Feb 12- Reflection
This project helped me think about making visual impact with minimal materials and abstract form. I really enjoyed working with a limited color pallet. I also feel like I pushed myself a lot by working primarily with formal elements rather than recognizable images as the focus. I think the light, color, and texture were successful. I think I was successful in creating an environment as well. There were different interpretations in the critique, but I was happy that most people viewed it as being peaceful, safe, alive, and reflective of nature.
The main thing that could be improved is touching up the bottom of the roof and painting on some white over the paper to make them cleaner. I didn’t think about seeing the bottom of the roof because I am always looking at it from above, but when you look inside you can see the bottom of the roof. I could also modify the yarn more to make even more texture.
Artist statement
This work was made as a way for the viewer to step into an alien space of serene and stillness. Inspired by artist Shelia Hicks, I experimented with the ways draping fiber can be used to enhance a space. The viewer walks into a candleholder that has been transformed into a jungle of yarn. The fibers fall from the ceiling in a naturalistic pattern similar to vines. This creates the feeling that the space is like a foreign nature. The yarn could have grown from the ceiling. The limited color pallet lets the space remain muted and calm, but not naturalistic. The red and blue colors make the space mysterious and otherworldly. The darkness of the walls encourages the viewer to let their eye be drawn to the light catching on the falling fibers. One must look up to get the full experience of the room.
I wanted to create a space that is quiet. There is mystery and beauty, but overall it is calm. Whether or not that calm feeling is pleasant or unsettling to the viewer is up to them. I chose this candleholder because it’s shape naturally draws the eye upwards, and it was important to me that the instillation primarily hang above. Being forced to look up at something is having to acknowledge your own position to it. I am small; I am below. Candleholders are also containers of light, and this piece ended up capturing that aspect as well. As the light catches on the falling yarn, it becomes a character of its own. The darkness surrounding may end up seeming like a void and the yarn from above may go on for miles beyond what is seen. This piece creates expanse around the small viewer.
Feb 9
This week I made a paper lid for my structure to cover up my new and large light. I made a clay cone big enough to cover the light and cast it in paper and yarn. I then papered the inside with a darker color so the light doesn’t bleed in and added cardboard to the bottom so the light doesn’t bleed down either. I was debating between a pink or white light. I think I will go with the white because it picks up the blue well.
I papered the inside as well. This made the color a deep red. Boy, was that difficult to do. There are only the two openings, so it was tricky to get my paintbrush in. I also glued down some of the dark red yarn to the bottom of the candleholder instead of using pompoms. This fits the colors better, and I like the look of the glued down yarn. It transitions into the wall color well. I think the dark walls make the focus on the yarn better and make the space feel bigger. Not using pompoms also keeps from weighing the room down.
I finished the stairs by covering them in paper. This helped them blend with the outside more. I also got a little person to stand on the stairs.
February 2
I started constructing my installation. I had a tea light to work around, but in such a small space it looks a little like a strobe. I am considering getting a dollhouse light instead. I deconstructed the tea light to sill use as a structure because I like the look of having a candle inside. I can easily insert a different light into it or attach the yarn to a working light. Either way would be a simple fix.
I chose yarn that I liked the texture of that semi fit within my planned color scheme. I ended up adding in purple yarn to the blue, but I like the way that looks for now. I laid all the yarn in tape strips and then attached it to the tea light. Originally, i tried to attach it to a cardboard circle that I would place on the top of the holder, but that wasn’t very easy to do. The yarn was hard to layer and it laid weirdly inside the holder. Instead, I layered the yarn on masking tape. This was a nice process, because I can easily make changes if I would like. It can be easily removed add layers can be replaced or trimmed. I then attached the tape to the tea light and trimmed the edges. Currently, the tea light fits by just sliding it into the top.
I am working on making stairs and a ramp as an entrance. I am making this out of cardboard, and I tried to keep the dimensions close to scale for a staircase. I also have some clay that I will use to make a little person.
I would love some feedback on what you guys think of the tea lighting. To me, it is too flickery, but I would love your thoughts. Would a dollhouse light be better? The other thing I am considering is painting wax onto the yarn. I think that could make it look less yarn-like, but it would definitely change the overall look. Also, do I still need the pompoms? Would that help flesh out the environment, or is it too much visual information?January 25
For the small world installation, I am taking inspiration from Shelia Hicks. She is a fiber artists that makes long rope-like installations as well as ones that look like big pompoms. I want to combine these ideas into one installation.
Bethany, this is a solid and thoughtful start, and Sheila Hicks is an appropriate and productive reference for what you’re interested in exploring. Your focus on fiber, accumulation, and softness is clear, and the desire to create an environment rather than a single object aligns well with the goals of this project.
The candle holder is an interesting found object choice, especially because it already contains multiple openings. You’re right to recognize that those openings are not neutral—they determine how the viewer can access the interior space. Thinking about which opening functions as entry versus window is exactly the kind of spatial decision this project is asking for.
Your instinct to create an engulfing, whimsical environment through hanging yarn and pom-pom accumulation makes sense conceptually. I’d encourage you to think carefully about how much fiber is necessary to create that feeling at a miniature scale. At this size, fewer strands, pushed further, can often feel more immersive than adding as much material as possible.
Between your two options, Option #2 feels stronger spatially because it emphasizes gravity and downward movement, which works well with fiber. If visibility becomes an issue, lighting can be simple and subtle—small LED tea lights or light bouncing off lighter-colored yarn may be enough. You don’t need to overcomplicate this.
Your concern about the ceramic exterior not being adaptable is valid, but also part of the challenge of working with a found object. Rather than trying to change the outside, focus on how the interior can be activated through material, density, and placement. Let the object’s limitations guide your decisions or you may need to find an object that would be more flexible.
As you move forward, ask yourself:
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Where does the viewer “enter” the space visually?
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Which opening matters most, and why?
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How can yarn and pom-poms define a sense of enclosure rather than decoration?
This is a promising direction. Focus on clarity, restraint, and letting the material do the work, and you’ll be in a good place.








































