Donald Lipski, âWhoâs Afraid of Red, White and Blue #37â, 1990, White wool gabardine, made in collaboration with The Fabric Workshop and Museum
Rose B. Simpson, âTonantzinâ, 2022, Linen, cotton, clay, and thread, made in collaboration with The Fabric Workshop and Museum
(L to R) Rev. Howard Finster, âGeorge Washington Meets Martha Custis, 1984, Pigment on cotton t-shirt; James Luna, âHigh Tech War Shirtâ, 1997-98, Smoked hide, nylon setting, silk suiting, horse hair, metal, shell buttons, bead work with watches and necklace (shell, thermometer, and plastic toys); Hock E Aye VI Edgar Heap Of Birds, âWho Owns Historyâ, 1992, Pigment on cotton t-shirt (all works made in collaboration with The Fabric Workshop and Museum)
S.A. Bachman, âAre You Telling Yourself A Little White Lie?â, 1988, Edition of 5, Halftone photographic silkscreen pigment on nylon, made in collaboration with The Fabric Workshop and Museum
Pictured are just a few of the many excellent artworks currently on view in Some American Dreams at The Fabric Workshop and Museum in Philadelphia. Exploring the concept of America and the American dream, all the works were created by an impressive list of artists who were Artists in Residence at the museum over the past four decades.
From the museum and curator Hilde Nelson:
In her 1986 essay âWaking Up in the Middle of Some American Dreams,â poet June Jordan calls for a multiplicity of American dreams rather than a singular paradigm. For Jordan, those in pursuit of these dreams include: the white people the black people the female people the lonely people the terrorized people the elderly people the young people the visionary people the unemployed people the regular ordinary omnipresent people who crave grace and variety and surprise and safety and one new day after another. On the occasion of the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Declaration of Independence, this presentation of works from The Fabric Workshop and Museumâs collection explores the complexity of American-ness through lenses of history, memory, and mythology. Made by past Artists in Residence in collaboration with the FWM Studio, the projects reimagine symbols of nationhood and belonging, critique ongoing legacies of inequity, and offer expanded visions of kinship and community. The works on view represent four decades of making at FWM. They meditate on themes including indigeneity and race, alternative origin stories, landscape and the environment, the construction of historical narrative, memory and resistance, and images of cultural affiliation. Sections of the exhibition invite additional voices, drawing their titles from a chorus of American poets, songwriters, essayists, abolitionists, and historians. The artists featured in Some American Dreams break down borders and categorical distinctions to propose a polyphony of American dreams shaped by hybridity, friction, and affinity. They ask: what if America is not one project, but many? And how might these Americas be affirmed, resisted or remade, in Jordanâs words, to envision âone new day after another?â
This exhibition closes 6/14/26.









