"Green Fashions, Lawn and Suburbia Line," is on display at the
Renaissance Gallery until Wednesday, Jan. 28. Stevie Famulari,
environmental artist and NDSU assistant professor of landscape
architecture, created the series of wearable artwork.
A teacher of the history of landscape architecture, Famulari was
inspired to create the series by Levittown, N.Y., the first
suburb to exist in the United States. In 1947, William Levitt
created a grid pattern of cul-de-sacs and roads that we now know
as suburbia. He executed his vision in a potato field.
"Since then, suburbia has grown and we have these ideas about
lawn," Famulari said. "In 1947, lawn regulations were developed
to make it look like there was more green space." The five pieces
included in the series use forms, textures, materials and scale
indicative of these land patterns. Famulari even created a piece
that is based on the blueprint of Levittown and wore it to an
event in New York.
The most dramatic and detailed piece, titled "Sunflower Field
Perspective," goes across the entire gallery. Famulari chose to
create a wearable sunflower field because there are areas around
the Fargo-Moorhead area that were sunflower fields turned into
suburbs.
She learned how to sew from her grandmother. "My Italian
grandmother was a seamstress so we always had access to a
tailoring machine," Famulari said. "I knew how to make lasagna by
the time I was seven and I knew how to sew."
A reception is planned for Monday, Jan. 26, from 4:30 p.m. to 6
p.m. at the Renaissance Gallery, located in Renaissance Hall, 650
N.P. Ave. For more information, contact Famulari at (505)
710-3586.