Above Left: Close-up detail, photo courtesy of the artist.
"From Loom to Screen: Weaving Textiles into Animation”
Thursday, May 14, 4:00 p.m.
Lectures will be in Lawrence Hall, Room 115, 1190 Franklin Boulevard, Eugene, OR 97403.
Lecture videos are archived on YouTube.
This presentation introduces the artist's studio practice, which is situated at the intersection of weaving and animation. Nartker creates woven textiles on a jacquard loom and translates these fabrics into time-based works, approaching the loom as a camera and editing tool. By working with sequential woven images and material processes, the artist's work explores how textiles can generate motion and shape the moving image. Nartker will discuss recent projects that move between handwoven cloth and animation, as well as the technical and conceptual questions that arise when textiles are used as a time-based medium. The talk will also touch on the overlapping histories of weaving and cinema, and how textile processes offer alternative ways of thinking about moving images, narrative, and authorship.
Kate Nartker works between animation and weaving to dismantle images, narratives, and material structures. She received an MFA from the California College of the Arts and is an Assistant Professor of Textile Design at the Wilson College of Textiles at NC State University. Her work has been included in exhibitions and screenings throughout the United States and internationally, including The Museum of Craft and Design in San Francisco, The Contemporary Austin, and the Hordaland Art Center in Bergen, Norway.