Wet Felting & Weaving by Charlene Leary & Joy Muller-McCoola

Tannery Pond Center presents Weaving Demonstration by Charlene Leary & Wet Felting Workshop by Joy Muller-McCoola

Saturday | October 28 | 12-2 PM

Weaving Demonstration: FREE

Wet Felting Workshop: $25/workshop/person, Class Size is limited to 12.

In coordination with their current gallery exhibit, Charlene Leary and Joy Muller-McCoola will present a weaving demonstration and a wet felting workshop. Come and enjoy either!

Weaving Demonstration by Charlene Leary: Come to see who Charlene produces her beautifully woven art pieces.

Wet Felting Workshop by Joy Muller-McCoola: Learn to wet felt a small vessel or pouch using a resist and wool roving. We will layout wool around a flat plastic sheet and create surface and three dimensional form simultaneously with only soap, water, and our hands.

Charlene Leary’s fiber work for body and home incorporates interpretations of natural elements. Her hand woven, hand dyed and sculpted fabrics are often enhanced with vintage cloth, shibori, printing, and felting to create contemporary, hand made cloth for one-of-a-kind designs.

Her love for fiber grew from her mother and grandmother’s fondness for knitting, crocheting and sewing, which they introduced to Charlene during her childhood in New Hampshire. Her appreciation of nature, a focal point of much of her work, developed from their frequent family outings to the ocean, the White Mountains, and summers at Great East Lake.

Charlene found her expressive voice in fiber when she was introduced to weaving as part of her occupational therapy training in 1970. Shortly after moving to NY in 1973 to practice O.T., Leary has continued her creative goals in weaving and other fiber media. During her 30 years in the fiber arts she has studied with notable instructors including Lia Cook, Catherine Ellis, Joan Morris and Polly Sterling.

Leary has taught weaving and surface design and exhibited her artwork throughout Northern New York and New England. She has appeared on TV8, participated in the Arts in Education Program, and presented at the Hyde and Chapman Museums, Emmaus House and the American Sewing Guild.

Charlene is a member of the Hudson-Mohawk Weavers’ Guild and has been published in Handwoven Magazine. Using fiber to capture the energy of the Adirondack Mountains around her studio, Leary hopes that her work strikes a visual dialogue with others in her desire to interpret the diversity of nature.

Joy Muller-McCoola works with wool using the ancient process of wet felting. The sculptural possibilities of wool, its capacity to become fabric and form simultaneously, and its tactile properties are a draw of the medium.

Joy grew up near the Atlantic Ocean, which created an intense love and respect for water. Her work is influenced by environmental water issues including flooding, aridification, and algal bloom. Several of her pieces tour as part of Wool & Water, a traveling group of fiber pieces that bring attention to water issues in the Adirondacks.

Joy holds a BA from NYU and an MS from SUNY Albany. She worked as an art teacher in the public schools for over 35 years and delighted in sharing a variety of media. Felting became her personal medium of choice in 2011. She has shown at The Hyde Collection, Schweinfurth Art Center, Albany Center Gallery, Worcester Center for Crafts, View Center for Arts and Culture, Lake Placid Center for the Arts and more.

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