Making Boulders!

The installation of my exhibit Cloud Girl Accidentally Eats Rainbow continued this week at the Sawtooth School of Visual Art. We invited community volunteers to help me make boulders, large bundles of textiles that are compressed and tied together. I started making these a couple of years ago while experimenting with reclaimed fabric at Penland School of Craft, and wanted to include more and bigger ones in this show. They sit heavy on the floor in my sculpture work Boulder field.

I’m particularly pleased with this boulder-making experience because last summer I decided I wanted to make more work collaboratively and with community. The two events that the Sawtooth School held brought in people who were genuinely curious about the process, and who were happy to put in the physical effort needed to tightly bundle all of these materials. It was a real pleasure to make these as a group.

Thank you to all the volunteers who came out to help and to our community partners who generously donated the large quantities of scrap fabric needed to make these!

The opening reception is April 17th 6-8pm in the Davis Gallery at the Sawtooth School for Visual Art.

Jessica Singerman and volunteer Ann Rowe-Davis working on a textile boulder
Volunteers Russ Dubois, Rebecca Silberman, and Betsy Messick making textile boulders
Artist Jessica Singerman and volunteers Katie Barber, Toni Bryja, and Nicole Cochran working together to make a textile boulder
Tensioning and tying down all the fabric
All hands on deck!
Artist Jessica Singerman and volunteers Katie Barber, Toni Bryja, and Nicole Cochran working together to make a textile boulder
Jessica Singerman and her niece Alex Singerman Driggs celebrating Alex’s boulder-making prowess
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