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As a child of the 1980s growing up in Michigan, I thought of macrame,
embroidery and crochet as tedious tasks for homemakers. But a decade
later, in my MFA program, I gained a new found appreciation for fiber
arts as high-art feminist pursuits. Flush with grad school inspiration, I
got my needle and colored floss, and cross-stitched an array of
misogynistic terms that have been used against women in a puzzle-like
grid on a hot mitt. I had been pulling the thread too tight, causing my
grid to turn into a lumpy trapezoid. When I proudly displayed my effort
to a feminist faculty member at Yale School of art, she said, "Oh
Hilary, leave this kind of art to people who really do it. You're a
painter." This was good advice, and "Hot Mitt for an Ice Bitch" hit the
trash.
Recently, I connected with a fiber artist who "really does it." As a
painter who mixes shades of oil paint from a limited palette of colors,
I'm amazed at the skill required to select complementary yarns from an
unlimited array of colors. But Somerville artist Jodi Colella does just that, mixing colors of wool together using the ancient technology of carding.

Colella wasn't always a fiber artist: "Traditional handiwork
techniques were part of my childhood, and then I abandoned them for
painting and printmaking. After some time, I realized I wasn't feeling
as though I was able to express myself as much with those mediums. On a
whim, I started using fiber in nontraditional ways and found I had more
of a voice in what I could create."
Colella's materials go far beyond just raw wool. On one side of her
studio, she has a wall of bins containing materials that she has
processed and organized for upcoming artworks. "I've created fibers on a
spinning wheel with steel wire. I've torn up hand-me-downs from the
Salvation Army." She opens a bin where a more complex form is beginning
to emerge from a mass of magenta yarn. "I'm adapting traditional Irish
crochet technique as an experimental way to create sculptures," she
says.
Colella has a degree in biology, and her artworks often resemble
natural forms. A piece in progress on a wall has gnarly twigs suspended
by and interconnected with tendrils of pale skeins of fiber. She says,
"I'm fascinated with biological forms as metaphors for life. Here I've
taken found ropes and am incorporating them to make dendrites," which
are extensions of nerve cells.

Using a process called "needle felting," Colella makes lichen-like
protrusions emerge from crevices in anthropomorphic driftwood. At close
range, you can see she has blended many shades of wool to create the
fungus. "I sculpt with the needle," she says. "The wool has been felted
to the wood with a barbed needle. What it does is contract large pieces
of wool into small compact structures and I like to mix my color and
layer it much like a painter would do."
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