May 27 through August 25
April 29 through August 1, 2010
April 29 through August 8, 2010
August 12 through October 31, 2010
Opening Reception and Lecture: Thursday, August 12 More...
See Color It Bizarre: Clarice Cliff Pottery from a Michiga More...
See the wood motorcyle--life-size, handcrafted, & one-of-a More...
Thursday, July 29
Thursday, July 29
Thursday, July 29
November 13, 2008 through February 8, 2009
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KAY KHAN
Chameleon, 2007
Cotton, silk, felt, wire
Photo credit: Gary Mankus

ILZE AVIKS
Improved Roses II, 2008
Rayon, silk, cotton, dyed fabric

ANN BADDELEY KEISTER
Tooth and Nail, 2008
Silk, cotton, glass beads

LINDSAY KETTERER GATES
Neckline Basket, 2004
Stainless mesh, coated copper and anti-tarnish silver wire, beads, pistachio shells, aluminum

ANNE MCKENZIE NICKOLSON
La Famille, 2003
Cotton
Wiener Gallery
Artists choosing fabric as a medium (and surprising alternative materials) and sewing as a technique is spreading throughout the contemporary art world. A Stitch in Our Time, organized by fiber artist Ann Baddeley Keister, Grand Valley State University Professor of Art, Allendale, Michigan, includes more than 30 objects by 11 artists that reveal the diversity of approaches to stitching and sewing as part of a studio art practice. The artists are Ilze Aviks, Susan Brandeis, Lindsay Ketterer Gates, Jan Hopkins, Mary Anne Jordan, Ann Keister, Kay Khan, Tom Lundberg, Anne McKenzie Nickolson, Carol Shinn, and Anna Torma. All of them acknowledge a debt to the traditions of crafting objects with techniques related to cloth and sewing, but your grandmother's quilts these are not! The creations of these nationally known artists exemplify the transcendence that occurs when artists of vision combine traditional textile techniques with other mediums such as digital imaging, new methods of dyeing, use of the sewing machine, painting and printing cloth, and incorporating non-traditional materials. That the works selected for the exhibition are exquisitely made is part of their appeal. It is also the individual voices of these gifted artists that instill the objects with magic and visual poetry. A Stitch in Our Time is underwritten by the Community Foundation for Muskegon County. Media support is provided by WGVU Public Broadcasting. Additional funding is provided, in part, through a grant from the Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs.