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Polly Barton

American textile artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Polly Barton is an American textile artist.

Biography

She was born in New York City.[1] As a student, she studied art history at Barnard College (class of 1978) and has lived and traveled in Paris, Florence, and Rome. In 1981, she moved to Kameoka, Japan, to study with master weaver Tomohiko Inoue, living in the religious heart of the Oomoto Foundation. She returned to New York in 1982 and continued to weave on her Japanese tsumugi silk kimono looms.[2]

She shows her woven silk ikat paintings on both coasts,[3] and is collected by the Art Institute of Chicago,[4] Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and by private collectors. Her work has been published in numerous magazines including Hali Magazine, FiberArts, Surface Design Journal and American Craft. She is a member of the Textile Society of America, Friends of Fiber Arts International, the Surface Design Association and the Textile Arts Alliance of Santa Fe.

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Education

  • 1993–2000 – Northern New Mexico Community College, El Rito
  • 1984 – Parsons School of Design, New York City
  • 1983–82 – Fashion Institute of Technology, New York City
  • 1981–82 – Kameoka, Japan, Apprentice to Master weaver Tomohiko Inoue
  • 1978 – Summer seminar, The Oomoto School of Traditional Japanese Arts, Kameoka, Japan
  • 1978 – BA, Barnard College, New York City, magna cum laude
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Exhibitions

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2012:

  • New Woven Works, William Siegal Gallery, Santa Fe, New Mexico
  • San Francisco Art Fair, Linda Fairchild Contemporary Art, San Francisco, California
  • Sourcing the Museum, The Textile Museum, Washington, DC[5]
  • New Works, Gail Martin, New York City

2011:

2010:

  • New Work, William Siegal Gallery, Santa Fe
  • New Fibers 2010, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, Michigan
  • Transformed Traditions in Ikat, Modern Arts Midwest, Lincoln, Nebraska

2009:

  • Origin, Shumei Arts Council, Pasadena, California

2008:

  • Thread: Drawn, Dyed, Woven, William Siegal Gallery, Santa Fe
  • Visible Presence, San Jose Museum of Quilts and Textiles, San Jose, California
  • Woven Expressions, Gail Martin Gallery, New York City

2007:

  • Saturn Returns: Back to the Future of Fiber Art, San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles, San Jose
  • Los Pintores: Past, Present, and Future, RSA along with FACT, Santa Fe
  • Then and Now, William Siegal Gallery, Santa Fe

2006:

2005:

2004:

  • New Works, Linda Fairchild Gallery, San Francisco

2003:

  • Opening Night, Linda Fairchild Gallery of Contemporary Art, San Francisco
  • SOFA New York, Gail Martin Gallery, New York City

2002:

  • Threads on the Edge: The Daphne Farago Fiber Art Collection, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts
  • Survey Fiber 2002, Snyderman-Works Galleries, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Public collections

  • Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago[4]
  • Miho Museum, Misono, Japan
  • Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
  • Daphne Farago Collection, Boston
  • Guido Goldman Ikat Collection, New York City
  • Davis, Polk & Wardwell, London, England and New York City
  • Tobin Collection, Santa Fe
  • Oomoto Foundation, Kameoka, Japan
  • Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine, New York City
  • Grace Cathedral, San Francisco
  • Church of the Heavenly Rest, New York City
  • Community Hospital Foundation of the Monterey Peninsula
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Honors

  • 1997 – Honorable Mention Crafts, Taos Open, Taos, New Mexico
  • 1986 – Stanley Mendelbaum Award, Juried Exhibition of the New York Guild of Handweavers, New York City
  • 1985 – Juror's Award, Juried Exhibition of the New York Guild of Handweavers, New York City
  • 1984 – Best of Show Award, Convergence ’84, Dallas, Texas

Lectures and workshops

  • 2009 – Shumei, Crestone, Colorado
  • 2008 – William Siegal Gallery, Santa Fe
    • Visible Presence, San Jose Museum of Quilts and Textiles, San Jose
    • Textile Arts Alliance, Santa Fe
    • Shumei, Crestone
  • 2004 – Design with Heart, Santa Fe
  • 2002 – Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
    • Textile Arts Alliance, Santa Fe
    • Summer Workshop: Ikat, Northern New Mexico Community College, El Rito, New Mexico
  • 2001 – Summer Workshop: Ikat, Northern New Mexico Community College, El Rito
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References

Further reading

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