Liz Collins (born 1968)[1] is an American contemporary artist and designer. She is recognized for her artwork involving fabric, knitwear, and textiles, as well for the fashion label she developed. She has expertise in textile media including the transition of fabric into multi-dimensional forms as a method to vary the scale of her pieces to make them architectural and inviting rather than object-based.[2] Collins is based in Brooklyn, New York.[3]
Early life and education
Liz Collins graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree (1991) and a Master of Fine Arts degree (1999) from the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD).[1] Collins launched her personal knitwear clothing line in 1999 as her master's thesis at RISD and ran her business until 2004.[4][5]
She was a professor of textiles at RISD from 2003 to 2013.
Career
After receiving her MFA, Collins spent the next several years developing her own knitwear company until 2004.[5] Recognized for its innovative design, Collins developed a patent for her specialized technique of interweaving and assembling different materials to construct her garments.[4] The label gained popularity, celebrity recognition, and media coverage.[5] Collins became a member of the Council of Fashion Designers of America in 1999 from her personal brand.[6] In the middle stages of her fashion design career, she could no longer afford to finance her label's labor wages and meet society's demand of product. Collins soon began to outsource her products, which is when she felt disconnected from her creative process and missed the hands-on aspect of designing garments.[7]
"Knit-Grafting" is a term created by Liz Collins that is used to describe her artistic process of reconstructing garments and is most specifically used in her work as a fashion designer. This term stemmed from the fundamental of Grafting, which is the process of intertwining two or more fabrics together. Collin's Knit-Grafting incorporates numerous panels of fabrics as well as fusing various materials together. These materials may include Lace, Metals, and other mediums used to make her design stand out.[2]
Knitting Nation
As a response to the fashion industry she previously worked within, Collins launched Knitting Nation.[5] KN was a multi-part installation and performance project that spanned several years and was globally spread.[5] It was a site-specific installation with collaborative performance that revealed some facets of the textile and apparel manufacturing processes by demonstrating costumed seamstresses manually working on knitting machines.[11] This work aimed to bring awareness to topics such as sexuality and gender within fashion, labor, and the issue of sustainable practices through immersive, visual means.[5] Crafting is filled with power hierarchies and gender nuances that are centered around the LGBTQ+ culture as fiber-based crafts like embroidery, knitting, and sewing examine the numerous preferences of society and raise reactions of those disapproving.[12] More specifically, Knitting Nation Phase 4 was titled "Pride" to admire and acknowledge the original rainbow flag of the LGBTQ+ Community. This installation was a hand-knit rainbow flag that was displayed at the front and center steps of a park in Providence, Rhode Island, for six hours.[11]
Other work
Other artwork by Liz Collins incorporates recycled textiles from previous art pieces, abstract designs, and structural components like poles and fences.[13] These pieces typically entertain a diverse color palette and explore themes such as human interconnectedness and cosmic energy.[13] Her work exists on a plane of varying sizes, from intimate, fibrous wall hangings to life-size installations that transport the audience to a temporary alternative universe.[10] Collins emphasizes interactive multi-media art that embodies various textures, scents, and colors in the materials to help make the audience's experiences multi-sensory.[14]
In 2022, Collins was commissioned to create the installation Every Which Way (2022) for Meta's Manhattan office complex in the historic James A. Farley Building.[15]