Slow Light
Carson Converse, Untitled - 2, 2020; quilted textile; 53 x 80 in. Courtesy of the artist.
June 4-August 16, 2026
Upon entering the Museum's main gallery, housed in a nineteenth-century barn, visitors are often struck by its grand, cathedral-like architecture. This exhibition pays tribute to the barn's physical presence and to its current role as a space devoted to the display and preservation of fiber arts in all its forms.
Conceived as a visual essay, the exhibition invites viewers to explore a sequence of interconnected ideas in which one artist’s work leads to the discovery of another. It encourages contemplation of textiles in relation to the Museum's structure and engages with the idea of fiber arts as inherently architectural.
Slow Light marks the fifteenth anniversary of the Museum's presence in this building, prompting reflection on the significance of being here. It also invites us to consider how fiber can provide insight into the architecture that surrounds us, the ways our bodies interact with these spaces, their scale and constraints, and the broader human experience within them.