Resident Artist

Photo by Katy Anderson.

Qiqing Lin

Medium: FIBER
Residency: September 1, 2023–
November 30, 2023

Qiqing (pronounced Chi-Ching) Lin is a textile artist based in New York. She explores feminism, immigration, language, accessibility, and politics through materials and weaving. Her experience growing up and working as a journalist in China had a profound impact on her practice. Switching her medium from text to textiles, weaving has become her new language. Through spinning paper yarn and painting with threads, she looks into the complexities of family, mother-daughter relationship, class divides, and political depression.

Lin’s work takes the form of figurative tapestries, sculptural installation, writings, and social practice. She finds that being close to the material and a laboring of the body is essential: she spins her own yarn, dyes her own colors, and weaves on a hand loom. She graduated with a BA in journalism in 2014 and an MFA in textiles at Parsons School of Design in 2023.

The artist’s work is featured in HCCC’s In Residence: 17th Edition exhibition.

To learn more about Qiquing Lin’s work, visit http://qlin.otherpeoplespixels.com/home.html

More Residents

June 1, 2021 –
August 31, 2021
Medium: Metal
May 1, 2021 –
July 31, 2021
Medium: Fiber
February 1, 2021 –
April 30, 2021
Medium: Clay
February 1, 2021 –
May 30, 2021
Medium: Interdisciplinary Craft + Photography Residency
September 1, 2020 –
June 30, 2021
Medium: Paper
August 1, 2020 –
May 31, 2021
Medium: Clay

The application for the 2025 – 2026 cycle opens December 1, 2025. It’s free to apply!

The Artist Residency Program is designed to offer time and space for craft artists to focus on their creative work and interact with the public. The program supports emerging, mid-career, and established artists working in all craft media, including but not limited to clay, fiber, glass, metal, wood and mixed media.

The application for the 2025 – 2026 cycle opens December 1, 2025. It’s free to apply!

The Artist Residency Program is designed to offer time and space for craft artists to focus on their creative work and interact with the public. The program supports emerging, mid-career, and established artists working in all craft media, including but not limited to clay, fiber, glass, metal, wood and mixed media.

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