Press
- American Craft
- Architectural Digest
- Case da Abitare
- FiberArts
- New York Times
- New York Times Magazine
- Selvedge
- Shuttle Spindle & Dyepot
- Surface Design Journal
- Textile Forum
- The Art Newspaper
- Crafts
American Craft Magazine
April/May 2009
CONSTRUCTING THE UNEXPECTED:Gyöngy Laky
Mija Riedel
pages 6, 14, 54-61
American Craft Magazine
April/May 2009
Radar: A Weaver's Weaver
pages 16-17
Article highlights the works of Ethel Stein
American Craft Magazine
February/March 2008
SPIRITUAL REVLUTIONARY LENORE TAWNEY
Sigrid Wortmann Weltge
pages 90-77
Article celebrates the Life and works of Lenore Tawney
American Craft Magazine
August/September 2007
BAMBOO SHOOTS TO MAKE ITS MARK
Christine Kaminsky
pages 44-47
Photos include works by Nancy Moore Bess
and Jiro Yonezawa
Architectural Digest
May 2007
GREAT DESIGN: BATHS
photography by Tom Grotta
page 86
Photo of our bathroom includes work by Mary Giles and Yasuhisa Kohyama.
Architectural Digest
July 2006
PLAYING WITH TRADITION
by Mildred F. Schmertz
pages 88-91
Photos include works by Mariette Rousseau-Vermette, Toshio Sekiji, Christine Joy, Debra Sachs, Mary Merkel-Hess, Lenore Tawney and others.
Case da Abitare
May 2007
Stanze come luoghi d'arte
text by Cristiano De Lorenzo
photography by Toni Meneguzzo
pages 284-293
Photos on art display that include work by Markku Kosonen, Lia Cook, Valerie Pragnell, Jiro Yonezawa, Debra Sachs, Kiyomi Iwata, Dawn MacNutt, Caroline Bartlitt, Ritzi Jacobi, Ulla-Maija Vikman, Sara Brennan, Maskako Yoshida, Chiyoko Tanaka, Sylvia Seventy, Ruth Malinowski, Jun Tomita, Helena Hernmarck, Lenore Tawney, Mary Merkel-Hess, Karyl Sisson, Yasuhisa Kohyama, Christine Joy, Katherine Westphal.
FiberArts
Jan/Feb 2008
In Memoriam: Lenore Tawney
by Kathleen Nugent Mangan
page 8FiberArts
Sept/Oct 2007
JIRO YONEZAWA:
TRADITION AND INNOVATION
by Nancy Moore Bess
pages 38-41FiberArts
April/May 2007
A BARN BUILT FOR ART
by Rhonda Brown and Tom Grotta
photography by Tom Grotta
pages 44-49
Photos on art display that include work by Marjike Arp, Caroline Bartlett, Sara Brennan, Lia Cook, Mary Giles, Kate Hunt, Ritzi Jacobi, Anda Klancic, Yasuhisa Kohyama, Irina Kolesnikova, Markku Kosonen, Dawn MacNutt, Ruth Malinowski, Mary Merkel-Hess, Kiyomi Iwata, Judy Mulford, Greg Parsons, Valerie Pragnell, Ed Rossbach, Debra Sachs, Toshio Sekiji, Sylvia Seventy, Hiroyuki Shindo, Karyl Sisson, Jin-Sook So, Noriko Takamiya, Tsuruko Tanikawa, Lenore Tawney, Jun Tomita, Linda Welker, Katherine Westphal, Chiyoko Tanaka, Jiro Yonezawa, Masako Yoshida.
Additional photos and installation tips click here.FiberArts
Sept/Oct 2006
Reviews: BEYOND WEAVING INTERNATIONAL ARTTEXTILES
by Rehema Barber
pages 54-55
Review of Beyond Weaving: International ArtTextiles exhibition at Flinn Gallery, Greenwich, Connecticut. Photos include works by Anda Klancic; Ulla Maija-Vikman; Kiyomi Iwata; Hideho Tanaka; Ceca Georgieva and Lewis KnaussFiberArts
Sept/Oct 2006
SOFA Chicago ad placements highlighting artists from browngrotta arts
New York Times
September 4, 2006
Sheila Hicks Exhibit at Bard
IN THE WOOF AND WARP OF MINIATURES, INTERLOCKING METAPHORS AND JOURNEYS
by Kathryn Shattuck
page E3
New York Times Magazine
April 20, 2008
Lettering by Gyšngy Laky
THE GREEN ISSUE: Some Bold Steps to Make Your Carbon Footprint Smaller
pages 45-75
TO SEE MORE LETTERS AND AND A VIDEO INTERVIEW WITH LAKY ON THE NEW YORK TIMES SITE, click here.
