ERIN MILLER

 

Bubble Wrap Upset, 2017

60 x 80 inches

cotton.

Statement

As an artist working primarily with textiles, I am deeply concerned by the human relationship with cloth. We spend a significant amount of time physically interacting with textiles, but contemporarily, little time thinking about how they came to us. Cloth is something that we know intimately with our whole bodies; it comforts us and holds the physical memory of our being, but its place in our lives has become mostly an afterthought. We have developed a disconnect with the origins of one of our most basic necessities, and its value has been lowered both monetarily and emotionally. Before the onset of the industrial revolution cloth was a luxury, and even the most worn garments and linens were reused and repaired until they nearly vanished. Today, clothing and textiles are produced in a manner that has pushed them into the realm of “temporary” commodity. My consideration of contemporary consumer culture has led me to investigate my own consumption of temporary materials, the hierarchy of comfort objects, and how trauma has informed my relationship with cloth. Textiles have always been my primary comfort objects, and my work is created as a means of comfort or protection from traumatic experiences while unpacking them.

 

ERIN MILLER

Head of Weaving,

Berea College Student Crafts, Berea, KY

Erin R Miller received her MFA in Fibers from Eastern Michigan University in 2017 and her BFA in Textiles from Kent State University in 2014. Her work has been exhibited throughout the United States and Canada, with recent solo exhibitions at The Bonded Llama in Raleigh, North Carolina and Praxis Fiber Workshop in Cleveland, Ohio. She is currently Head of Weaving in Student Crafts at Berea College in Berea Kentucky.