Interventions: Weaving Joy, Woven Resistance
October 17, 2025 - October 18, 2026
Mint Museum Randolph
October 17, 2025 - October 18, 2026
Mint Museum Randolph
“It’s a bicultural narrative that we’re talking about and then exploring, like the play of identity through materials. Things like the beads and the pearls and the fiber—it’s tactile materiality that exists within me, like in my home being surrounded by fabrics and yarns from my mom and my grandmother and now my aunt. That’s why I’m interested in layering more in these pieces.” –Katrina Sánchez
Interventions places contemporary works amongst permanent collection installations at the Mint to spark dialogue between past and present. The initiative was created to broaden cultural engagement by initiating new conversations with these works as a catalyst, offering new considerations around cultures directly or tangentially related to our city and country.
Katrina Sánchez weaves her Panamanian heritage into all aspects of her life and work. Sánchez grew up suspended between two cultures: Panama in the home and the southern United States when she stepped outside. Her mother also raised Sánchez with the tradition of handwork: making clothes, repurposing material into a lunch bag, embroidering store-bought linens to personalize them. The ubiquity of craft was a foundation brought from Panama—family members lovingly nicknamed Sánchez’s great-grandmother “the spider” because of her constant crocheting; her handwork covered the surfaces of her house. Sánchez’s annual visits to Panama established those traditions in her life, just as the objects carried back to her North Carolina home served as a daily reminder.
Shortly after graduating from University of North Carolina Charlotte with a BFA in Fiber, Sánchez experimented with weaving during a residency at Goodyear Arts, a practice she pushes beyond fiber in this Mint installation. With vibrant colors that reference Panama’s lush landscape, and materials—yarn, ribbons, beads, fish scales, and corn—that allude to the brilliant Mola blouses, dresses, and costumes of her ancestors, Sánchez constructs webs that map her daily life, overlapping her present memories, traditions, and loved ones both close and distant. She explains: “What I love about fiber is that passing down of history, a manual kind of history being passed on. And that connection that we have through family. That’s why I love fiber, really. It’s that human touch to it. It’s like comfort.”
Ongoing
Mint Museum Uptown
Ongoing
Mint Museum Uptown