NORA L ROLF
CV
BIO + ARTIST STATEMENT
CV
BIO + ARTIST STATEMENT
My formative adult years were split between the Great Plains of Nebraska and the Mojave Desert of Southern California. In Nebraska, a Black Mountain College-informed University curriculum pulled me into the surrounding community, visiting farms, foraging for material, and asking permission to work on someone else's land. That ethic of showing up to a place and learning from what it holds has stayed with me.
My grandmother was a seamstress, furniture restorer, and frame maker who learned from neighbors and taught herself from books she had no business owning - a two-inch thick Vogue etiquette guide purchased not for social aspiration but to understand a rigorous process. She often sat at the breakfast table speaking with my grandfather in something akin to German. When I asked, she would say 'we are German'. When I asked of Germany, she would say 'we’re not from Germany'. She refused that flattening her entire life.
I became a weaver before I knew it was an ancestral inheritance. I work with cloth, found objects, and the slow accumulation of material research, drawn to what everyday objects carry across generations and what survives displacement when passed through the hands rather than the record.
Nora Louisa Rolf (b. 1986) makes weavings and sculptures that move between the archival and the provisional. Working with animal and plant fibers at any stage in their processing, raw, spun, dyed, unraveled; she builds cloth as a form of cultural memory, tracing the craft grammar of Central European folk communities as a system that had its own logic. Alongside the weavings, she assembles ephemeral compositions from found, purchased, modified, and handmade objects: arrangements that hold the same interest in transmission and material life, only more loosely. There is a recurring interest in forms that hold or accumulate. Objects that suggest a body or a presence without illustrating one. Her thinking runs through the Bauhaus and Black Mountain College, lineages she treats less as influence than as ongoing argument.
Where she gets interested is where the lineage gets uncomfortable. The Bauhaus argument travels - making as thinking, material as grammar, craft as epistemology. The folk textile traditions of the Spiš region of Slovakia don't. Linen and wool, household-transmitted, particular to a place and a community that was displaced, they resist the universalizing move that makes the Bauhaus legible. She works near what remains of that, as a descendant rather than an inheritor, using tools the tradition wasn't built for, to read something she can't access directly.
Rolf holds a BFA in Studio Art with a minor in Design, received the Lenore Tawney Scholarship to attend Haystack Mountain School of Craft, and has worked and studied at the Marshfield School of Weaving, High Desert Test Sites, and A-Z West.
Reclaimed cedar, a reclaimed terra cotta planter, a reclaimed inflatable seat cushion, and a custom plywood pedestal.
12” x 12”x 6’
18” x 18’” x 4’
2018
Reclaimed cedar from a weathering homestead cabin in the Mojave Desert. A cairn and its inversion; the same form flipped, now a base for a large vessel.