Because
fiber arts make up such a large component of the Tradition/Innovation
exhibit (and play such an important role in the landscape
of contemporary Southern crafts), the fiber arts are
presented in two virtual galleries: Baskets and Fiber
Arts.
Basketmakers seem to have a
profound connection to their natural environment. The
traditional basketmakers in the exhibit represent diverse
cultures and regions of the South. For these basketmakers,
the basket begins with the collecting and careful preparation
of the materials used, whether that is sweetgrass, white
oak splits, pine needles, or river cane. When the material
that they use for basketmaking is |
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For
many traditional artists, “knowing your
materials” is the hallmark of mastery. The
selection...
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When one studies the
development of ancient cultures, the introduction
of paper, baskets, and woven textiles is a watershed...
<continued>
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threatened, whether
by logging or development, they feel that loss. Clay
Burnette, although he does not make traditional baskets,
also enjoys the process of collecting his preferred
material, pine needles. He is particularly excited when
he discovers very long needles in the woods on his property.
Billie Ruth Sudduth takes a
different approach to basketmaking. For her, the process
of basketmaking begins with an idea, a mathematical
concept that she will express through her baskets. But
even though she does not collect her own basketmaking
materials, she does feel that her basketmaking connects
her to the natural world. The mathematical concept she
expresses through many of her baskets is called the
Nature Sequence of Fibonacci numbers. It is a sequence
that is seen in natural forms like seashells, flower
petals and the caps of acorns. Sudduth feels that using
this naturally occurring rhythm as the basis of her
weaving reaffirms her connection to the natural world.
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