Cynthia Alberto is a Filipina, artist, weaver, weaving activist, teacher, and founder/director of the Brooklyn-based weaving studio, Weaving Hand. Her personal work as a fiber artist bridges traditional and contemporary weaving: drawing inspiration from ancient communities of Europe, Asia, Latin America, and Africa. Cynthia honors the artisanal process of weaving while using unconventional materials to create expressions of form, structure, and function, often addressing themes such as femininity, age, and beauty as it relates to our culture today.
Weaving Hand is a Brooklyn based weaving studio and healing arts center. ... As a healing arts center, Weaving Hand uses weaving as a creative tool to enhance developmental programs for adults and children with intellectual, emotional and physical disabilities.
K'Glen Deli and Sari Sari Store Pabili po. Kain. Busog. Tambay. We will bring Pinas to you! and SATISFY your Filipino Cravings! Mangan na! Bili na! Kita kits! Satisfy your Filipino cravings! And find products from the Philippines here.
Little Manila Queens Bayanihan Art is a collaboration between artists and cultural workers who support community-based arts and creative placekeeping efforts by and for the diasporic Filipino community in Woodside, Queens and the greater NYC area.
This initiative is sponsored by The Laundromat Project’s Create Change Program, a program designed to connect communities and artists in meaningful ways.
Weaving Hand is a Brooklyn based weaving studio and healing arts center. ... As a healing arts center, Weaving Hand uses weaving as a creative tool to enhance developmental programs for adults and children with intellectual, emotional and physical disabilities.
K'Glen Deli and Sari Sari Store Pabili po. Kain. Busog. Tambay. We will bring Pinas to you! and SATISFY your Filipino Cravings! Mangan na! Bili na! Kita kits! Satisfy your Filipino cravings! And find products from the Philippines here.
Little Manila Queens Bayanihan Art is a collaboration between artists and cultural workers who support community-based arts and creative placekeeping efforts by and for the diasporic Filipino community in Woodside, Queens and the greater NYC area.
This initiative is sponsored by The Laundromat Project’s Create Change Program, a program designed to connect communities and artists in meaningful ways.