Welcome to Non Woven Structures!
This website is devoted to the exploration the world of non woven fiber structures alongside our in class time together this Spring. This course explores a wide range of off loom textile structures such as basketry, netting, crochet, felting and soft sculpture.
This website will serve as the homebase for this class. Check here regularly for important course information on fiber techniques, processes, and concepts as well as information for all assignments, class announcements, and detailed linkable fiber art resources.
We will examine off loom textile techniques together in hopes of finding ways that the concepts, materials, and processes of fiber might serve to enhance your own developing art practices, wherever you go after this class.
I’m glad you are here!
Images above, from top:
I wish I was in LA to see the exhibition “Woven Histories: Textiles and Modern Abstraction” before it closes at the end of the month. However, I was able to purchase the catalogue for our fiber class library which features this particular work by contemporary artist Andrea Zittel made using the felting process which we will learn this semester.
From the exhibition press release:
“Woven Histories: Textiles and Modern Abstraction foregrounds a robust if over-looked strand in art history’s modernist narratives by tracing how, when, and why abstract art intersected with woven textiles (and such pre-loom technologies as basketry, knotting, and netting) over the past century. Although at times unevenly weighted, the diverse exchanges, alignments, affiliations, and affinities that have brought these art forms into dialogue constitute an ongoing if intermittent narrative in which one art repeatedly impacts and even redefines the other. In short, the relationship between abstract art and woven textiles can best be described as co-constitutive, and their histories as interdependent. With over 150 works by an international and transhistorical roster of artists, this exhibition reveals how shifting relations among abstract art, fashion, design, and craft shaped recurrent aesthetic, cultural, and socio-political forces, as they, in turn, were impacted by modernist art forms.“
our informal fiber studio logo designed by Baylor Graphic Design Spring 2023 graduate Delaney Bullock!!
some things to learn in fabric surface design, from a deck of cards I made using text from the book “101 Things to Learn in Art School” by Kit White. P.S. This book is available for you to look at during class in our new fiber studio library.














