“In the early 1900s, some people had this idea that Appalachians were untouched by time because they were so remote,” says Katherine Gemperline, the curator of Crafted in the Mountains: An Evolution of Appalachian Art, a new exhibition at Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts in Gatlinburg, Tennessee.
In preparation for the exhibition—which is on view through March 6—she read widely in the history of the region. An intriguing story emerged. “Many of the crafts, the fiber patterns, were brought to this area by immigrants and revitalized with industrialization,” she says. “I was really drawn to this concept when reading about the history of Arrowmont and the area, and also wanted to showcase the conversation between traditional craft and the contemporary.”
Gemperline, the school’s 2025–26 Kenneth R. Tapp Craft Assistant/Curatorial Fellow, selected 70 works from Arrowmont’s permanent collection to tell a small sliver of the much larger story of how traditional craft and contemporary art have influenced one another as the boundaries between the two erode.
A hand-built ceramic teapot by Lana Wilson features in the show.
