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Piper Shepard

She // Her // Hers

Fiber Artist

Baltimore, Maryland

Photo of Piper Shepard.

Photo by Craig Dietz.

Piper Shepard’s artistic practice is as an engagement with cloth where she seeks to remove in order to reveal. Over the past sixteen years, she has cut cloth into lace-like filigree patterns, sometimes regimented in structure and other times according to a process akin to freehand drawing. Her process is informed equally by the qualities of the cloth—among them, the physical tolerance of the material itself—and the rich domain where that specimen intersects with its own place in history and memory.


Shepard’s work represents an intimate journey through the magnitude of textile, a meditation informed by the structure and architecture of cloth itself.


Shepard’s work has been shown at the Museum of Arts and Design in New York City; the Baltimore Museum of Art; the John Michael Kohler Arts Center, Sheboygan, WI; the Snyderman-Works Gallery, Philadelphia, PA; and the Birmingham Museums and Art Gallery in Birmingham, UK. She has received four Individual Artists Awards from The Maryland State Arts Council in crafts. She recently received a 2016 Japan-US Friendship Commission, National Endowment for the Arts, Creative Arts Exchange Program Fellowship. Her work is in the collections of the Baltimore Museum of Art and The Museum of Arts and Design, New York. Since 1994, she has taught in the Fiber Department at MICA (Maryland Institute College of Art). 

Donor -This award was generously supported by an Anonymous donor.

This artist page was last updated on: 01.04.2025

Artwork by Piper Shepard.

Lacing Space by Piper Shepard, 2012. Hand-cut muslin, gesso, graphite, aluminum armature.

Photo by Sophie Mutevelian.

Installation by Piper Shepard.

In Air: Cutworks by Piper Shepard, 2014. Installation view, University of Creative Arts, Farnham, UK.

Photo courtesy of the artist.

Artwork by Piper Shepard.

Radials 1, 2, and 3 by Piper Shepard, 2014. Hand-cut and digitally printed cotton, aluminum armature, steel cable.

Photo by Dan Meyers.