Corey Alston is no stranger to museum commissions. His sculptural baskets—enormous sewn vessels stacked and linked by swirls of coiled marsh grass—have been commissioned or collected by the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Duke Endowment, the Mint Museum, the Museum of Arts and Design, and more.
But when approached by the South Carolina State Museum, the fifth-generation sweetgrass basket maker challenged himself to create something bigger and more impressive than ever before in honor of his home state.
Finished just a few weeks ago and now permanently on display in the museum, Alston’s Big Percy is around 11 feet wide, five feet tall, and entirely handcrafted. In addition to being Alston’s biggest undertaking, it may also be the largest sweetgrass basket ever made. “It turned out about 35 inches bigger and one foot taller than it should have been, but that’s what art does when you’re just being freehanded,” he explains.
Alston and Dr. Ramon Jackson, South Carolina State Museum curator of cultural history, reveal Big Percy at a press conference.
