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Joyce Lin Wins 2025 John D. Mineck Fellowship

The Houston furniture maker secured $25,000 to advance her practice.

By Shivaun Watchorn
November 25, 2025

Photo by Logan Jackson, courtesy of R & Company

Joyce Lin's work combines strong woodworking skills and beguiling artifice. From left to right: Wood Chair (Yellow Pine on Grass), Surfaces All the Way Down, and Metal Chair, all 2025.

Joyce Lin’s sculptural furniture is a little off. The Alabama-raised, Houston-based artist is best known for making chairs and other furniture forms that straddle the natural, the manmade, the functional, and the conceptual. Aiming to “bypass material limitation through imitation,” Lin uses finely honed woodworking skills to execute her otherwise impossible ideas, layering real and reproduced materials into unlikely forms. The results are as impressive as they are befuddling. “It’s this uncanny element I aim to express in object-making,” says Lin.

In October, the Boston-based Society of Arts and Crafts awarded Lin the 2025 John D. Mineck Fellowship. The $25,000 unrestricted prize—adjudicated this year by woodworker and RISD president emerita Rosanne Somerson, furniture maker and 2017 Mineck Fellowship winner Jack Mauch, and industrial designer and artist Jomo Tariku—is given to an early-career furniture maker to provide “financial assistance to develop skills that move them toward independence.” Securing the fellowship is a powerful way for artists to take their careers to the next level: Lin plans to use her award to expand studio capacity, upgrade equipment, and hire a fabrication assistant.

Photo courtesy of the artist

Joyce Lin.

Sadly, the board of the Society of Arts and Crafts also announced in October that the 128-year-old organization was ceasing operations. And while the Mineck Fellowship will continue to be funded by the John D. Mineck Foundation, it will now be administered by Boston’s venerable North Bennet Street School, which will also absorb other remaining assets of the Society of Arts and Crafts.

Meanwhile, Lin’s new exhibition, Hypernatural, opened in November at New York City’s R & Company. It includes four works from her new Kudzu Series, in which she weaves the South’s omnipresent vine into traditional furniture forms that blur the lines between the natural and constructed. The show runs through January 9.

To dive deeper into the Mineck Fellowship, check out American Craft’s coverage of previous winners Charles Thompson (2024) and Sophie Glenn (2022).

Photo by Joyce Lin

Lin's Kudzu Series, 2025, wood, found lamp, kudzu vine, epoxy, cloth, wire, and paint.

Shivaun Watchorn is associate editor at the American Craft Council.

Check out more of Joyce Lin's work online.

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