
Ashley Page
January 29, 2021

In her work, Ashley Page explores the vulnerability, grace, and complexities of the Black experience.
She believes art is a vessel used to present larger conversations about representation and visibility of the African American image, intellect, and spirit.
Employing paper, fiber, and steel in her work, she envisions a world where individuals are given the autonomy to represent themselves.
Page shared, “I make work for the black and brown women, children, men, and elders who don’t see themselves represented within local or global conversations surrounding fine art, craft, and cultural impact. A people whose culture, craft, body, and story are exploited and erased; my practice is the vehicle for their stories to be told.”
In Pupa State, Page uses basketry and fiber-manipulation techniques to create sculptures reminiscent of bodily forms and various lifecycles. A “pupa” is the life stage of some insects undergoing transformation between immature and mature stages. Page crochets sculptures reflective of this lifecycle that also speak to her artistic pursuits as a maker, a Black woman, a daughter, and a socially conscious human being. In Pupa State, Page weaves together voices, stories, memories, and materials as she rediscovers truths and redefines narratives about the Black female body. Page wrote, “my work is an ode to the people who came before me, a reflection of the time in which I currently reside, and a point of reference for those in the future.”
EXPLORE MORE ARTWORKS FROM UNTITLED, 2020
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