You are here: American University College of Arts & Sciences American University Museum 2025 Fabricated Boundaries: Filipina American Textile & Fiber Artists

Fabricated Boundaries: Filipina American Textile & Fiber Artists

September 6 – December 7, 2025

Pacita Abad, Mic Diño Boekelmann, Jeanne F. Jalandoni, and Patricia Orpilla, artists
Tiffany Lynn Hunt, PhD, curator

Mic Diño Boekelmann, Self Portrait, 2024. A painting of a woman partially obscured by floral cutout in manila folder.
Mic Diño Boekelmann, Self Portrait, 2024. Oil on board in a Manila Envelope, 10 x 14.5 inches. Courtesy of the artist, photograph by Y.E.C. Creations. 

Overview

Discover the extraordinary work of four Filipina-American female artists as they explore the many layers of identity shaped by place, migration, memory, and family. Through deeply personal works, they reflect what it means to live between cultures, to carry heritage across borders, and to navigate life far from one’s ancestral homeland. Together, their art forms a woven tapestry of stories that honors past generations while expressing the complexity of Filipina American life today.

Working in painting, sculpture, and printmaking in combination with textile and fiber techniques, these artists push the boundaries of traditional materials. They use fabrics such as abaca (banana fiber), piña (pineapple fiber), and cottons dyed with ikat and batik methods. Their practices incorporate embroidery (burda), sewing (pananahi), weaving (paghahabi), crocheting (paggagantsilyo), and papercutting (pabalat).

At the heart of the show is habi, the Tagalog word for weaving. Like threads coming together on a loom, the artists’ stories are interconnected—stories of migration and memory, women’s labor and artistry, cultural pride and transformation. Through this shared process, they create a powerful collective narrative rooted in both tradition and change.

Jeanne F. Jalandoni, Moth Whispers, 2025. Oil on canvas, hand embroidered pineapple leaf fabric. Brooding woman surrounded by moths at sunset wearing large white embroidered sleeves and purple dress
Jeanne F. Jalandoni, Moth Whispers, 2025. Oil on canvas, hand embroidered pineapple leaf fabric, 40 x 36 inches. Courtesy of the artist. 

 

Patricia Orpilla, Kapag hindi pinangalanan ang Diyos (When God Went Unnamed), Unique collagraph, woodcut, and monotype on paper. Abstract image that resembles an eclipse with sun flare over cloth

Patricia Orpilla, Kapag hindi pinangalanan ang Diyos (When God Went Unnamed), Unique collagraph, woodcut, and monotype on paper, (H) 31.5 x (W) 75 inches (Each Panel: 31.5 x 23.75 inches Framed (Paper size 29.5 x 22 inches)), Courtesy of the Artist, Photography by Fresco Arts Team.