
“Swim Team.” Photo by Jaime Alvarez for Fleisher Art Memorial. All images © Caitlin McCormack, shared with permission
From humble, crocheted thread emerges
Through a speculative view of a post-human world, McCormack imbues her work with a sense of foreboding that contrasts the medium of crochet and its comforting, nostalgic associations. Her current exhibition at
SOUVENIRS OF A WASTELAND is presented through the lens of “a pseudoscientific museum exhibition chronicling the influx of strange new life forms that have appeared in the wake of humanity’s demise,” McCormack tells Colossal. “The concept explores our complicity in environmental destruction and questions what will happen to our trash when we are gone. Turns out, things will get real weird.”

“Libidinous Drifter.” Photo by Stacey Evans for Second Street Gallery
Increasingly focusing on freestanding, sculptural works reliant almost exclusively on stiffened, crocheted material, McCormack has started to depart from her earlier wall-mounted relief compositions. “In 2020, I started building assemblages out of found objects, carefully upholstering the structures with hand-sewn velvet and adorning them so that their surfaces grew heavily-textured with an abundance of fiber sculptural relief forms,” she says. “The crocheted cotton is occasionally dyed with natural pigments sourced from my surroundings during hikes and time spent in the woods at rural residencies.”
McCormack will include a large-scale piece at the
SOUVENIRS OF THE WASTELAND continues in Newburgh, New York, through October 1. Find more on the artist’s

“Manicure at the End of the World.” Photo by Jason Chen

“Go Home Magna Mater, You’re Drunk.” Photo by Jason Chen

Detail of “Swim Team”

“The Only Witness to a Vanished World”

Detail of “The Only Witness to a Vanished World”

“You Know He Told Everyone.” Photo by The Wassaic Project

“They Come Back, But They’re Never the Same.” Photo by Jason Chen

“Prince of Nothing”
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