Foraged Fibre Basketry
with Ralph Simpson
October 4
Foraged Fibre Basketry
with Ralph Simpson
REGISTRATION IS FULL!
AX Workshop Room | 12 Maple Ave.
Saturday, October 4 | 9am-430pm
$150 per person | Ages 16+
Step into the AX Workshop Room on Saturday, October 4, 9 AM – 4:30 PM for an immersive day of creativity with master basketry artist Ralph Simpson.
Ralph, a multi-award-winning plant fibre artist, transforms natural vegetation into stunning, one-of-a-kind vessels. Drawing from his forestry background, he works with textures, shapes, and stories woven straight from nature. In this hands-on workshop, you’ll learn the timeless craft of basket weaving while creating your own unique piece. Bring along any fibres that hold personal meaning to you—they’ll become part of a vessel designed to hold your most precious objects.
*Please bring your own lunch*
About the Instructor
Nationally acclaimed Canadian plant fibre artist, Ralph Simpson has developed an innovative method of weaving, bending and sculpting plant fibre into sculptural forms.
Ralph is an award-winning artist with grants from Arts NB and Canada Council, short-listed for the Salt Springs National art Prize (2021) and his work has been accessioned into Collection ARTNB, New Brunswick’s permanent art collection (2023). Ralph holds an MSc. from UNB in Forest Research Biology, and a Diploma in Fine Craft from NBCCD. Informed by the sciences and his acquired technical expertise his intricately woven pieces reflect the fields and forests around him.
He was born in Hillsborough, New Brunswick and currently resides in Fredericton, New Brunswick and works full time in his studio there, exhibiting his work locally and internationally, attending residencies and giving workshops. Ralph chooses to work with locally sourced, sustainable materials and he forages his own plant fibres using environmentally sustainable methods.
The flora of New Brunswick informs his work and his creative process. His designs arise from his interpretations of nature and have evolved from traditional basketry, to vessels, and botanical sculptures. His process results in a contemporary manifestation of his connection with plants in their natural habitat. His work varies in form and style but what resonates in all his work is an underlying investigation into ways that plant materials can be used to spark interest and insight into the natural world.
His personal motivation arises from a deep connection with nature and a reciprocal need to promote environmental sustainability.