Articles

Raid the Database 3

Heather Leigh McPherson

"Raid the Database with Heather Leigh McPherson" is the third installment in an ongoing project in which artists bring new curatorial perspectives to the museum's extensive collections.

Still Life

As a curatorial intern for the Contemporary Art Department at the RISD Museum during the summer of 2016, I was introduced to the in-depth experience of museum work.

(Re)tracing the Silver Seaweed: A Maker's Process

This salad spoon and fork set, made by the Gorham Manufacturing Company ca. 1885, is named after the coastal town of Narragansett, Rhode Island. Replete with intricately detailed shells, seaweed, and sea creatures—including small fish and tiny crabs—these two sea-encrusted utensils were my point of inspiration for a set of five brooches. In the following article I will describe some of the basic processes used to create my Narragansett-inspired jewelry

Exhibition Design

Intermission

In December of 2016 the RISD Museum needed to deinstall its European Galleries in order to renovate them.

From Flax To Finish

Embroidery samplers are inextricably linked to an image of colonial America: farmhouses waved sheets of linen like flags of surrender, with fields of flax extending beyond, as far as the eye could

Egúngún

Mysteries Concealed in Magical Cloth

For Yorùbá-speaking peoples in West Africa, cloth is equated with their most precious possession, children.