fiber art

Introducing Brittany Kiertzner, New Member

California Fibers would like to introduce our new member, Brittany Kiertzner, a mixed media and textile fine artist from Southern California. Kiertzner is an enrolled member of the St Regis Mohawk Tribe and studied fine art at California State University Fullerton. Kiertzner explores critical materials that reframe her personal history into a contemporary context. Through a dynamic interplay of woven and stitched threads, her work is influenced by traditional Mohawk Iroquois splint basket making, embroidery, and raised beadwork.

She investigates themes of regeneration, authenticity, and subversion of materials through synthesizing the past. Kiertzner has shown her mixed media and textile-based work extensively in solo and juried exhibitions in California since 2007. Her work is in the permanent collection at Sasse Museum of Art. She manages her studio in Claremont, California.

I Am Alive Konhnhe

Brittany Kiertzner’s work makes connections within loss and insecurity. It unravels the intrinsic vulnerability encapsulated within the dichotomy of life and death, particularly focusing on the subsequent generations of Indigenous women. The narrative navigates through the artist's endeavor to embody the inevitable social pressures that catalyze disintegration and impermanence.

They Give Us Life Kiohehkwen

In her body of work, the color red emerges as a potent symbol, signifying the prevailing silence and indifference that shrouds Indigenous women. A significant number of these women find themselves either missing or succumbing to violence. Kiertzner manifests abstract figurative depictions within her sculptural works. These bodies serve as both a commemoration of those who have been lost, capturing the essence of their absence, while also portraying the resilience of those who persist, navigating dysphoric conditions.

Hide Yourself Satahseht

Panels on display at Sasse Museum of Art

You can see her work at her website or on Instagram. Keep an eye out for Kiertzner’s work in future California Fibers’ shows.

Influences/Influencers: Workshops at Craft in America

As part of the Influences/Influencers exhibit, California Fibers’ members have been preparing workshops to go along with their art.

Aneesa Shami Zizzo recently gave her Fabric Collage Workshop, using reclaimed fabric, collage methods, and applique techniques.

Annette Heully will be teaching knotless netting on Saturday, October 14, from 12:30 AM-3:30 PM. Use simple knots, loops, and a needle to learn to shape a flexible netted structure around almost any form.

On Saturday, October 28, from 11 AM-4 PM, Debra Weiss will be teaching Layers of Life: Collage and Stitch. You will learn to layer and stitch opaque and sheer fabrics to make a small autobiographical artwork that can also become a needle case.

Lastly, Ashley V. Blalock will be teaching beginning crochet on Saturday, November 18, from 11 AM-5 PM. Learn all the basic stitches while crocheting a small, three-dimensional item.

All class information is available on the Craft in America website.

Influences/Influencers: California Fibers at Craft in America

The Craft in America Center in Los Angeles, CA, presents Influences/Influencers: California Fibers from September 9 - December 2, 2023. Influences/Influencers features the work of twenty-three members of California Fibers: Sandy Abrams, Olivia Batchelder, Charlotte Bird, Ashley V. Blalock, Carrie Burckle, Marilyn McKenzie Chaffee, Ben Cuevas, Doshi, Polly Jacobs Giacchina, Lydia Tjioe Hall, Susan Henry, Annette Heully, Anifaye Korngute, Kathy Nida, Liz Oliver, Marty Ornish, Michael F. Rohde, Rebecca Smith, Cameron Taylor-Brown, Elise Vazelakis, Debra Weiss, Peggy Wiedemann, and Aneesa Shami Zizzo.

This exhibit showcases the breadth of the influential and innovative work created by members of California Fibers.  Emily Zaiden, Director and Curator of the Craft in America Center, states, “The artists in this exhibition are part of an historic organization that has been at the forefront of contemporary fiber art in Southern California, across the state, and far beyond.”  Influences/Influencers represents some of the vast influences that are shaping fiber today,and simultaneously is a celebration of how fiber has become a beam of influence on the broader contemporary art world in recent years. 

Works in the exhibition are accompanied by artist statements expressing the myriad influences on their individual artistic practices and are a window into the many threads that continue to shape the field of contemporary textile art and artists.  Some examples follow.

Susan Henry says of her work Vortex II, “I find great inspiration through art history and most notably the artist Joseph Mallord William Turner… Turner's influence in my work is reflective of a combination of perspective, movement and chaos as I aspire, like Turner, to convey mood rather than information.”

Susan Henry, Vortex II: deconstructed wool trousers, cotton canvas Arashi wrapped and discharged resist, machine stitched.

Annette Heully states that her piece Weight of Change – Red is made with yarns that were gifts from her mentor Frances Bulwa. “By using this material it was my way of honoring her memory. The pieces all have unwoven sections exposing the warp threads expressing the feelings of loss. Over time the weft threads slowly settle, starting to close these gaps referencing grief and the element of time in healing.”

Annette Heully, Weight of Change - Red: handwoven wool and cotton.

Ben Cuevas says that his more recent work is influenced by Agnes Martin. Her white paintings that explore the idea of the grid are referenced in his current series, Non-Binary Code, of which Reveal/Conceal Diptych is a part. “I knit with acrylic fiber on canvas in a stitch pattern derived from the word NON-BINARY, which I translated into binary code, with knits for 1’s and purls for 0’s. The finished work is an abstract minimalist white grid knit-painting, and a coded meditation on gender identity.”

Ben Cuevas, Reveal/Conceal Diptych: acrylic fiber on canvas.