Selvedge
Issue 27
Celebrationg Kyoto:
Modern Arts from Boston's Sister City)
page 88
(review of exhibit which included browngrotta arts loaned works: Naomi Kobayashi, Hiroyuki Shindo, Chiyoko Tanaka and Jun TomitaSelvedge
Issue 21
Finnish Sculptor Merja Winqvist Comes Ashore
page 7
Flow Fall
Ulla-Maija VikmanSelvedge
Issue 18
COULD YOU REPEAT THAT?
Simone Pheulpin's art contains subtle layers of meaning
pages 68-70
Highlighting Simone's SOLEIL D'HIVER
Selvedge
Issue 16
BLUE SKY THINKING:
The innovative approach of Hiroyuki Shindo
photography by Tom Grotta
pages 60-62
Shindo's natural indigo art and life outside Kyoto is described.Selvedge
Issue 13
SOFA Chicago ad placements highlighting artists from browngrotta arts
Selvedge
Issue 10
A ROCK AND A SLOW PACE: Sue Lawty Interview
pages 62-65
MUTUAL ADMIRATION: Bamboo has inspired artists worldwide
by Nancy Moore Bess
pages 66-71
Shuttle Spindle & Dyepot
Fall 2007
KIYOMI IWATA:
by Carol D. Westfall
pages 52-56
Shuttle Spindle & Dyepot
Volume XXXVIII No.1
Issue 149, Winter 2006/2007
NANCY MOORE BESS:
Artist, Author, Artisan
by Carol D. Westfall
pages 51-55
Surface Design
Fall 2009
Katagami Inversions: Jennifer Falck Linssen's Carved Paper Sculpture
by Ginger Knowlton
pages 6-11
Surface Design
Winter 2007
Lewis Knauss: Recording Sites & Seasons
by Kathleen McCann
pages 12-17
In Review: Sheila Hicks
by Kathleen McCann
Review of Sheila Hicks: Weaving as Metaphor, Bard Graduate Center
pages 50-51
In Review: Beyond Weaving
by Carol Westphal
Review of Beyond Weaving: International Art Textiles, Flinn Gallery, Greenwich Public Library
pages 52-53
Surface Design
Summer 2006
MUSEUM INTERVENTIONS:
Collections as Inspiration
by Jessica Hemmings
Collaborations amongst British museums and fiber artists Caroline Bartlett, Sue Lawty, Michael Brennand-Wood and Dierdre Nelson, have included exhibition space, residencies and commissions.
pages 16-25
Discusses browngrotta arts' catalog, Beyond Weaving: International ArtTextiles
ETN Textileforum
September 2006
BEYOND WEAVING INTERNATIONAL ARTTEXTILES
by Beatrijs Sterk
page 39
The Art Newspaper
International Edition
October 2008
TRAILBLAZERS
Caroline Bartlett
Crafts
Willow Talk, by Emma Crichton-Miller, appeared in the July-August 2009 issue of Crafts magazine. http://www.craftscouncil.org.uk/crafts-magazine/latest-issue. In it Crichton-Miller offers a positive prognosis for the art of basketry in the U.K.. The author tracks the growing appreciation in the U.K. for basketry as an art form. She compares artists like Ed Rossbach and John McQueen in the U.S., Markku Kosonen in Finland and Shouchiko Tanabe of Japan, with artists like Lizzie Farey of the U.K., Joe Hogan of Ireland and Dail Behennah and Mary Butcher of the U.K., for whom recognition has been more recently won. She lists a series of important exhibition, concluding that basketry in the U.K. is poised "to join the contemporary conversation."


























