Lauren L. deSerres Kelischek
What is Left at the Table; What is Brought to the Door He Fell Asleep in Garden Marmalade: A Nice Way to Go She Stitched and Stitched Second Hand Memory The Immensity of Entanglement: There Were Miles and Miles of Thread Early Work


Cloth is a substance that is made of thousands of little threads, made of thousands of even smaller threads. I use fiber and cloth that is laden with the history of other people. I use old sheets and old cut-up sweaters, and wool from local farms, and lace from my grandmother’s sewing room and wood (which is made of fibers too). I use these materials because they seem to encompass the gravity and enormity of the human relationships that I am addressing- fibers woven together make a cloth, which
is strong, yet pull one string and you can unravel the whole thing. It is easily worn and stained. It can be soft and comforting, but when there is too much of it, it can be stifling and smothering. I’m using fiber as a metaphor for relationships and how they comprise and individual or even a family. I’m using fiber to recreate stories from my own experiences.