Silkwork

Contemplating the Difference between Transformation and Metamorphosis

Metamorphosis is an innate shift in a state of being. 
Predestined, not requiring will or desire, it’s momentum is not intentional or conscious.
Transformation requires effort and  struggle. 
It involves conviction in a destination whether societal or personal.

Ballet for Evelyn

A sprite-like person wears an ethereal cream and white Vicki Essig garment against a green landscape with mountains. image by Myles Pettengill
A sprite-like person wears an ethereal cream and white Vicki Essig garment against a green landscape with mountains. image by Myles Pettengill

I was assigned female at birth. I was taught to wear pink and to play with dolls.
Because I identify as a woman, there is no tension between what I was taught and how I feel.
This makes things easier for me. 
Evelyn is transgender, and has not had it so easy. As I write this, she is celebrating her 18th birthday. She has my unconditional love. 
This tutu was made in the spirit of highlighting the personal nature of gender and the dimensions that we often don’t see.
I want this piece to inspire you to greet others with grace and compassion, and to trust that others are experts in their own unique experiences. 
I invite you to rethink your own gender traditions.

Photo credit: Myles Pettengill

A Pair for Joyce

A sprite-like person wears an ethereal cream and white Vicki Essig garment against a green landscape with mountains. image by Myles Pettengill

Overalls have clothed us as far back as the late 1700s. Typically made from den- im, they were durable and practical. But overalls were also were used to visually delineate between race and class. Denim overalls were regularly worn by en- slaved people and after the Civil War, sharecroppers continued to wear them. This perpetuated the negative perception that denim overalls were for Black Americans and poor white Americans. With the sharecropping history in mind, civil rights workers in the 1960s also wore denim overalls to symbolize how little had been achieved since reconstruction. These overalls made entirely from silk are a nod to these hard working men and women who perhaps should have been wearing silk.

Joyce Ladner was a member of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and the SNCC Coordinator of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom political rally in Washington, DC, on August 28th, 1963

Photo credit: Myles Pettengill
An almost transparent white and cream dress by artist Vicki Essig against a pure black background.

Memento Mori

“Memento Mori” was constructed entirely by silkworms. I raised more than 400 Bombyx mori (the caterpillar of the silkworm moth) for the sole purpose of having them create this dress. The process began when the silkworms hatched from their eggs and began to eat the pounds and pounds of mulberry leaves I gathered for them. After four weeks, they were ready to spin. By nature, they weave beautiful figure-eight patterns to form a cocoon. To do so, they need to attach their silk to two different planes, such as the corner of a box or the angle of a branch and a twig. To make the dress, I simply removed one plane, requiring them to spin on flat surfaces—platforms cut to the size and shape of the dress pattern pieces. Because they couldn’t create a cocoon, they wove their silk into flat panels of fabric. Once they had woven the individual pieces of the dress, other silkworms were choreographed into stitching them together—think Cinderella and the birds making her gown. No scissors, no thread, no needle: just silkworms, and a bit of guidance from the artist.

Photo credit: Steve Mann

Working with Silkworms

These silk garments are created entirely by silkworms. Hundreds of bombyx mori, ie. silkworms are raised for the sole purpose of having them create these pieces of clothing  They were taught to make the fabric pattern pieces and then to stitch these pieces together. The process of designing and planning this piece began when the silkworms, (actually caterpillars) hatched  from their eggs and began to eat. After six weeks of voracious eating, the silkworms had eaten pounds of mulberry leaves and were then ready to spin. It is not in the silk worm’s nature to create fabric or even spin their silk on flat surfaces. They try in earnest to find a corner to attach their silk web, so the process of building a protective cocoon can begin. At this stage the worms are placed on platforms that are cut to the size and shape of the overall pattern pieces. The worms need continual reminding to work on the flat surface and not to wander. This is how the fabric is created. Once the pieces are finished other worms are then choreographed into stitching them together.  No scissors, nor needle and thread were used in the construction of this garment, only the the mighty silkworm.


 Learn more about unconventional sericulture