Marla Brill

ARTIST BIO
Marla Brill’s creative journey began in Chicago, where a childhood surrounded by fabric, color, and craft shaped a lifelong love of tactile materials. A third-generation maker — her grandfather a tailor, her father in the men’s clothing business — Brill inherited not only a skill set, but a reverence for material, texture, and the handmade. “For my father, it was always about the goods — the cloth, the feel, the hand,” she recalls. “That sensibility is at the heart of everything I make.”

After moving to California in the late 1970s, Brill’s practice evolved through fiber construction, handmade paper, and fabric collage. Travels across the globe deepened her connection to the textures, colors, and traditions of diverse cultures — influences that continue to resonate in her work today.

Over time, Brill’s exploration expanded into mixed-media assemblage, incorporating repurposed and found objects. Her work reflects a fascination with transformation — how memory, material, and meaning converge through the act of making. She describes herself as a “collector of possibilities,” often sourcing inspiration in hardware stores, salvage yards, and the overlooked corners of daily life.

Each piece Brill creates carries echoes of her past and her heritage of makers, reimagined through curiosity and craftsmanship. Her art invites viewers to look closely, to see beauty in what’s been remade, and to rediscover the tactile world through the lens of transformation.