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Liz Miller
Textile Artist Liz Miller_02

Architectural Hyperbole 04 (2021)

 

65 x 42 x 6 inches

 

assorted rope, zip ties, and other mixed media on metal and plastic armature

 

Photo credit: John Dooley

Liz Miller_03

Architectural Hyperbole 02 (2021)

 

65 x 42 x 6 inches

 

assorted rope, zip ties, and other mixed media on metal and plastic armature

 

Photo credit: John Dooley

Liz Miller Knotting_09

Architectural Hyperbole 06 (2021)

 

65 x 40 x 6 inches

 

assorted rope, zip ties, and other mixed media on metal and plastic armature

 

Photo credit: John Dooley

Textile artist LIz Miller_04

Architectural Hyperbole 04 – detail (2021)

 

65 x 42 x 6 inches

 

assorted rope, zip ties, and other mixed media on metal and plastic armature

 

Photo credit: John Dooley

Liz Miller textile artist_01

Architectural Hyperbole 01 (2021)

 

40 x 65 x 6 inches

 

assorted rope, zip ties, and other mixed media on metal and plastic armature

 

Photo credit: John Dooley

Miller_08

Architectural Hyperbole 05 (2021)

 

40 x 65 x 6 inches

 

assorted rope, zip ties, and other mixed media on metal and plastic armature

 

Photo credit: John Dooley

Textile Artist Liz Miller_06

Blind (Fort for 2020)

 

dimensions variable

 

assorted rope, gutter guards, plastic fencing, and other mixed media

 

Photo credit: Rik Sferra

Fibre artist Liz Miller_05

Blind (Fort for 2020)

 

dimensions variable

 

assorted rope, gutter guards, plastic fencing, and other mixed media

 

installation view: Textile Center, 2021 Photo credit: Rik Sferra

Liz Miller_07

Blind (Fort for 2020)

 

dimensions variable

 

assorted rope, gutter guards, plastic fencing, and other mixed media

 

Photo credit: Rik Sferra

Knotting is the main technique used in American textile artist Liz Miller’s dynamic colourful hanging work and installations. She creates “interdependent knotted topographies that allude to both structure and malleability while also recognizing and elevating aspects of human culture that are neglected, overlooked, or discarded.”

 

Firstly where did you grow up and where do you live now? 

I grew up in Bloomington, Minnesota–a suburb of Minneapolis. After moving around a bit when I was younger, I ended up finding a college teaching job at Minnesota State University-Mankato. I have lived in the tiny southern Minnesota town of Good Thunder, MN (population around 600 people) for the past sixteen years. Rural southern Minnesota is certainly not where I saw myself living when I was first starting out as an artist. Even after all these years, I feel most comfortable in big cities…but I’ve grown to love it here, too. There is a different sense of space and time that can be conducive to making work, and I have tried to embrace that.

 

What is your background in textiles?

I have no formal background in textiles! My academic degrees include an undergraduate degree in Painting from the Rhode Island School of Design, and a graduate degree in Painting & Drawing from the University of Minnesota. However, from the time I was an undergraduate student, I was very interested in painting as an expanded practice that included diverse material sensibilities. I can’t sew at all, but for as long as I can remember, I’ve been interested in clothing and fabric. As a graduate student at The University of Minnesota, I took courses on the history of dress. It seems only natural that for most of my art career, fabric, rope, and other textile materials have played a primary role in my work.

 

What is it about textiles as an art form that appeals to you?

I am drawn to textiles for their architectural potential, strength, tactility, and malleability. Textiles can be incredibly tough and durable, but are also extremely flexible.

 

Why do you use knotting as your main technique?

I’d been creating large-scale, site-specific installations for quite a few years before I started paying attention to the fact that I was tying hundreds of knots for each installation. The knots were comprised of fishing line and formed a kind of invisible “rigging” that allowed elements to magically hang from the ceiling of exhibition spaces. When my use of fishing line evolved to brightly colored paracord, my knotting was suddenly visible. At that juncture, I became so fascinated with the knotting, a formerly overlooked part of my work, that I abandoned other parts of my art practice to pursue it full-time!

Although I have tried to learn specific types of knots, most of the knots I make are quite simple and very improvisational. There are cable ties on the ends of many of the knots, another holdover from my years of making sculptural installations. I could never get the knots to stay in place, so I would put plastic cable ties on the ends.

I love the fact that knotting is decorative, but also functional. There is a kind of emphatic weight to knotting that I find beautiful and intense. There is an urgency to knotting. I’ve also been “weaving” rope and cord through various materials, and I feel the same sense of purpose and intensity in that process.

 

What other textile techniques do you use?

The textile “techniques” in my work are highly improvised. For a long time, I was afraid to show true textile and fiber artists what I was doing. Now, I am excited about how technique, improvisation, and ad-hoc ways of making can collide. I am currently integrating found building materials like fences as well as mundane elements of domestic environments such as office organizers, refrigerator shelves, and metal radiator covers and using these as a structure through which to weave rope and cord. The act of intricately adorning these banal remnants of our contemporary life is very satisfying, as is the play between hard and soft materials.

 

How do you describe your work?

In my wall-based works and installation environments, I explore architecture, boundaries, and borders through the juxtaposition of architectural fragments and fiber-based adornment. Pieces of the built environment, such as components of fences, gutter guards, or metal remnants of domestic interiors (such as stove grates) become armatures for ad-hoc weaving, knotting, and embellishment with rope, cord, and other textile materials.

I create interdependent knotted topographies that allude to both structure and malleability while also recognizing and elevating aspects of human culture that are neglected, overlooked, or discarded. The repeated act of hand tying integrates an emphatic sense of strength, while the flexibility and nuance of the textile material ensures permutations. The resulting works are only quasi-architectural, providing metaphorical insight laced with humor as related to a variety of structural and systemic behavior.

The color in my work is largely intuitive. I love playing with the seductive and decorative qualities of bright colors as well as how those same colors can become excessive or discordant.

 

How do you create a piece?

My process is really driven by materials. I don’t do sketches or models or mock-ups, but I will spend many hours looking for the right materials to begin a work. Today, for example, I found an amazing vintage headboard for a bed that is the perfect framework for a new wall piece. I like having lots of different types of materials in the studio that offer up a plethora of possibilities.

 

I know this is a hard question but how long does a bigger piece take?

That is a hard question! I generally do the wall-based works in a series, so I am focusing on multiple works at any given moment. The six works in my Architectural Hyperbole series took a total of only about a month to make—which is really quick for me. But this was during a residency, and all I had to worry about was making art! Generally, a larger group of wall works, or a site-specific installation, can take months (or even over a year) for me to develop.

 

What are you most proud of in your art career so far?

One of my recent and most memorable career highlights was receiving a 2020 McKnight Foundation Fellowship for Fiber Artists. The fellowship is intended for mid-career fiber artists based in Minnesota, and it includes a $25000 unrestricted award. It meant a great deal to me to be recognized for the experimental work I’ve done in fibers over the past two decades, and it helped connect me to an amazing community of fiber and textile artists from around the world.

 

Do you have any advice for aspiring textile artists?

As someone who came to textiles from a non-textiles background, I would tell aspiring textile artists (or any artists!) to not be afraid to embrace what makes you and your work unique. The very things that I felt made me an outsider within the textile community were what have allowed me to bring a unique sensibility and vision.