In Crafting America, Crystal Bridges’ current temporary exhibition, craft comes front and center, featuring 120 works in ceramics, textiles, fiber, wood, metal, glass, and more unexpected materials. Learn more about the creative mediums used in these works of art, from tin to glass, art is brought to life through American craft.
Wood and Tin
Ronald Lockett
Sarah Lockett’s Roses
Ronald Lockett created Sarah Lockett’s Roses to memorialize his late great-grandmother, Sarah, who was a gardener and quilter. For this homage, he gathered discarded metal materials from their neighborhood. Each tin rectangle features a dense texture and a centered, stylized rose, all painted. Lockett’s layering technique and use of color create a vibrant and rhythmic pattern resembling the construction of a quilt.
Ceramics
Maija Grotell
Vase
Maija Grotell, an immigrant to the United States from Finland, joined the faculty at Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. Under her direction, the ceramics program at Cranbrook flourished, and she encouraged students to develop individual styles. Grotell embellishes this roughly spherical pot with rhythmically placed chevrons.
Kathy Butterly
Color Safe (left) and Black Plaid (right)
Kathy Butterly packs a punch into each of her compact ceramics. She tucks, twists, and otherwise coaxes her clay into complex and convoluted shapes, then adds layer after layer of slip and glaze. Her works do retain a connection to the vessel—they sometimes sport handles and usually culminate in sensuous lips at the top. Their main function, though, is to provide a rush of visual pleasure.
Glass
Andy Paiko
Reliquary Group
Andy Paiko creates reliquaries, sometimes left empty, sometimes filled with handmade “specimens” evoking those of a historic curiosity cabinet. Within these enclosed microcosms, time seems suspended, creating an opportunity for extended reflection in all senses of the term.
“The visual gravity of Paiko’s blown-glass reliquaries pulls viewers into their orbits. Elegant canisters, pedestals for fragments foraged or fabricated, they bend light to the will of the contemplative imagination, concentrating vision into meditation, concealing as much as they reveal. His are alchemical creations that nudge us off-balance. In our flailing attempts to recenter ourselves, they compel us to recalibrate what we might think and what we might know.”
―Bernard L. Herman, “On Reliquaries and Self-Evident Truths,” Crafting America: Artists and Objects: 1940 to Today
Flora C. Mace and Joey Kirkpatrick
Fruit Bowl
Flora C. Mace and Joey Kirkpatrick have collaborated since 1979 in creating a body of innovative work made from blown glass. With Fruit Bowl, the artists go big and bold, infusing each piece of fruit with brilliant color. Their technique is unique, as they build layers of color on their glass forms by sifting colored glass powders onto the hot glass during the blowing process. This enables them to create realistic colors and textures.
Jewelry
Merry Renk
“White Cloud” Wedding Crown
“People ornament their bodies for many reasons: to demonstrate status, to fit in with prevailing styles, or just to be attractive. Studio jewelers reflect on these basic instincts while exploring the communicative range and sheer complexity of bodily decoration. In Merry Renk’s gold and pearl headpiece [seen above], we see elaborate historical forms—medieval wedding crowns and Baroque lace collars—approached with the structural exactitude of industrial design, which was the original professional discipline of both of these jewelers.” ―Crafting America: Artists and Objects: 1940 to Today
Fabric
Nick Cave
Soundsuit (left)
Jamie Okuma
Coat (right)
Nick Cave’s celebrated Soundsuits series, of which this work is one example, serves as a tool of liberation. The adorned objects, including the hundreds of hand-attached buttons here, become sonically animated when put in motion through dance—hence the name Soundsuit. Cave creates each suit from a huge array of textiles and found objects. He choreographs performances in which dancers wear these elaborate outfits, drawing from African ceremonial practices as well as contemporary theater and street pageantry.
Jamie Okuma, a California-based fashion designer, has been a vocal critic of the appropriation of Native traditions. She employs motifs drawn from her Luiseño and Shoshone-Bannock heritage, and her own personal experience, in her extravagant creations. Her garments take off from historical patterns into new flights of the imagination. The impressive beadwork, ribbon work, and cowrie shell design of this coat show the confluence of rich Native traditions and couture fashion.
Written by Kat de Sonnaville, communications intern, Crystal Bridges.