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“The master’s tools will never dismantle
the master’s house.”
--Audre Lorde
“I want to dismantle the master’s house with the master’s
tools.”
--Paul Butler
My current work merges craft with objects of violence and control to
examine large structures of power and how they might be interrupted
by ways of making that are often labeled as gendered, amateur, and low.
By hand-weaving razor wire fences that have been ensconced with yarn
knitted on children’s toy knitted machines and morphing seminal
craft tools like spinning wheels into cyborg like creatures, notions
of what it means to “master” are thrown into question. To
“master” is to wield power over others, but “to master”
in the context of craft is to possess a self-sufficient creative agency
over materials and tools. I hover between the ideas of Lorde and Butler,
reclaiming the mastery of craft to create an alternative set of tools
that could potentially dismantle “the master’s house.”
-Lacey Jane Roberts |
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