Making Masks, Artists Respond to the Social Imperative

Museums and cultural institutions are currently shuttered during the global pandemic and

subsequent stay at home orders. Artist’s reliance upon these spaces is now upended, and

makers have to fend for themselves. As with most artists, they have an eye towards the

public response. The turn to creating masks is their answer to the social imperative of a

wartime society in desperate need of PPE (personal protective equipment) for its citizens.

Informality has spoken to several artists around the country to ask how they’ve transformed

their spaces to accommodate mask making. This idea is not new; Westword in Denver,

Colorado, recently reported a great story on how artists there are making masks for the city’s

homeless population.

We reached out to many artists and makers. Due to the overwhelming need for masks and

other PPE, many could not respond. These fantastic creators include The Sewing Labs,

Rightfully Sewn, Chloe Schempf, Debra Smith and many others participating in this

enormous effort.

Courtesy Jessica Kincaid

Kansas City artist Jessica Kincaid uses two layers of 100% lightweight cotton with one layer

of lightweight fusible interfacing in between. After ironing each mask for the last time, Kincaid

immediately puts it in a plastic bag. She is following examples from KC Helps Make Masks. It

is the local grass-roots organization that is doing incredible things by collecting volunteer made

masks and distributing them to hospitals and facilities in most dire need.

They also provide instructions for washing your cloth in hot water, disinfecting your tools and

work area so it’s sterile, and washing your hands every hour, as well as keeping your work

area separated from all other household members within a 6-foot radius. “Also, we wear

masks as we sew. I try hard to follow these best practices.”

The standards of PPE have made itself well-known to the art community over the past few

weeks and this knowledge is stitched into their making. Kincaid opted to make the “Tier 2”

design mask, as opposed to “Tier 1” or rounded masks made from special vinyl material from

the hospital that fit more firmly over the bridge of the nose.

Tier 1 masks cover n95 masks to extend the lives of those PPE. Tier 2 is the style thatis

“disposable,” which people can slip on when they enter a waiting room or need a quick,

temporary cover.

Kincaid tells Informality the most challenging aspect of all this is keeping up with the

changing rules. “The CDC has contradicted the WHO, and the president has been

inconsistent on… well never mind that. There have been changes in who the masks are for:

only medical personnel? Essential employees? Everyone so that the droplets do not get

spread at all?

“Changes in how to make the masks: elastic was ok at first, now fabric ties are preferred.

What style of mask is in more demand? Tier 1, then Tier 2, but really both. It is my

understanding that any mask will be worn and is better than no shield at all. I’m not a medical

professional, and this is not my turf. I am following the advice of people in the art community

who have researched the best practices and designs.”

Creating the masks has pushed Kincaid to make esthetic decisions again after a lull in her

own studio practice. Like millions of Americans, Kincaid was furloughed from her job and, as

she says, “we’re all in limbo as to when the crisis will subside, but having extra time allows

me to make more creative work.

“I would like to get back into making art, but I don’t know where I will store it. I sure won’t

have anything framed. Apparel and functional items could be the solution.”

Courtesy Michelle Hartney

Michelle Hartney is a Chicago based artist whose work addresses a broad range of topics,

from women’s health issues to the concept of heroes, love, and the cosmos. She has been

using leftover hand-silkscreened fabric scraps from Mother’s Right, a past project concerning

America’s high maternal mortality rate.

“Along with local midwives and doulas, we sewed 1,200 hospital gowns, one for every

woman who died during childbirth in the United States in 2013. This fabric is so unique to

me. The fabric print was created using hand drawings. (The illustrations were) of plant

derivatives of the drugs used on laboring women for the past 150 years that ultimately killed

so many infants and mothers because pregnant women were their guinea pigs.”

Production (for these masks) is slow because Hartney is now homeschooling her children.

“I’ve made about 50 masks so far. I have a lot of experience working with fabric and setting

up an assembly line, so I cut everything first, then sew, iron pleats, sew more, put in the ties.

I really love sewing, so the process is enjoyable.” Her six and nine-year-olds have helped her

a little so far, too.

Asked where these masks are going, Hartney responds, “a few of my friends reached out to

Chicago hospitals and clinics, and they let us know how many they need[ed]. One of our

friends’ bikes around to pick up our masks for hands-free pickups, then they’re delivered.”

Hartney finds the project itself to be healing. She was previously an art therapist, so her “art

practice is almost always tied to a therapeutic element. Because of the social justice themes

in my work…this makes me feel like I’m doing something to help.

“The hard part of this is the psychological toll the pandemic and quarantine has taken;he

fear, the anger at our administration for doing nothing, mocking and dismissing the severity,

then changing their stance and taking zero accountability.”

Adapting her studio, Hartney says, “my studio is now my kitchen table, which is a big

change! I’m a huge introvert and being alone in my studio rejuvenated me every day. I’m a

better mom when I get that time to work alone. The irony of this quarantine is I’m never

alone! I’m with my family 24/7, and it is lovely to get that quality time, and also challenging to

not be able to recharge my introverted self with alone time.”

Many of the materials Hartney uses comes from previous projects. She also has a lot of

hospital baby blankets for a future project about infant mortality and is repurposing that fabric

too. Hartney also loves that the two materials were also used for healthcare-related issues.

And she has had a few friends donate elastic as well, which is hard to come by.

Hartney’s art practice has been intertwined with social justice issues for six years now and

doesn’t see the mask-making as a departure from her work. She says, “These masks are

works of art…they’re functional…very much so tied to my practice as a feminist artist. (These

masks have) strong ties to crafts and functional objects that weren’t labeled as art objects for

centuries. My definition of art is very expansive.”

