Fiber & Light brings together two distinct yet deeply connected practices, offering a rare intergenerational conversation shaped by material, process, and memory. Presented as part of Themes + Projects’ 25th anniversary, the exhibition pairs the work of
Brigitte Carnochan with that of her grandson, Patrick Carroll, marking the first time their art is shown side by side. The result is not a comparison, but a shared space where lineage becomes a living, evolving force.
Brigitte Carnochan’s photo-based works are rooted in transformation. Through layered encaustic surfaces, her photographs move beyond representation, becoming tactile objects that seem to hold light within them. Natural forms are softened, obscured, and reimagined, inviting slow looking and quiet contemplation. Her long engagement with photography, teaching, and publishing has established a practice that values intuition, patience, and physical presence, qualities that resonate strongly in these luminous works.
Patrick Carroll approaches material from a different direction, working primarily with knit textiles sourced from the fashion industry. Stretched, manipulated, and shaped, his pieces blur boundaries between language, garment, and sculpture. Words and structures emerge through repetition and tension, suggesting narratives that are felt as much as read. While firmly grounded in contemporary discourse, his work retains a sense of intimacy, reflecting on how meaning is carried through touch, labor, and reuse.
Together, the works in
Fiber & Light reveal unexpected parallels. Both artists treat material as a vessel for memory and sensation, allowing process to guide form. Light, whether absorbed into wax or caught in the weave of textile, becomes a connective element. This exhibition honors continuity without nostalgia, showing how creativity can pass through generations while remaining responsive to its time. In bringing these voices together, the gallery underscores art’s ability to bridge distance—between mediums, eras, and members of the same family.
Image:
Brigitte Carnochan, White Peony, photo encaustic, 12 x 16 inches © Brigitte Carnochan