BIOGRPAPHY + CV

Teaching

Deborah Valoma (she/her) is an artist, writer, professor emerita, and former Chair of the Textiles Program and Director of Fine Arts at California College of the Arts (CCA) in San Francisco. Her specialized field of research, writing, and teaching investigates textiles as signifiers of identity and agents of cultural continuity. With a Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology from the University of California, Berkeley (Summa Cum Laude) and Master of Fine Arts from the California College of Arts and Crafts (High Honors), her practice is a hybrid of theory and practice. Valoma’s professional training fuses academic scholarship and embodied knowledge in fields often populated by non-practitioners on the one hand and non-academics on the other.

During her twenty-eight years as a professor at CCA, Valoma developed a comprehensive series of graduate and undergraduate courses on textile history and theory, for which she earned a national reputation. These were taught through multiple lenses including colonialism and industrialism; cultural reclamation and indigenization movements; cultural appropriation and notions of so-called authenticity; and gendered and racialized hierarchies of aesthetic value in contemporary art. Textile history classes included: Constructing Identity: Textiles, Indigeneity, and Resistance; Women’s Work: Textiles, Gender, and Hierarchy; Textile Biographies:Trade, Hybridization, and Authenticity; Fashioning the Social Body: Appropriation and Cultural Cross-Dressing. Theory and practice seminars included: Thinking Textiles; Basket Case; Chromophilia; Craft Lab; Material Biographies; For-Site: Loss for Words.

Scholarship

As a contributor to the growing body of textile scholarship, she has delivered lectures, curated exhibitions, and published writings on related topics. Early publications include “The Impermanent Made Permanent: Textiles, Pattern and the Migration of a Medium” (Fiberarts, 2005); “Cloth and African Identity in Bahia, Brazil” (Berg Encyclopedia of World Dress and Fashion, 2010); Lia Cook: In the Folds (Brown/Grotta, 2007); and “Complex Simplicity” (Kay Sekimachi: Simple Complexity, The Craft and Folk Art Museum, 2016). Deborah edited and wrote the introductory essay “Dust Chronicles” on the topic of textile ephemerality for a special issue of the leading international peer-review publication Textiles: Journal of Cloth and Culture (2011).

In 2013 Deborah published the book Scrape the Willow Until It Sings, which traces the words and work of premier Native American elder and basketmaker Julia Parker (Heyday). A product of nine years of research, the book is part art volume, part oral history, and part historical analysis. Structured in four chapters, like the four quadrants of a basket, the book alternates between Deborah’s analysis and Parker’s storytelling. The book contextualizes Parker’s work as a carrier of intangible cultural heritage within the Native American cultural reclamation movement, but also positions her work within the contemporary art arena. More recent publications include: “When Linen Remembers,” a poetic treatise on the materiality of flax and linen (Material Intelligence, edited by Glenn Adamson, 2021); “Alluring Monotony+Luminous Threads,” an article addressing the rhythmic repetitions that run through weaving, dance, music, poetry, and prayer (Textile: Journal of Cloth and Culture, 2022); and “Following an Anonymous Thread,” an essay written in collaboration with Rehan Miskci about a family photograph, cloak, and veil worn by an unidentified woman (Armenian Creatives, 2023).

Deborah is currently working on a multi-year, interdisciplinary project initiated when she inherited a collection of one hundred textile pieces from her grandmother. Now cleaned, inventoried, and properly stored, the Sara Sohigian Magarian Archive includes techniques such as knitting, crocheting, tatting, bobbin lace, drawnwork, cutwork, embroidery, and most importantly, Armenian needlelace. The most precious date back one-hundred-and-twenty years and were crafted in what is now Turkey.

A combination of archiving, researching, writing, and responsive art making, Deborah’s current work traces threadwork as an ancestral practice. Focusing her inquiry primarily on Armenian needlelace, Deborah’s research has taken her to Armenian population centers of Fresno, Los Angeles, Watertown, Jerusalem, Nazareth, and Istanbul to meet with contemporary Armenian needlelace practitioners. She wrote a review of the ground-breaking exhibition Janyak: Armenian Art of Knots and Loops curated by Gassia Armenian at the Fowler Museum at UCLA (Textile: Journal of Cloth and Culture, 2023) and the poetic essay “Thread Memory” published in both English and Turkish in the volume entitled 23:5 (Hrant Dink Foundation, Istanbul, 2026).

