Berea College Collection



In iconic design, the artist
is not always present.

Since 1855, student crafters at Berea College have served as stewards of Appalachian design by mastering basketry, weaving, broomcraft, and ceramics. Rich in history, these beloved crafts are sold to help support Berea.

But in 2018, this noble program embarked on a challenge to show their work. Or workers, that is. In collaboration with Aaron Beale, the college’s Director of Student Craft, designer Stephen Burks has led a series of workshops at Berea to expand the values and tenets of Appalachian tradition by making student crafters more visible in the design process.

Here, Burks explains how he empowered Berea College’s student makers to set a new path for Appalachian craftsmanship.

Stephen Burks and assistant making white oak wooden basket
Stephen Burks holding  bent white oak wooden basket band
Man bending wooden basket bands around pegs

There’s a real shift happening at Berea from how they look at the students as a labor force, to how they look at the students as a creative force.
Stephen Burks

On freeing the hand

“Human beings are making these things, these are not machines. We believe in making use of the hand where the hand is most useful, and using the machine where the machine is most useful. The hand has a different set of capabilities, right? If we think about all of the possibilities that a creative open mind can bring to a product in the production process, depending on how many ways the hands are getting involved, we like to think that the hand is contributing to the product rather than detracting.

You look at industrial production: More times, the system of industrial production or manufacturing is designed to exclude the hand or the human variable. They believe there’s room for mistakes, there’s room for accidents. But we believe the more times we can bring the hand to industry in that way, the more times we’re capable of adding value to the product.”

Man weaving Pixel Runner in loom

The hand has creative power, the hand has communal power, the hand has political power.
Stephen Burks

Stephen Burks watching student weave on loom
Closeup of thread on loom