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Craft Around the Country

Craft Artists Aim to Divine the Future in a California Exhibition

The eight artists featured in Material Prophecies at the Armory Center for the Arts use ancestral knowledge to conjure possibilities.

By Jacqueline Huynh Young
April 30, 2026

Photo by Chris Young, courtesy of Armory Center for the Arts

Installation view of Material Prophecies: Craft as Divination at Armory Center for the Arts, 2026.

“I think of artists as translators, channeling something intangible into form,” says Taylor Bythewood-Porter, the curator of Material Prophecies: Craft as Divination. On view through August 1 at the Armory Center for the Arts in Pasadena, California, the exhibition considers whether craft can do more than preserve tradition. What if it can also act as a tool for envisioning possible futures, and what new realities might be created through the act of making?

The exhibition includes works by Jackie Amézquita, April Bey, Calethia DeConto, Emmanuel Louisnord Desir, Joel Gaitan, vanessa german, Sky Hopinka, and Lani Trock. Spanning clay, fiber, wood, and other earth materials, these artists contend with history—particularly its colonial inheritances—while reaching toward the prophetic. 

At the entrance, a 20-foot-wide jacquard and sherpa tapestry by April Bey hangs as if from a clothesline, secured by elaborately decorated pins. The image of a Black femme, repeated within the dense foliage, gazes outward, while pink pineapple appliqués catch the light. The piece, I Know All About What You Want to Know All About (2024), belongs to Bey’s larger sci-fi series about the librarians of a decolonized Atlantica—a fictional utopia where Black joy and creativity flourish. As Bythewood-Porter explains, Bey’s work “draws on traditions of fabric as narrative, reimagined through her Afrofuturist world-building practice.” 

Photo by Chris Young, courtesy of Armory Center for the Arts

April Bey, I Know All About What You Want to Know All About, 2024, jacquard, sherpa, crushed velour, metallic thread, beads, adorned clothespins, 80 x 240 in.

Further into the gallery, Joel Gaitan’s terracotta figures sit atop orange plinths and reference early Mesoamerican objects. Voluptuous bodies—with braids made from ceramic and real hair—wear headpieces and gold-lustered jewelry, while the central figure dons an orange and turquoise grill. In Gaitan’s hands, these figures give off a cheeky irreverence, visible in their wry smiles and gold chains. One sculpture bears the inscription, “Todos en las manos de Dios” (“Everything is in God’s hands”) as if fate too has been given a body.

Taken together, the exhibition’s works assume the quality of an incantation aimed at altering the conditions that have shaped the present moment and makes space for other futures to emerge.

Photo by Chris Young, courtesy of Armory Center for the Arts

Joel Gaitan's No Pidas Agua, Cuando No Hay Sed installed as a part of Material Prophecies.

Jacqueline Huynh Young is a Vietnamese American artist and writer based in Los Angeles.

Learn more about the exhibition online.

Website

This article was made possible with support from the Windgate Foundation.

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