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Thursday, May 22, 2025 |
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The Rockwell Museum celebrates seven years of antigravity with Anna Warfield's Fast Colors Make a Slow Eye |
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Warfield is known for their extensive use of pink, and more recently blue, uncovering the many meanings society has placed on these hues, with an aim at reclaiming pink as a color of strength, empowerment, and complexity.
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CORNING, NY.- The Rockwell Museum introduces Fast Colors Make a Slow Eye, a site-specific installation by visual artist and poet Anna Warfield (she/they, b. 1995). This marks the seventh iteration of The Rockwells Antigravity series, an annual initiative that provides emerging artists with an opportunity to transform the Museums historic rotunda with thought-provoking contemporary art.
Warfields work is a nuanced yet whimsical exploration of identity, language, and materiality. Employing soft sculpture and quilting techniques, Fast Colors Make a Slow Eye presents an ethereal collection of bubble-like, text-based fiber forms that cascade from the ceiling of the first-floor rotunda. The installation engages visitors in a dynamic interplay between the legible and the abstract, calling on them to embrace complexity and ambiguity in human experience.
I hope visitors engage with this work from multiple perspectives and leave with more questions than answers, says Anna Warfield. The experience of trying to read the poem and search for meaning may feel frustratingand thats intentional. I want to create a space where uncertainty can be appreciated rather than resolved.
Fast Colors Make a Slow Eye is one of many programs and exhibitions at The Rockwell Museum in 2025 that revolve around the annual theme of Color!investigating the many dimensions of color, from its scientific properties to its cultural symbolism and emotional resonance.
Anna Warfields installation is a captivating addition to The Rockwells year of exploring color, says the Museums executive director, Erin M. Coe. The work is visually arresting yet layered with meaning. The cloud-like shaped pink letters drifting across the rotunda will surprise visitors both as they enter and exit the building, leaving a lasting impression that challenges expectations and activates the senses.
Warfield is known for their extensive use of pink, and more recently blue, uncovering the many meanings society has placed on these hues, with an aim at reclaiming pink as a color of strength, empowerment, and complexity.
Educational Outreach
In addition, Fast Colors Make a Slow Eye features a collaboration with students from the International Baccalaureate Visual Arts Programme at Corning-Painted Post High School, who contributed to the dyeing of the fabric used in the work. Under Warfields guidance, students experimented with varying shades of pink dye, introducing an element of chance and playfulness that is integral to the final piece.
Letting go of control has become a central theme in this artwork, says Warfield. Working with young artists emerging into their careers was incredibly inspiring to me. While I provided guidance, I also made space for them to experiment and leave their own imprint on the piece. Their contributions added an organic and unpredictable dimension that makes the work truly special.
The Museum acknowledges the contributions of Corning-Painted Post student artists Alyssa Ainsworth, Keira Ceralde, Finn Chapman, Frederick Collins, Ethan Julien, Lilia Mack, Cora McNeill, Mel Peanasky, Josephine Sauer, Nimue Tubbs, Janice Van Gorden, Alyssa Wilson, and Elsa Wood.
Fast Colors Make a Slow Eye is on view at The Rockwell Museum through March 2026, and is made possible with support from the New York State Council on the Arts, with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature. The Museums 2025 exhibitions are generously supported by Mary Spurrier.
Anna Warfield (she/they, b. 1995) is a visual artist and poet based in Binghamton, New York. Their predominantly text-based fiber sculptures explore unlearning and identity.
Warfield is the 2025 Antigravity artist at The Rockwell Museum (Corning) and has a solo exhibition at the Everson Museum (Syracuse) opening in June 2025. Additional solo exhibitions include UNDOINGS at SUNY Oneonta (2024) and Placid Thoughts from Inside Her Eyelids at the Roberson Museum (2023-2024). Warfield has exhibited with MAG Rochester, Herbert F. Johnson Museum, Schweinfurth Art Center, Ithaca Print Shop, Site: Brooklyn Gallery, and the Arts Council of the Southern Finger Lakes, among other spaces.
Recent awards include a NYSCA Artist Support grant, a Saltonstall Residency and Fellowship, a Community Foundation for South Central New York Womens Fund grant, and an Arts in the Community Individual Artist Commission. Warfield holds a B.F.A. and B.S. in Communication from Cornell University, where their 2018 thesis received the Charles Baskerville Painting Award.
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