Textile Installation Art by Amanda Browder // Brooklyn, New York.



Prismatic Vortex, 2012
I’d love to walk down the street and discover one of these assaults of colour. Can you imagine it? There would be a shriek of excitement followed by a case of instagram gone wild. (Don’t judge, I know I’m not the only one.) These joyful temporary works are the creation of American artist, Amanda Browder. What I adore about her work is the way she invites play, both in the creation of the work and the final execution.



Chromatic Hi-Five, 2011
Browder invites her local community to donate scrap materials and participate in the actual craft of these oversized patchworks. Often created during single day sewing bees, members of the community can feel a sense of ownership to the work, as well as a connection to their fellow volunteers.


Hello Niagara, 2012

Rapunzel, 2006
Besides garnering a sense of community spirit, these bold gestures are an event in themselves. They are much more than just an exercise in creating “community.” The cascading candy coloured fabrics create some seriously bold and sculptural gestures at oftentimes epic scales. They transform our understanding of the spaces they inhabit and create a new experience. They are not only a source of visual joy – visitors are free to run under, over and through. Basically, this artist is just an all round crowd pleaser.
-Ella.
[Images via Amanda Browder and Prismatic Vortex.]



Prismatic Vortex, 2012
I’d love to walk down the street and discover one of these assaults of colour. Can you imagine it? There would be a shriek of excitement followed by a case of instagram gone wild. (Don’t judge, I know I’m not the only one.) These joyful temporary works are the creation of American artist, Amanda Browder. What I adore about her work is the way she invites play, both in the creation of the work and the final execution.



Chromatic Hi-Five, 2011
Browder invites her local community to donate scrap materials and participate in the actual craft of these oversized patchworks. Often created during single day sewing bees, members of the community can feel a sense of ownership to the work, as well as a connection to their fellow volunteers.


Hello Niagara, 2012

Rapunzel, 2006
Besides garnering a sense of community spirit, these bold gestures are an event in themselves. They are much more than just an exercise in creating “community.” The cascading candy coloured fabrics create some seriously bold and sculptural gestures at oftentimes epic scales. They transform our understanding of the spaces they inhabit and create a new experience. They are not only a source of visual joy – visitors are free to run under, over and through. Basically, this artist is just an all round crowd pleaser.
-Ella.
[Images via Amanda Browder and Prismatic Vortex.]


















