Works of ARQ - Weaving the Land - A Wild Tapestry Map of ARQ - by Zoë Van Nostrand

Zoë Van Nostrand 

Weaving the Land, 2025

wild grapevine (vitis vinifera), daylily leaves (hemerocallis spp.), willow (salix nigra), white birch bark (betula papyrifera), bittersweet (celastrus sp.), iris leaves (iris atropurpurea), locust root (gleditsia triacanthos); polyester kitestring cord (warp), cotton 3-strand cord (rope loops), iron (nails along back of locust root)

Harvested and woven on Gayogo̱hó:nǫˀ land, commonly known as Mecklenburg NY

Weaving the Land was supported through an Individual Artist grant from the Arts Council of the Southern Finger Lakes

I have been a textile student (weaving, sewing, embroidery, mending, dyeing, spinning, basket-making, felting, and more) for over 20 years. My passion and fascination with textiles has taken me traveling across the world, and encouraged me to pursue learning opportunities with dozens of textile craft educators. I inherited 9 acres of my fathers land in Mecklenburg NY in early 2023. My late father, a master carpenter and sculptural woodworker, viewed caretaking of the land as an act of reciprocity and his artistic experience as a woodworker led him to deep relationships with our trees and various agricultural buildings. As I adopted the responsibility of caretaking the land and buildings, I experienced an overwhelming feeling of being uninitiated and ill-equipped to take on the vast responsibilities of caretaking an ecosystem, multiple structures, and the expectations of my community. 

As I began to tackle the gardens and build my own relationships with our trees, bushes, wild meadow, and many flower gardens, my textile mind started to catalogue the natural fiber possibilities already growing here. This sprouted in my mind the idea of weaving my own map of the land, with fibers already growing from the earth. My hope for this art work was to build a bridge between my passion for textiles, my inheritance of this property, and connect me to the process of caretaking the natural spaces that my father had lovingly maintained for decades.

This work is a connected process of working through my grief at losing a parent I had shared a home with for the last eight years, while also maturing into the responsibilities he left for me to discover.

‘Weaving the Land’ took me just over 2 months to weave, at an estimated 45 hours of active weaving of wet/soaked materials, and more hours spent harvesting the seven natural weft fibers from our trees, hedgerows, and gardens throughout the year. I used a Zapotec-inspired style of block weaving approach for each section, using my lessons from my Zapotec weaving teacher José Buenaventura Gonzalez; I also utilized some of my natural basketry experience from lessons with Justin Sutera; and inspiration from many online natural fiber and textile craftspeople. I am thankful to generations of craftspeople across the world that learned to work with each of these materials through centuries of trial and error, and for those that have continued to pass the knowledge forward.



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The DARQ Forest - Now seen from SPACE