“The people who receive these masks won’t know the meaning behind the fabric, and that’s

ok. I hope the masks are kept. Maybe they will end up together again one day, reunited as

art objects once this horrible nightmare is over. I hope they keep people safe when they’re

being used.”

Like many of us, Hartney started this quarantine “in a state of panic for the first two weeks…

When I started to make the masks, I felt more grounded. This is exactly in line with my work,

so I feel somewhat useful again, like I’m helping in a small way…I cannot imagine what our

brave doctors, nurses, paramedics, and other healthcare workers are going through. They

are our heroes. Our lives are in their hands as they’re risking their lives to save us. It’s

remarkable. Making masks is the least I can do.”

Courtesy Mark Kirchner

Mark Kirchner teaches photography at the Soka University of America in Aliso Viejo,

California.

In 1968 the first skill in life Kirchner learned to sew from his mother. As a boy, he played with

G.I.Joes and the clothes they wore into battle were soon shredded. He couldn’t send his

action figures into battle naked, so his mom taught him to sew pants from the cotton cloth on

an old Singer sewing machine…”

Kirchner studied art at the San Francisco Art Institute. Kirchner tells Informality, “…During the

subsequent years, I practiced photography, visual anthropology, and trained as a hand

bookbinder. Bookbinding requires different types of sewing, and I have always enjoyed the

sewing of paper into books.

“Today, I am my mother’s caregiver as she battles cancer. She is currently in her 8th year of

chemotherapy, and having some type of protective mask was important for her to have when

going to doctor’s appointments.”

Kirchner’s masks are made from cloth that was given to him over the years. The first group

was made using some retro-1950s style cloth. The pattern was found on a Japanese website

that also describes how to make masks without sewing. This design requires making

different sizes of masks, as they are not a universal one size fits all type.

Kirchner, like many artists, is learning the adeptness of a new reality. “As for time, I am

spending a great amount of time adapting my teaching of traditional chemical photography to

multiple online platforms. (Also) keeping two households afloat and providing care for my

mom.”

Angelica Sandoval. Image courtesy Susan McSpadden JCCC

Angelica Sandoval is a designer, sculptor, porcelain maven, and facilitator for MakerSpace at

the Johnson County Library in Overland Park, Kansas, a suburb of Kansas City.

Sandoval is making non-medical grade cloth masks for front line health care professionals

who have no other options for safety.

She, and the rest of the MakerSpace team, which includes Brian Oertel, Thomas Mailioux

and Nick Ward-Bopp are working in shifts to start the 3D printers that print harnesses for face

shields. The face shields will also be used for health care workers on the front lines, where

protection of any sort remains tightly allocated.

Sandoval tells Informality, “The first batch of cloth masks are being donated to Johnson

County Developmental Services. Our next batch of PPE will go to JOCO (Johnson County,

Kansas) EMS.

For Sandoval, she says the most challenging aspect of this endeavor is locating materials!

“We are running short on 100% cotton and ¼” elastic. We are trying to find PETG, a type of

plastic used for the visor on the face shield.”

With her dining room a makeshift sewing station, the Black & Veatch Makerspace has turned

into a 3D printing farm to print face shield harnesses. Johnson County Community College,

Maker Lab, and Meredith Nelson have lent their 3D printers to assist us with production.

Sandoval says, “the majority of the fabric was donated by staff members and a local Kansas

City company, Twirl. Black & Veatch Makerspace has also purchased the majority of the

materials for the face shields.” Making PPE, like cloth masks and face shields, has wholly

taken over Sandolval’s studio time. A time like this makes it necessary for skilled persons like

Sandoval to utilize her design and fabrication skills to help health care professionals.

Sandoval notes this experience “just proves that artists are important assets to our

community. We are makers who are resourceful problem solvers that jump in at times of

need.”

Courtesy Kat Nechleba

Denver-based artist, art therapist, and psychotherapist Kat Nechleba is another of this long

list of creatives contributing to the effort. Speaking to Informality via email she states, “I was

given 10 yards of Phillip de Leon’s Viva Frida printed on cotton a few years back and was

waiting for the opportunity to use it. Another person donated a huge box of shoelaces to my

studio, which I’m using as the straps on an A.B. mask pattern that I altered. It’s fascinating

how the weave of a shoelace stretches to wrap the face, almost like elastic. So far I’ve made

60 masks to date, and plan to keep sewing through the pandemic.”

She goes on to say, “a few weeks back, JOANN Fabric was giving away free yards of fabric

to volunteer mask-makers to donate to local hospitals. (Jessica Kincaid used their

resources). I did that, but then I thought about my 5-year-old niece in Chicago, who is at risk

because she’s spent her entire life in-and-out of ICU for lung issues. Then I thought about

my retired aunt, who’s volunteering in hospitals, and then all my family and neighbors. I

spiraled and just started stitching up masks and shipping them out to friends and loved ones

around the world. Now I’m putting masks in my neighbor’s mailboxes and giving them out to

strangers outside of grocery stores.”

The most challenging aspect of all this sewing is back pain, but making a face mask is easy

and so crucial for any artist or crafter to do. Even with a shortage of materials, “we can all

make something out of what we have.” Neblecha’s only cost has been shipping.

“In the biggest twist of irony, before any of this happened, I was creating a body of work that

questioned how we were presently living in a dystopian future threatened by an invisible

psychological war. It seemed appropriate to take a break from that concept once the

pandemic actually hit.”

She concludes, “…for the first time in history, it feels like the entire world is on the same

page. Maybe that will encourage growth and appreciation in all of humanity. So many people

are stepping up in their own way to help during this crisis, and I think that’s very beautiful.

How can positive change not happen?”

Courtesy Kat Nechleba

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