes only.
FRAME STYLE
MATTING SIZE
BUILDING YOUR EXPERIENCE
powered by Blankwall
Take a few steps back and let your camera see more of the scene.
powered by Blankwall
Was this experience helpful?

Held in Part is a series by Jarnah Montersino that explores how meaning is shaped through accumulation, memory, and the act of reassembly over time. Working with textiles and remnant fabrics, Montersino creates compositions that carry traces of touch, wear, and lived experience. Fragments imbued with their own histories are gathered, disassembled, and reconstructed, allowing new forms and relationships to emerge from existing materials. Through processes of stitching, stretching, and repair, the work approaches making as an act of holding — both physically and emotionally.
Throughout the series, tension and softness exist simultaneously, with subtle shifts in tone, texture, and structure revealing a balance between fragility and resilience. Repetition and care become central gestures within the work, reflecting a quiet persistence that runs through each piece. In Held in Part, Montersino examines how acts of mending, continuation, and transformation can preserve memory while creating space for renewal.


