Deborah is also co-founder of the Armenian Needlelace Initiative, a website and Instagram account. At a time when Armenian needlework is experiencing an upsurge in interest among Armenian makers, families, and communities around the world, Deborah has joined forces with fellow artist and scholar Elise Youssoufian to help revitalize Armenian needlelace traditions. Through online resources and upcoming calls for participation, their mission is to engage the global network of Armenian needlelace practitioners, researchers, curators, collectors, and enthusiasts.

Art

Like her grandmother and great-grandmother, Deborah’s medium is thread. An experienced weaver, spinner, crocheter, basketmaker, and seamstress, she only began to practice Armenian needlelace in the last few years after learning the basic knot from her grandmother decades ago. Intensely research-based, her Studio Practice harnesses the nuances of this humble, yet poetically charged medium. Using hand construction techniques and cutting-edge digital weaving technology, Deborah’s work hugs the edges of traditional practice, simultaneously unraveling long-held stereotypes and upholding age-old customs through a call-and-response with her foremothers. She has shown her work in various Group Exhibitions over the years and is represented by Brown/Grotta, but Deborah’s work has become more conceptual and ephemeral in nature over the last decade.

Currently engaged in a creative call-and-response with her Armenian foremothers, Deborah is crafting a body of work that re-remembers untold narratives and mends cultural through-lines. Hands-on art projects include On the Way to Aleppo, a crocheted tablecloth narrating the story of her grandmother’s first cousin Satinig Chopoorian who did not survive the genocide; Tending the Bones, a series of hand-woven linen shrouds commemorating those on her family tree marked as “died in massacres”; and Re-Making / Re-Remembering, a series of crocheted doilies duplicating pieces in her family collection as a means of communicating with her foremothers.

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Biography + CV



BIOGRPAPHY + CV

Teaching

Deborah Valoma (she/her) is an artist, writer, professor emerita, and former Chair of the Textiles Program and Director of Fine Arts at California College of the Arts (CCA) in San Francisco. Her specialized field of research, writing, and teaching investigates textiles as signifiers of identity and agents of cultural continuity. With a Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology from the University of California, Berkeley (Summa Cum Laude) and Master of Fine Arts from the California College of Arts and Crafts (High Honors), her practice is a hybrid of theory and practice. Valoma’s professional training fuses academic scholarship and embodied knowledge in fields often populated by non-practitioners on the one hand and non-academics on the other.

During her twenty-eight years as a professor at CCA, Valoma developed a comprehensive series of graduate and undergraduate courses on textile history and theory, for which she earned a national reputation. These were taught through multiple lenses including colonialism and industrialism; cultural reclamation and indigenization movements; cultural appropriation and notions of so-called authenticity; and gendered and racialized hierarchies of aesthetic value in contemporary art. Textile history classes included: Constructing Identity: Textiles, Indigeneity, and Resistance; Women’s Work: Textiles, Gender, and Hierarchy; Textile Biographies:Trade, Hybridization, and Authenticity; Fashioning the Social Body: Appropriation and Cultural Cross-Dressing. Theory and practice seminars included: Thinking Textiles; Basket Case; Chromophilia; Craft Lab; Material Biographies; For-Site: Loss for Words.

Scholarship

As a contributor to the growing body of textile scholarship, she has delivered lectures, curated exhibitions, and published writings on related topics. Early publications include “The Impermanent Made Permanent: Textiles, Pattern and the Migration of a Medium” (Fiberarts, 2005); “Cloth and African Identity in Bahia, Brazil” (Berg Encyclopedia of World Dress and Fashion, 2010); Lia Cook: In the Folds (Brown/Grotta, 2007); and “Complex Simplicity” (Kay Sekimachi: Simple Complexity, The Craft and Folk Art Museum, 2016). Deborah edited and wrote the introductory essay “Dust Chronicles” on the topic of textile ephemerality for a special issue of the leading international peer-review publication Textiles: Journal of Cloth and Culture (2011).

