Showing posts with label "Art Cloth Network". Show all posts
Showing posts with label "Art Cloth Network". Show all posts

Thursday, February 26, 2026

 Hi everyone,

Barbara Matthews was in Cleveland recently and she took the time to document our Layers show at Praxis Fiber Workshop Gallery. She edited the video and sent it on to me. I added some music and beginning and ending slides and uploaded it to our YouTube channel. Barbara also wrote the text for the YouTube description box, including links.Thank you Barbara!

 

https://youtu.be/Q1d2S5rY8wM?si=Ugh-E8WIpHZTERgt

Share this link to the video as you see fit. I would like to suggest  that when you promote this video that you include a Call to Action: an invitation to contact us about exhibiting any of our shows. Point out the link to our website in the YouTube description. You don't have to be too specific about how to navigate our website. Curators are pretty savvy since this is how they learn about artists--but they do respond to an invitation to look at more artwork. They might want to hear that we have three shows available and ready to go! 

Thursday, November 13, 2025

Art Cloth Network joins Craft in America's National Initiative


Today we celebrate the launch of @handwork2026! 


Art Cloth Network is proud to join more than 250 arts organizations across the country who will be hosting exhibitions and events throughout 2026 to showcase the importance of the handmade throughout our country’s history and in contemporary life. 


Presented by @craftinamerica, #Handwork2026 celebrates the diversity of the crafts that define America, bringing compelling stories and underrepresented art and artists into the spotlight.


Our first Handwork 2026 event will be a presentation of LAYERS at Praxis Fiber Workshop in Cleveland, OH from January 11 to 22, 2026.   Visit handwork2026.org for more info! 



Saturday, October 11, 2025

I Work With Intention by Barbara James


My work is informed by the lush landscapes and historic character of my home in the Lowcountry of coastal South Carolina. When I am thinking about a new piece, I look around and see many possibilities. Before beginning, I often take photographs and may even do some additional reading or interviewing about the subject of my piece.  I then start to work letting the materials guide me in an intuitive manner. 

 This year’s Art Cloth Network juried exhibit theme,” Intersections”, inspired me of make art works informed by the Rails to Trails Conservancy, a national system of connecting trails used for biking and walking. 



The Beaufort, South Carolina section of the trail is called the Spanish Moss Trail with 10 miles of trail that have repurposed the former Magnolia Rail Train Line, rich with history and local color.  I took photos of buildings and foliage along the path, a small portion of the railroad bed that can be seen intersecting it and sections of the new paved trail.






The selection of materials proved a challenge, but that came together when I found some artifacts and dove into my stash of vintage fabrics and trims. I determined that the materials needed a historic appearance that could to achieved by wrapping fabrics and vintage handwork around rusted objects found along the trail and in the foundry where the metal was smelted to build and repair the track. The fabrics and handwork were then tea dyed. 




 I worked in small sections and hand stitched the pieces together with scatter stitches and French knots. This not only connected the pieces, but added interest and helped tell the story. I mounted the piece on white cotton and continued to stitch in an intuitive manner.

Here is a photo of the completed piece.



                                                            Rails to Trails 1

                                                            18.5"W x 14"H

Here are some detail shots.






 Click here for for a link to Barbara's website

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday, August 23, 2025

Layers, Light and Load-bearing Walls: My challenge of a 19-piece installation by Sharon Grosh.

 

By Sharon Grosh

This past spring, I installed 19 mixed media works as part of my show named, “Layers and Light” at The Phipps Center for the Arts in Hudson, Wisconsin. The show marked a culmination of two years of creative development — and an intense, three-week sprint to complete, frame, mount, and install nearly every piece.

About the Show

After a two-year wait, I was invited to present my work in the premier gallery space at The Phipps. The venue’s scale required me to finalize a significant body of work, including five pieces created during a 2025 annual residency in Costa Rica (which were reframed after returning home), and a tryptich from a 2023 residency. The latter, built on mulberry paper, had to be permanently mounted to canvas for stability.

My intention for 2025

One of my intentions for 2025 was to complete unfinished pieces — the ones that linger just shy of completion. This installation became the catalyst to finish a lot of work. The tryptich Oceanna from the ‘23 residency, was heavily layered onto layered mulberry paper and silk organza, the thin paper was supported it with sheet-rock mud and polymer medium. I trimmed the paper edges and mounted it to linen canvas. 

 

 

 

  Oceanna 1,2 & 3.

 

The Concept Behind, Layers and Light.

                    

Layers and Light represents work that evolved over the last few years, starting with flattened mixed medium collages to three dimensional structures and sheer fabric that layers over paper, creating more light and lift to the pieces. This concept helped me arrange the order and the story behind Layers and Light. Many times these pieces reflect the garden and its chaotic representation of color, texture and depth. 

 

                              

                  The Unknown (L), Curtains (M), Window Thru (R), & A Pauly Cudd Glass Platter

Unexpected Harmony

To my surprise, I shared the space with well-known glass artist Pauly Cudd. The curator had a wonderful eye, placing his luminous vases and platters beside my layered textile work. The combination created a natural atmosphere of contrast and complement — light playing through color and form.

 

The Challenge of the Birch Trees

Of the 19 pieces in the show, Birch Trees was by far the most challenging. Built on plywood and layered in encaustic-embedded silk tea bags, it weighed over 45 pounds. I had just one week to complete the edges and figure out how to hang it vertically — safely and cleanly.

After experimenting, consulting with the curator, and recruiting my husband for engineering support, we solved the issue. Once hung, it stood upright with presence — a sculptural focal point that grounded the rest of the installation. That moment was a personal triumph.

                                   

  

                                          

        

 The Birches

 

Reactions and Takeaways

Hearing from viewers — seeing their responses — reminded me why we do this work.

Finishing The Birches taught me the value of starting with a plan for presentation — even if that plan changes. It also reminded me that art isn’t always soft or serene. Sometimes it’s heavy, literal, and full of problem-solving. And that’s part of the beauty.

     Sharon's website