Field of Study:
Arts
Home Institution in the U.S.:
At-Large, Bar Harbor, ME
Host Institution in India:
National Institute of Design, Ahmedabad, Gujarat
Start Date/Month in India:
November 2024
Duration of Grant:
Five months
Shira Singer
Ms. Shira Singer is a textile artist, art educator, and art therapist living in Bar Harbor, Maine. She has been applying color and pattern to cloth for several decades, while also focusing on the historical, social, and cultural contexts of different textile traditions and mediums. For the past six years, she has been using locally grown or foraged vegetation and plant materials to make fabric dyes.
Ms. Singer has been a teaching artist in a wide variety of settings, including schools, community arts programs for children and adults, senior colleges, and art festivals. She taught elementary school art for 15 years in multi-age classrooms on islands off the coast of Maine.
Ms. Singer has also had the privilege of leading art education workshops and making art with people of all ages: in Bengaluru, India, with the Parikrma Humanity Foundation; in Ambon, Indonesia, with the Heka Leka Education Foundation; and in Muscat, Oman, with the Sidab Women’s Sewing Center. Her textile pieces have been exhibited in galleries and shows throughout the U.S. and her recent work appeared in the Fall 2023 journal of the Surface Design Association, International Exhibition in Print.
Moreover, as an art therapist, she has over 35 years of experience in facilitating therapeutic art expression in psychiatric hospitals, counseling centers, and schools, as well as through private practice. Ms. Singer received her BS in elementary education from Northwestern University and her MA in art therapy from The George Washington University.
Ms. Singer’s Fulbright-Nehru project is focusing on understanding how natural dyeing traditions in India are evolving in response to rapid environmental change and societal impacts in the post-COVID scenario. As part of her project, she is creating a body of expressive artwork on cloth informed by conversations, research, and training with individuals who are engaged in preserving traditional practices of natural dyeing and design.