Peach Fuzz was the Pantone Color of the Year for 2024, but artists at browngrotta arts don’t seem to be finished with color and adjacent tones just yet. Our Spring exhibition, FIeld Notes: an art surveyfeatured several works including pink, rose, and related shades.

As the mix between red’s passion and white’s purity, traditionally, pink symbolizes love, nurture and compassion. It also evokes feelings of comfort, warmth and hope. And these are the themes that many of our artists were channeling in these unsettling times. 

Caroline Bartlett
26cb Juncture, Caroline Bartlett, linen, cotton thread, perspex battening, 61″ x 26.5″, 2025. Photo by Tom Grotta

“The language of textiles speaks of entanglements and connectivity ” explains Caroline Bartlett, “of continuity and severance, and pink might be considered as a field for nurture.” For Bartlett, her work Juncture, suggests “a point of time, especially one made critical or important by a concurrence of circumstances.”

Stéphanie Jacques
24sj Retournement en cours IV, Stéphanie Jacques, electric cable, 12″ x 19″ x 4.125″, 2025. Photo by Tom Grotta

Stéphanie Jacques works with a dark pink wire cable in works like Retournement en cours IV to create figures that illustrate transformation. “The cable consists of two twisted copper wires sheathed in plastic film; one white, the other dark pink,” she says. “The varnish that covers them gives a beautiful finish. Sometimes the white is twisted with a red or orange thread, but it’s the dark pink that I prefer.”

Polly Barton Pivot
17pb Pivot, Polly Barton, silk double ikat with painted warp, 12.5” x 12.5” x 2”, 2008. Photo by Tom Grotta

Polly Barton’s Pivot is imbued with pink and other colors. Barton finds solace in “[C]reating a surface to rub color in a variety of forms; dye, pigment, pastel, ink. I weave the liminal space between a painted surface and the woven structure.”

20wc Totems, Wlodzimierz Cygan, linen, sisal, fiber optic, 37″ x 37″ x 7″, 2022. Photo by Tom Grotta

Totems, by Wlodimierz Cygan, is a study in color — pink is only one of the shades it reveals through fiber optic lighting. “The introduction of the motif of changing light into this system,” he observes, “turned this small weaving form into a magical, magnetizing object, encouraging meditation.”

Neha Puri Dhir
Detail: 9npd Shifting Horizons, Neha Puri Dhir, Hand painting and stitch-resist dyeing on handwoven silk
26.5″ x 26.5″ x 2.5″, 2023. Photo by Tom Grotta

Neha Puri Dhir writes eloquently about the color in her work Shifting Horizons. This intimate textile artwork, inspired by Akbar Padamsee’s Metascapes, transforms handwoven silk into a whisper of unseen change. “I have painted the silk with earthy colors,” she says, “gentle teals for my quiet unease, warm yellows for a flicker of hope, and soft pinks for the tender ache in my heart — capturing a shift I feel but cannot see, like a storm brewing beyond the horizon.”

10sy Emotional Summer, Young-ok Shin, Hand-wound mosikuri, ramie, linen thread, 24″ x 18.5″ x 1.6″, 2025. Photo by Tom Grotta

In her work, Emotional Summerwhich includes pink and other pastels, Young-ok Shin has a message to convey. “I want to express the power passed down from tradition as work full of vitality that is given meaning, rather than innovation.”

Shed on Ice and Dark Shed, Laura Foster Nicholson
27lfn Shed on Ice and Dark Shed, Laura Foster Nicholson, wool, cotton, 55” x 30.5” x 2.625”, 2024.. Photo by Tom Grotta

Also expressing a message are Shed on Ice and Dark Shed. “Since moving to a rural community in southern Indiana nearly 20 years ago,” Laura Foster Nicholson reports, “I continue to be fascinated by the simple forms and light of the landscapes.” The mood in Shed on Icewith its early-morning, rose-colored sky reflects Nicholson’s concern about climate change. “The farms, which seem so evocatively beautiful,” she says, “are contributing radically to climate change.”

You can see more on our website: browngrotta.com.