IS AY! H T RD TU A S
by Kris Vagner
k r isv @ ne wsr e v ie w.c o m
Jenny Valloric weaves memories of travel and landscapes into her textiles.
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Jenny Valloric described weaving as a slow, laborious, orderly process punctuated by the occasional moment of chaos. She called it a âspaghetti nightmareâ when 16 pounds of cotton yarn clumped up as she washed it after dyeing it. As for the 11,000 yards of translucent monofilament she wound onto bobbins, she joked, âLook at it wrong way and it explodes.â âWeaving is maddening,â she said âItâs not something you can sit down and just pick up in a day. Thereâs a lot of ins and outs to it. Itâs a love-hate relationship.â Over the last several months, Valloric has been preparing for an exhibit at Sierra Arts, meshing the dyed yarn and monofilament together into semi-translucent panels that are about three by 9 feet. She thinks of these works as abstracted landscapes, records of her travels, distilled down into the colors of a placeâor even down to the detail of a particular tree or plant. Often her work has the subtle sages and earthy browns of Northern Nevada, where she spent much of 2015, or her native Fort Collins, Colorado, where she now lives. For the upcoming exhibit, the hues are a brighter green, resembling the area around Christchurch, New Zealand, where she studied sculpture for a year. Valloric first got hooked on textiles as an art student at Colorado State University in the early 2000s. She was especially taken with historical textilesâintricate indigo dyeing techniques from ancient Peru and âtraditional Persian carpets, full of process and technique and, really, loads of stylized symbolism.â âIâm enchanted with the old things that dictate human culture and the development of humanity,â she said. She pointed out that up until the Industrial Revolution,
textiles were of front-and-center concern to the average person. If you needed a new sweater, for example, youâd be far more likely to make one than buy one. In Valloricâs mind, however, even though most of us are removed from the process of making everyday necessities such as cloth by hand, weâre still intimately connected to the fabric itself, because we use it daily. For that reason, she said, âTextiles are really personable. Theyâre an intimate medium.â Viewers tend to relate easily to the textures and optical effects of Valloricâs panels. They fit into two worlds at onceâthe austere realm of galleries and the universally recognizable realm of cloth. âIâve seen people sneaking in and rubbing their faces on them to see what they feel like,â Valloric said. âIâm not saying run around with greasy Cheeto hands and touch everything,â she added, but as someone who finds a lot of satisfaction in handling each piece for 20 or more hours as she weaves each thread, she can easily understand the appeal of experiencing the pieces tactilely, even in a gallery, where thatâs typically prohibited. Sometimes Valloric takes full advantage of modern technological efficiency, say when sheâs ordering fishing line in bulk from Florida, or buying cotton directly from a mill in North Carolina. Other times, sheâs likely to take on everyday tasks the slow, pre-industrial way, âusing a fork instead of a mixer,â for example. When it comes to making large panels of fabricâsomething that could also be accomplished by sending a schematic to a commercial weaverâ sheâll do it herself. âI think itâs important to keep the creatorâs hand in there,â she said. Ω
Jenny Valloricâs exhibit Veiled will be on view Oct. 4-25 at sierra arts, 17 s. Virginia st. a reception is scheduled for 5-7 p.m. on Oct. 20. For information, visit sierra-arts.org or call 329-2787.