Janice Lessman-Moss
is a weaver who teaches. During the past twenty-three years,
she has produced an astonishing body of work while transmitting
her passion for the textile arts to students at Kent State University.
Her commitment to her work as an artist and educator has required
steadfast dedication. Currently Head of Textile Arts and Graduate
Coordinator for the School of Art, Professor Lessman-Moss is
a native of Pittsburgh. She earned a B.F.A. from the Tyler School
of Art at Temple University and an M.F.A. from the University
of Michigan. Since her arrival at Kent State in 1981, her work
has been supported and recognized locally, nationally and internationally.
Her weavings have been seen in countless arts publications and
shown throughout the world in galleries and museums from London
to Nagoya and from Poland to China. The National Endowment for
the Arts (Arts Midwest), the Ohio Arts Council, the University
Research Council and the College of Fine and Professional Arts
at KSU have awarded her numerous fellowships. In 2000 she received
the University's Distinguished Scholar Award and became the
first artist and the second women in our academic community
to be recognized.
Promoting
research and scholarship in all its many forms has made Janice
Lessman-Moss a leader in her field. With the rise of new computer
technologies, especially those applied to Jacquard looms, she
seeks to understand how "new options will not just facilitate
and expedite the execution of laborious processes, but enhance
parameters of thinking." In the exhibition of her work
at the Kent State University Museum, the Palmer Gallery features
her digital power loom weavings while the Mull Gallery presents
pieces she has created through complex manipulation of the threads
on her computerized dobby looms. While computers can provide
broader visual options and greater flexibility, Lessman-Moss
remains committed both to the tactility of her medium through
the inclusion of yarns of varied weight and to the intuitive
approach available through hand and partly computerized processes.
In many instances, the strengths and limitations of her tools
inspire and guide her work. Although many of her weavings are
conceptualized with the aid of graphic image manipulation software,
they remain grounded in the ancient craft of weaving and require
a solid knowledge of traditional practices. Though weavers and
looms are forever linked in public perception, the absence of
Lessman-Moss' physical engagement in the weaving of power loom
pieces allows us to address the artist's work beyond the traditional
boundaries of fabrication.
The skills
and creative imagination involved in the work of Janice Lessman-Moss
combine visual and tactile possibilities rooted in both historic
processes and current technologies. Her work is unique and has
been displayed alongside that of leading textile artists in
many juried competitions. These include competitions organized
by the Kyoto Museum and in institutions such as the American
Craft Museum in New York, where her work is part of the collection
and was presented in the 1986 inaugural exhibition and catalogue,
Craft Today: Poetry of the Physical, and again in 1995. After
a dozen solo exhibitions locally, nationally and internationally,
and inclusion in many public and corporate collections, visitors
to the Kent State University Museum can at long last see for
themselves the work of an artist at the forefront of her field
who has helped revitalized American textile arts and has made
Kent State's department one of the strongest in the country.
Anne Bissonnette
Curator
|