Inherited Bearing
Looms left unfinished in workshops hint at the skills carried forward—and then set aside—by generations; a grandmother’s incomplete weaving embodies this suspended potential, passed down but never wholly realized. Such objects demonstrate that technique isn't simply acquisition of mastery, but rather an inhabitation of ongoing processes where both triumphs and failures inform subsequent attempts. This exchange creates a dynamic relationship shaping our capacity for action through embodied experience—and acknowledging these inherited complexities can deepen our understanding of the present.