By Erica-Lynn Huberty
The creative process is vital to humanity, as it is the vehicle by which we communicate and connect with one another: something that is more important than ever in our increasingly isolating society.
My work mingles textiles and sewing arts techniques with watercolor and ink, embroidery, crochet and knitting, loom-woven grounds, mediums overlapping as if done simultaneously, and exploring the historical tradition of “women’s work.” The process is at once tedious, time-consuming and physically demanding, as well as a symbol of feminine self-worth.
With a MFA in visual art from Bennington College, 1995, Erica-Lynn Huberty has been exhibited at Racine Art Museum, WI; David&Schweitzer Contemporary, Brooklyn; Ricco Maresca Gallery and Denise Bibro Fine Arts in Manhattan; Sara Nightingale Gallery, Sag Harbor, and Guild Hall Museum in East Hampton, NY. Site-specific installations at the Byrd Hoffman Water Mill Center, the Leiber Collection Museum Garden, the Gardens of Onna House, East Hampton, an abandoned beach house in Bridgehampton, the Sag Harbor Whaling & Historical Museum in Sag Harbor, NY, and on Mary Mattingly’s Wetland, for The Parrish Art Museum’s ambitious “Radical Seafaring” exhibition. Work in the permanent collections of Onna House, East, Onna House, South, and the Parrish Art Museum.
The Creative Process is created with kind support from the Jan Michalski Foundation.