The Golden Thread 2 / BravinLee programs

Thrilled to join a truly incredible group of artists in BravinLee programsThe Golden Thread 2: A Fiber Arts Exhibition, April 11–May 16, 2025. Curated by the wonderful Karin Bravin, The Golden Thread 2 occupies the multiple and meandering levels of 207 Front Street in Manhattan’s historic South Street Seaport.

Artists
Liv Aanrud / Alissa Alfonso / Abdolreza Aminlari / Paolo Arao / Natalie Baxter / Felix Beaudry / Sammy Bennett / Montrel Beverly / Samantha Bittman / Julia Bland / Jess Blaustein / Chris Bogia / Eileen Braun / Jennifer Cecere / Ruby Chishti / Poppy DeltaDawn / Rima Day / Sam Dienst / Lesley Dill / Ali Dipp / Lucia Engstrom / Mark Fleuridor / Terri Friedman / Manuela Gonzalez / Francoise Grossen / Tali Halpern / Sharon Kerry-Harlan /   Valerie Hegarty / Ana María Hernando / Candace Hicks / Traci Johnson / Anna Kunz / Lauren Luloff / Karen Margolis / Ruben Marroquin / Caitlin McCormack / Lior Modan / Tomo Mori / Ellie Murphy / Tura Oliveira / Mia Pearlman / Sheila Pepe / Julie Peppito / Debra Rapoport / Josie Love Roebuck / Baylee Schmitt / Sylvia Schwartz / Michelle Segre / Manju Shandler / Fran Siegel / Emily Silver / Jacqueline Surdell / Rhian Swierat / Suzanne Tick / Trish Tillman / Tiny Pricks Project / Maris Van Vlack / Cyle Warner / Rachel Mica Weiss / Ulla-Stina Wikander / Halley Zien

Transmission 36-44919, 2025
Cloth scraps and plastic tarp with pigment ink on discarded coaxial cable
350 linear feet

Created specifically for the site, Transmission 36-44919 is cloth-covered coaxial cable crafted to channel past lives of the building it moves through. Fragments of archival research into the history of 207 Front Street and the South Street Seaport are externalized on the surface, in the slow physical form of pigment ink on fabric, rather than invisibly carried at high speeds within. Transmission Line is wrapped with scraps and made from the discards, leftovers, and remains of contemporary communication infrastructure coiling along floors, ceilings, and wall surfaces everywhere around us.