Tufting is an art and Tuft the World wants to shine a light on a select group of tufters whose work inspires and excites us through a one month exhibition. The selected artwork will be on display during TuftCon, Philadelphia’s first ever tufting convention. Submissions were reviewed and chosen by textile artist Qualeasha Wood.
This Juried exhibition is on view from March 26-April 30, 2023.
Exhibition on view, by appointment: March 27th-April 30th (please email studio@tufttheworld.com to schedule a viewing)
Opening Reception: Select guests are invited to join us on Sunday, March 26, 2023 from 12-2:30pm in the Bok Building (rm 501) in South Philadelphia. TuftCon ticket holders and exhibiting artists are welcome, unfortunately we cannot extend the opening reception invitation to guests or public due to capacity restrictions.
Closing Reception: Please join us for a public closing reception on Saturday, April 29th from 6-8pm.
Congratulations to our exhibiting artists:
Bahls, Cecilia
Benét, Blue
Berman-Gestring, Kyra
Brown, Sheraya
Calderón, Mandy
Cheverall, Liberty
Cibel, Audrey
Colón, Magan
De La Paz, Monica
Edwards, Coelina
Ericson, Evan
Gonçalves Costa, Jessica
Grue
Hall, Ciera
Hall, Derek
Henthorne, Abigail
Hill, Grace
Hooper, Sheri
James, Tara
Janek, Sachiko
Kim, Jongbum
Kosowski, Tara
Lahnert, Halo
Leka, Hanna
LeVitre, Cathy
Liddell, Sarah
Linton, Jennifer
Maas, Grace
Orlowski, Anna
Padungvichean, Duairak (Lun)
Perez, Venus
Santiago, Michael
Slaughter, Chelsea
Slayden, Shelby
Stamper, Elise
Stone, Melissa
Tomlinson, Heather
Wojkovich, Tessa
Zisman, Vicky
Qualeasha Wood is a textile artist whose work contemplates realities around black female embodiment that do and might exist. Inspired by a familial relationship to textiles, queer craft, Microsoft Paint and internet avatars Wood's tufted and tapestry pieces mesh traditional craft and contemporary technological materials. Together, Qualeasha navigates both an Internet environment saturated in Black Femme figures and culture, and a political and economic environment holding that embodiment at the margins. Like the vast majority of her age-peers, Wood has operated one mortal and multiple digital avatars since pre-adolescence. For her what are intuitive combinations of analog and cybernetic compositional processes make for a plainly contemporary exploration of Black American Femme ontology.