Anifaye Korngute finds inspiration from her study of choreographic artmaking as an experimental and explorative form. “I learned about Black Mountain College from the perspective of Merce Cunningham and John Cage — Chance Dance, which continues to influence my artmaking today.” Her piece They Call Me Mellow Yellow is a current expression of this approach.

Anifaye Korngute, They Call Me Mellow Yellow: silk noil (raw silk), washi paper, fabric dye, sumie ink, gouache, acrylic, cotton, stitch, charcoal.

Carrie Burckle states that her influence for (en)gendered vessel “comes from my teacher Carol Shaw-Sutton. Carol Shaw-Sutton was my professor at CSULB where I earned my MFA. She was head of the fiber program for 35 years…Carol emphasized deep knowledge of materials and skill building as a foundation for idea-based work that pushed the boundaries of fiber art.”

Carrie Burckle, (en)gendered vessel: kraft paper twine, house paint, twining.

Elise Vazelakis says, “As a weaver, I have long been inspired by the weavings of Deidrick Brackens and his unique process of combining the tactile nature of yarn with the rich tradition of storytelling. His work has influenced my own artwork in countless ways, but perhaps most significantly in my series Exposed. This series is deeply personal to me as it incorporates construction materials salvaged from the rebuilding of my home that perished in the 2018 Woolsey Fire. I have been able to imbue these materials with new meanings and bring my own story to life in a tangible way.”  A piece from this series, Exposed VIII, is included in this exhibition. 

Elise Vazelakis, Exposed VIII; loom-woven cotton, concrete anchors, wood-panel-mounted.

Kathy Nida’s piece, And Then There Was One, exemplifies the ongoing influence of  “…women artists or artists creating about being female; this piece is about being a feminist, which means raising both my kids, one male and one female, to accept a woman’s equity and strength in today’s world, to make no assumptions of what is right for this or that gender, or to even let biological gender limit us.”

Kathy Nida, And Then There Was One: fused applique, machine stitched, machine quilted.

Lydia Tjioe Hall states that her piece Nesting Houses is influenced by Ruth Asawa’s “sculptures within sculptures.”

Lydia Tjioe Hall, Nesting Houses, Steel wire looping technique.

Michael Rohde explains that his work Birnalese Sonnet is one of a series “examining languages, how they are expressed and used. This subset of that effort comes due to influences by Jim Bassler’s own work based on examination of Peruvian textiles. My connection to language and Peruvian textiles comes from speculations by scholars such as Mary Frame. She has explored the idea that repeated patterns in textiles might encode undeciphered verbal ideas…”

Michael F. Rohde, Birnalese Sonnet: handwoven tapestry: silk, natural dyes.

The Craft in America Center is located at 8415 West Third Street in Los Angeles, CA. Hours are Tuesday – Saturday from noon – 6 PM.  Admission is free. The opening reception with participating artists is September 9 from 3-5 PM. Workshops and talks TBA.  Check the Craft in America website for more information about upcoming events.

About Craft in America and the Craft in America Center: Craft in America is a Los Angeles-based nonprofit arts organization founded in 2004 with the mission to promote and advance original handcrafted work through programs in all media. In addition to the acclaimed PBS documentary series, Craft in America promotes and advances original handcrafted work through the Craft in America Center—a small museum, library, and programmatic space where visitors engage directly with art, artists, and ideas. They give voice to traditional and contemporary craft, ranging from functional to purely conceptual, through personal engagement. They organize exhibitions, artist talks, scholarly lectures, a reading group, book signings, hands-on workshops, demonstrations, student field trips, concerts, and publications. The Craft in America Center produces 6-8 exhibitions per year featuring work by local and nationally acclaimed artists. They highlight the work of numerous local craft-based artists while providing a platform in Los Angeles for the nation’s finest artists. For those who are not able to visit in-person, exhibitions are digitized and shared on their website and artist talks are filmed and archived online as resources for all to access. The Center also operates an education outreach program, Craft in Schools, which offers standards-based art education for underrepresented LAUSD and public K-12 schools and local colleges. 

Upcoming Project and Works in Progress

While many of our shows are canceled or postponed, most of us are still making work. California Fibers’ members recently met (via video, of course, the new reality), and enjoyed seeing each others’ faces, but also came up with an idea for a group show, online, responding to what is surrounding us. Member Lydia Tjioe-Hall suggested we all work within our personal medium to create something mask-like that was a response to our new reality, whether it's what it feels like to wear a mask, or to NEED to wear a mask, or about the changes in our daily routines due to COVID-19 and Shelter-in-Place orders.

Member Debby Weiss has been making masks and using her leftovers to create art pieces. She has made over 600 masks from scrap fabric.

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The piece below is made of scraps from her mask-making activities.

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Member Michael F. Rohde has made work related to masks in the past. The piece below is Asora, from a photo he took in Papua New Guinea, during festival time. The Asora group creates masks constructed of mud that cover their entire head. They are often called Mud Men. Rohde comments that this might be the best way to go to the grocery store at the moment.

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He has been weaving some large pieces lately from photos of walls he took last Fall in Oaxaca, Mexico. The current tapestry needed 165 colors, all dyed by Rohde himself.

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Member Kathy Nida is currently working on a large COVID-19 quilt, as she processes the overwhelming input of virus-related news and manages online teaching. She has finished the drawing and tracing stages, seen here.

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And is now spending hours cutting out fusible pattern pieces for the next stage, the fun one with all the fabric and colors.

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Stay tuned for more work in progress and updates on the online mask exhibit.