In 2013 Deborah published the book Scrape the Willow Until It Sings, which traces the words and work of premier Native American elder and basketmaker Julia Parker (Heyday). A product of nine years of research, the book is part art volume, part oral history, and part historical analysis. Structured in four chapters, like the four quadrants of a basket, the book alternates between Deborah’s analysis and Parker’s storytelling. The book contextualizes Parker’s work as a carrier of intangible cultural heritage within the Native American cultural reclamation movement, but also positions her work within the contemporary art arena. More recent publications include: “When Linen Remembers,” a poetic treatise on the materiality of flax and linen (Material Intelligence, edited by Glenn Adamson, 2021); “Alluring Monotony+Luminous Threads,” an article addressing the rhythmic repetitions that run through weaving, dance, music, poetry, and prayer (Textile: Journal of Cloth and Culture, 2022); and “Following an Anonymous Thread,” an essay written in collaboration with Rehan Miskci about a family photograph, cloak, and veil worn by an unidentified woman (Armenian Creatives, 2023).

Deborah is currently working on a multi-year, interdisciplinary project initiated when she inherited a collection of one hundred textile pieces from her grandmother. Now cleaned, inventoried, and properly stored, the Sara Sohigian Magarian Archive includes techniques such as knitting, crocheting, tatting, bobbin lace, drawnwork, cutwork, embroidery, and most importantly, Armenian needlelace. The most precious date back one-hundred-and-twenty years and were crafted in what is now Turkey.

A combination of archiving, researching, writing, and responsive art making, Deborah’s current work traces threadwork as an ancestral practice. Focusing her inquiry primarily on Armenian needlelace, Deborah’s research has taken her to Armenian population centers of Fresno, Los Angeles, Watertown, Jerusalem, Nazareth, and Istanbul to meet with contemporary Armenian needlelace practitioners. She wrote a review of the ground-breaking exhibition Janyak: Armenian Art of Knots and Loops curated by Gassia Armenian at the Fowler Museum at UCLA (Textile: Journal of Cloth and Culture, 2023) and the poetic essay “Thread Memory” published in both English and Turkish in the volume entitled 23:5 (Hrant Dink Foundation, Istanbul, 2026).

Deborah is also co-founder of the Armenian Needlelace Initiative, a website and Instagram account. At a time when Armenian needlework is experiencing an upsurge in interest among Armenian makers, families, and communities around the world, Deborah has joined forces with fellow artist and scholar Elise Youssoufian to help revitalize Armenian needlelace traditions. Through online resources and upcoming calls for participation, their mission is to engage the global network of Armenian needlelace practitioners, researchers, curators, collectors, and enthusiasts.

Art

Like her grandmother and great-grandmother, Deborah’s medium is thread. An experienced weaver, spinner, crocheter, basketmaker, and seamstress, she only began to practice Armenian needlelace in the last few years after learning the basic knot from her grandmother decades ago. Intensely research-based, her Studio Practice harnesses the nuances of this humble, yet poetically charged medium. Using hand construction techniques and cutting-edge digital weaving technology, Deborah’s work hugs the edges of traditional practice, simultaneously unraveling long-held stereotypes and upholding age-old customs through a call-and-response with her foremothers. She has shown her work in various Group Exhibitions over the years and is represented by Brown/Grotta, but Deborah’s work has become more conceptual and ephemeral in nature over the last decade.

Currently engaged in a creative call-and-response with her Armenian foremothers, Deborah is crafting a body of work that re-remembers untold narratives and mends cultural through-lines. Hands-on art projects include On the Way to Aleppo, a crocheted tablecloth narrating the story of her grandmother’s first cousin Satinig Chopoorian who did not survive the genocide; Tending the Bones, a series of hand-woven linen shrouds commemorating those on her family tree marked as “died in massacres”; and Re-Making / Re-Remembering, a series of crocheted doilies duplicating pieces in her family collection as a means of communicating with her foremothers.

DOWNLOAD FULL CV