Marie Watt’s circle stitches collective memory
The work of artist Marie Watt often begins with people sitting together, hands moving across fabric as stories pass from one voice to another.
While the setting can range from a museum, a school, a community space, or the artist’s studio, the gesture stays close and direct. Needles thread through wool as lines of stitching follow handwriting and a shared space gathers the presence of many hands.
Watt’s practice offers a deeply human view into the question of what craft can become. The Seattle-born artist, a member of the Turtle Clan of the Seneca Nation of Indians, works across printmaking, painting, textiles, and sculpture.
She draws from...
