The Week in Craft: June 21, 2017
Your weekly dose of links about craft, art, design, and whatever else we’re excited about sharing.
We are in love with these incredibly realistic bird pins by Warsaw-based artist Paulina Bartnik.
You can now search through 3,000 years of fashion on Google’s new online archive.
Check out this fascinating stop-motion short film illustrating what happens when raw wood travels through a milling machine.
You think you've seen balloon animals? Not like these by Masayoshi Matsumoto.
"Many of the artists in the US today are grappling with how to deal with our horror at what our government is doing," says quiltmaker Kathy Nida in a piece about her recent work.
On the other hand: The BBC has investigated quiltmakers who've been trolled by a conservative American quilt group.
The Minneapolis Sculpture Garden, co-operated by the Walker Art Center and Minneapolis Parks and Recreation Board, recently reopened after a massive overhaul. During the opening ceremony, Nina Hale, a member of the Walker board of trustees, made her entrance in a handmade “rooster frock.”
The chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities recently announced their resignation.
Paulus Berensohn, former dancer and choreographer, ceramist, passionate educator, and ACC honorary fellow, died last week.