In Stiches: Contemporary Approaches to Needlework
For some, needlework and other fiber-related techniques are pastimes, while for others, they are used for professions. For still more, these practices are employed to depict ideas. The contemporary artists whose works are included in this exhibition prioritize these processes and use handcraft techniques like embroidery, sewing, crocheting, and quilting to explore a wide range of subjects. They investigate labor, gender, memory, and history, and popular culture as well as personal or social issues.
Primarily drawn from RAM鈥檚 collection, the works featured in this exhibition demonstrate contemporary methods of working with materials such as fabric, thread, yarn, and embroidery floss through the use of needles, hooks, or hands. Works on loan from Milwaukee area artists Sharon Kerry-Harlan and Rosemary Ollison expand this conversation even further. Incorporating African influences, Kerry-Harlan uses textiles, as well as other media, to explore the potential metaphors and meanings of the human face and figure. Ollison collects glass, leather, bracelets, beads, bones, and jewelry that she then incorporates into all manner of works, including quilts.
Diverse examples shown next to one another offer opportunities for comparison and contrast. Large-scale quilts using found linens are shown alongside small-scale photo-realistic embroideries, crocheted earrings, and stitched baskets. In whatever form, these works reflect how handcraft traditions can be incorporated鈥攁nd expanded upon鈥攖o make creative, aesthetic, thoughtful, symbolic and practical statements.
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For some, needlework and other fiber-related techniques are pastimes, while for others, they are used for professions. For still more, these practices are employed to depict ideas. The contemporary artists whose works are included in this exhibition prioritize these processes and use handcraft techniques like embroidery, sewing, crocheting, and quilting to explore a wide range of subjects. They investigate labor, gender, memory, and history, and popular culture as well as personal or social issues.
Primarily drawn from RAM鈥檚 collection, the works featured in this exhibition demonstrate contemporary methods of working with materials such as fabric, thread, yarn, and embroidery floss through the use of needles, hooks, or hands. Works on loan from Milwaukee area artists Sharon Kerry-Harlan and Rosemary Ollison expand this conversation even further. Incorporating African influences, Kerry-Harlan uses textiles, as well as other media, to explore the potential metaphors and meanings of the human face and figure. Ollison collects glass, leather, bracelets, beads, bones, and jewelry that she then incorporates into all manner of works, including quilts.
Diverse examples shown next to one another offer opportunities for comparison and contrast. Large-scale quilts using found linens are shown alongside small-scale photo-realistic embroideries, crocheted earrings, and stitched baskets. In whatever form, these works reflect how handcraft traditions can be incorporated鈥攁nd expanded upon鈥攖o make creative, aesthetic, thoughtful, symbolic and practical statements.
Artists on show
- Joan Schulze
- Ai Kijima
- Amy Lipshie
- Andrzej Rajch
- Anne Kingsbury
- Anne Wilson
- Arline Fisch
- Barbara Lee Smith
- Barbara Stutman
- Blanka 艩perková
- Carol Shinn
- Carol Warner
- Charlene Nemec-Kessel
- Cherry Barr Jerry
- Cindy Hickok
- Claire Zeisler
- David R. Harper
- Diana Mott-Thornton
- Diane Banks
- Diane Itter
- Dona Look
- Ellen Moon
- Felieke van der Leest
- Gretchen Romey-Tanzer
- Jackie Abrams
- James Acord
- Jan Hopkins
- Janet Haigh
- Joyce Marquess Carey
- Judith H. Perry
- Kaaren Wiken
- Katherine Westphal
- Kay Khan
- Lilla Kulka
- Lily Poran
- Linda Behar
- Marcia Docter
- Marilyn Henrion
- Mark Newport
- Mary Bero
- Mary Beth Baloga
- Michael Brennand-Wood
- Michael James
- Missy Stevens
- Norma Minkowitz
- Patricia Malarcher
- Renie Breskin Adams
- Rosemary Ollison
- Rosita Johanson
- Sally Broadwell
- Sharon Kerry-Harlan
- Susan Shie
- Teri Greeves
- Theodora Elston
- Therese May
- Tom Lundberg
- Tom Rauschke
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