Press Release

FWM Explores the Complexity of American-ness in Some American Dreams

April 7, 2026

A photo of an artwork in the form of a white desaturated American flag pinned to a wall in a way that twists it from corner to corner.
Donald Lipski, in collaboration with The Fabric Workshop and Museum, Philadelphia. Who’s Afraid of Red, White and Blue #37, 1990. White wool gabardine, 71 x 115 inches. Photo credit: FWM Visual Archives.

Philadelphia, PA, April 7, 2026The Fabric Workshop and Museum (FWM) is pleased to announce Some American Dreams, a group exhibition organized on the occasion of the U.S. Semiquincentennial. This presentation of works from The Fabric Workshop and Museum’s collection explores the complexity of American-ness through lenses of history, memory, and mythology. Made by past Artists-in-Residence in collaboration with the FWM Studio, the projects reimagine symbols of nationhood and belonging, critique ongoing legacies of inequity, and offer expansive visions of kinship and community. The exhibition takes its name from June Jordan’s 1986 essay “Waking Up in the Middle of Some American Dreams,” in which the poet calls for a multiplicity of American dreams rather than a singular paradigm. It runs April 15–June 14, 2026.

Some American Dreams features 27 works by 20 artists employing a range of media—including furniture, sculpture, textiles and clothing, video, and photography—and representing four decades of making at FWM. The works meditate on themes of indigeneity and race, alternative origin stories, landscape and the environment, the national figure as icon, and images of cultural affiliation. Renditions of prominent historical figures—such as Frederick Douglass, George and Martha Washington, Harriet Jacobs, and Muhammad Ali—are interspersed with reworkings of patriotic symbols.

Hock E Aye Vi Edgar Heap of Birds’s abstract scarves render Cheyenne and Arapaho Nations’ reservation lands as vibrant patchworks of color, while Becky Howland’s maximalist table setting condemns environmental exploitation through depictions of toxic waste and poisoned waterways. In works by the Rev. Howard Finster, Rose B. Simpson, and Luis Jiménez, the mythological dimensions of the Americas emerge as printed visitations from angels and aliens, a ceramic earth mother goddess, and volcanic deities on low-rider car seats. Through recognizable hairstyles, a graffiti tag, and a cherished local musical act launched to stardom, other works by Alison Saar, Mario Ybarra, Jr., and Yinka Shonibare CBE RA consider visual markers of communal identity.

The artists represented in this exhibition break down borders and categorical distinctions to propose a polyphony of American dreams shaped by hybridity, friction, and affinity. They ask: what if “America” is not one project, but many? And how might these Americas be affirmed, resisted, or remade, in Jordan’s words, to envision “one new day after another?”

Full Artist List

Laurie Anderson, S.A. Bachman, Nicole Eisenman, Rev. Howard Finster, Renée Green, Hock E Aye Vi Edgar Heap of Birds, Becky Howland, Luis Jiménez, Tommy Joseph, Glenn Ligon, Donald Lipski, James Luna, Robert Pruitt, Tim Rollins and K.O.S., Alison Saar, Betye Saar, Yinka Shonibare CBE RA, Rose B. Simpson, Kara Walker, and Mario Ybarra Jr.

About the Curator

Some American Dreams is curated by Hilde Nelson, FWM Curatorial Fellow.


Downloadable Media

Download the Press Release PDFDownload the Press Release PDF


Related News

See it, hear it, feel it: All the Philly art we loved this week
Rosa Cartagena, The Philadelphia Inquirer, May 2, 2026


About the Fabric Workshop and Museum

The Fabric Workshop and Museum (FWM) is an internationally acclaimed contemporary art museum devoted to the creation, presentation, and preservation of innovative works of art. Its mission—Collaborating with artists, revealing new possibilities—embodies a 49-year commitment to helping artists experiment with the expressive possibilities of a broad spectrum of new materials and techniques. Through its renowned Artist-in-Residence Program, FWM provides artists at all stages of their careers with the opportunity to collaborate with its studio staff and take their work in fresh and often unexpected directions. FWM presents large-scale exhibitions, installations, and performative work, utilizing innovative fiber and other media including sculpture, installation, video, painting, photography, ceramics, and architecture. Founded in 1977, FWM brings this spirit of creative investigation and discovery to an eager audience, broadening access to art and advancing its role as a catalyst for innovation and social connection.

Museum Entry: General admission is free (suggested donation of $10).
Hours: Visit us Wednesday–Friday, 12:00–6:00 pm; Saturday–Sunday, 12:00–5:00 pm. Closed Mondays and Tuesdays.


Art