

Night Shift is a collection of light sculptures that investigate how wool can be transformed through structural tension and material manipulation. Each piece is built from wool on a steel frame—first woven into an open grid on a hand loom, with intersections needle-felted, then reshaped through heat, water, and pressure. This process tightens the grid into a dense, architectural skin while the ends bloom into soft, unraveled textures. Light interacts with the textile in varied ways—diffusing behind felted surfaces or passing through openings to cast shifting shadows—creating forms that hover between object and atmosphere. Balancing control and release, Night Shift offers a quiet study in how repetition, intervention, and memory shape both texture and space, continuing an ongoing inquiry into textiles as structure, not just surface.




PHOTOS TAKEN BY JAMES BEE AND DICHEN CHEN






