10 Mind-Blowing Textile Artists You Should Follow on Instagram Right Now
These fiercely talented and visionary artists will have you rethinking fiber art.
Weavers, sculptors, embroiderers, and beyond, these contemporary textile artists are redefining the boundaries of fiber art. Drawing from age-old techniques to reflect and challenge contemporary issues, these textile artists are redefining attitudes towards the ancient art form.
Cover photo: Sara Strickler
Elena Stonaker | @elenastonaker
Multimedia artist Elena Stonaker’s interactive textile installations use softness and beauty to explore discomfort.
Courtesy of @elenastonaker
Los Angeles–based multidisciplinary artist Elena Stonaker layers hand-beading and embroidery to create whimsical, raw depictions through soft sculpture, wearable art, paintings, moving image, art direction, and performance. Her feed stands as a broad portfolio encompassing all the various styles of her creations from intricate headdresses to life-size sculptures of plants, faces, bodies, and animals.
Erin M. Riley | @erinmriley
Erin M. Riley depicts a familiar contemporary trope—a woman taking a selfie—through traditional craft.
Courtesy of @erinmriley
Brooklyn–based Erin M. Riley’s evocative wool tapestries portray women’s lives, many of them taken from iPhone photos or Pornhub stills, forcing both herself and the viewer to confront what otherwise might have been scrolled past. Her hand-dyeing and weaving process upholds the experiences of contemporary female life—from sex and masturbation, to trauma and identity, to self-care and pop culture—through an ancient art form.
Gabriel Dawe | @gabrieldawe
Plexus no. 40 at Paradise Art Space.
Courtesy of @gabrieldawe
Hailing from Mexico City, Gabriel Dawe melds fashion and architecture in an investigation of shelter via site-specific installations. Through textiles, he examines gender and identity in his native home with a goal of reinventing norms around masculinity.
Sarah Zapata | @sylk_z
Sarah Zapata's Curriculum exhibit at EFA Project Space.
Courtesy of @sylk_z
Peruvian-American Sarah Zapata examines craft and sexuality through technicolor yarn. Her female and queer identity figure hugely in her work, as well as her relationship with her heritage. She was born and raised in Texas, and to connect with her background, she picked up traditional Peruvian weaving techniques, fusing them with American rug-making and dance. She uses her works as vessels to channel the movements of Peruvian women in performing arts.
Hannah Epstein | @gdgrlhanski
Hannah Epstein with her work at Art Brussels.
Courtesy of @gdgrlhanski
Hannah Epstein melds folk craft, contemporary art, and pop culture through her multidisciplinary practice that crosses boundaries between textiles, experimental games, and digital video. She's a trained folklorist capturing the chaos of the day-to-day in cute and fuzzy, but semi-scary woven creatures. Think: dark depictions of cats, monsters, and pop culture icons like bald Britney Spears.
Caroline Kaufman | @crosekauf
Caroline Kaufman's work at Textile Arts Center.
Courtesy of @crosekauf
New York City–based textile designer and artist Caroline Kaufman creates experimental textiles, collages, and paintings in an exploration of the intersection between color, texture, and pattern. Themes that bubble up include nostalgia and memory, childhood methods of creating, and time—rendered in multifaceted, multilayered woven art.
Tessa Perlow | @tessa_perlow
A close up of Tessa Perlow's embroidered faces.
Courtesy of @tessa_perlow
Tessa Perlow embroiders stunning, intricate designs. Out of her needlework, faces appear, flowers and houseplants bloom, organs pulse, and animals come to life. Embroidery hoops and garments are awash in multihued threads and beads in imagery that's equal parts folk-inspired and edgy.
Meghan Shimek | @meghanshimek
Meghan Shimek and her largest piece to date at Google.
Photo by Sara Strickler
For Oakland–based textile artist Meghan Shimek, weaving was a form of therapeutic healing. Following studies of tapestry, Navajo, rigid heddle, and floor loom weaving, she developed her own signature style in response to personal loss. What began as an exploration in comforting, fuzzy textures has become large-scale woven hangings and sculptures.
Julia Bland | @whoalia
Julia Bland's "Underbelly" exhibit at Helena Anrather.
Courtesy of @whoalia
The work of Julia Bland lies at the intersection of tapestry, sculpture, and painting. Through dyeing, weaving, stitching, knotting, and burning, she creates hanging geometric forms. Her foundation lies in her experiences in Morocco, where she studied Islamic art and Sufism; its architecture and symbolism inform her work, which explores how spirituality is manifest in natural and urban spaces.
MOMDALF | @momdalf
This isn’t your grandmother’s needlework: MOMDALF's images take on themes of death and rebirth—think snakes, dripping blood, and skeletons, and florals.
Courtesy of @momdalf
MOMDALF a collaboration between tattoo artist Jessica Gandalf Intelisano and her mother Joanne. Based in Santa Rosa, California, Jessica sends her designs back home to her mom, who lives just outside of New York City. Joanne then recreates her daughter’s paintings through intricate embroidery.
Related Reading: 10 Plant-Filled Abodes You Should Follow on Instagram Right Now, 10 Asian-Pacific American Designers You Should Follow on Instagram Right Now
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