Newsroom

Article

ARTICLE • February 19, 2026 • 5 min read

Mary McFerran’s Storm Dresses Brings Color, Compassion, and Urgency to Longyear Gallery

Author
Robert Brune
Author
5 min read 29 views

MARGARETVILLE — Mary McFerran’s Storm Dresses, now on view at Longyear Gallery through Sunday, March 15, arrives with a sense of urgency and grace that feels especially attuned to the moment. The opening reception on Saturday, February 14, at 3 pm unfolded as an arctic blast of cold weather finally began to loosen its grip, with temperatures inching just above freezing. While the bitter conditions limited attendance more than McFerran had hoped, those who braved the chill were rewarded with an exhibition of remarkable depth, imagination, and emotional resonance.

McFerran’s work is instantly recognizable for its radiant use of color and richly tactile surfaces. Yet what truly distinguishes her practice is the warmth and intelligence that animate every piece. Friendly in spirit yet thoughtfully incisive, she brings a keen observational eye to her materials and themes, crafting works that feel both approachable and deeply reflective. That balance of openness and rigor carries seamlessly from her personality into her art, inviting viewers to linger, consider, and connect.

In Storm Dresses, clothing becomes a vessel for exploring the human dimensions of climate change and social concern. Using fiber-based processes including sewing, embroidery, collage, and assemblage, McFerran constructs sculptural garments that evoke floods, fires, droughts, and hurricanes. These works avoid literal representation, instead relying on texture, form, and vivid color to suggest sensation and emotional weight. Turbulent blues ripple across layered fabrics, scorched reds and ochres evoke fire and heat, and fractured patterns hint at upheaval and loss. Each dress becomes a stand-in for lived experience, anchoring vast environmental forces in the intimate scale of the human body.

“My work is often inspired by historical, social, and political issues,” McFerran said. “I enjoy doing research and seeing where it leads me. I am interested in making unlikely relationships between materials and ideas.” She explained that while she hopes her work resonates with viewers, she avoids trying to predict or control their responses. “It is difficult for me, or probably any artist, to know what kind of reaction an audience will have, so I do not really go there. It is rewarding to have viewers appreciate your work, and it is often for different reasons than you might guess. My work definitely expresses my opinions, and making it is full of experiments and discoveries.”

Her color sense and compositional harmony play a critical role in delivering that emotional impact. McFerran typically begins with found and discarded remnants of fabric and other materials, allowing the pieces themselves to guide the final arrangement. “I usually work from fragments,” she said, “but I pull them together into a composition that is visually appealing. Paint, natural dyes, and stitches are tools I rely on during the process of creation to do that.” The result is a visual language that feels both deliberate and organic, balancing refinement with rawness.

McFerran’s artist statement underscores her commitment to engaging people’s lives, histories, and cultures. Working with natural materials and upcycled artifacts, she creates narrative forms that honor overlooked stories while embedding ideas of reuse and renewal directly into the work. That approach feels particularly resonant in light of ongoing environmental and political developments, reinforcing the exhibition’s relevance without overwhelming its poetic subtlety. The installation holds fragility and resilience in careful balance, offering contemplation rather than prescription.

Installed alongside Longyear Gallery’s late winter members exhibition, Storm Dresses sets a thoughtful tone for the entire space. Dozens of artists contribute to the seasonal group show, yet McFerran’s work provides a powerful thematic anchor. The interplay between her focused vision and the broader range of media and styles on display underscores the gallery’s role as both a showcase for individual achievement and a gathering place for community creativity.

At the opening, McFerran and I joked about her being “artist of the month,” as she currently has solo exhibitions at two of the largest galleries in the region. Reflecting on the coincidence, she said, “I feel very honored and privileged to have these two showing opportunities in Delaware County, my new home. The smaller intro member show, Storm Dresses, at Longyear Gallery came up after I had already accepted the invitation to show Sunny but Cold at Roxbury Arts Group. There was not any wiggle room in Longyear’s calendar, so I decided to go ahead with the second show in February.” The overlap speaks to both her prolific energy and the growing recognition of her work.

At Roxbury Arts Center’s Walter Meade Gallery, Sunny But Cold: Diaries of Farm Women, on view through March 14, draws on 19th- and 20th-century journals kept by women on New York State farms. There, McFerran transforms brief entries about weather, chores, illness, and community events into fiber-based installations that feel both historical and profoundly human. Embroidery, eco-dyed cotton, found materials, and antique tools are layered into works that honor endurance, labor, and quiet resilience. Fragments of handwritten text and sewn paper echo the cadence of diary entries, while embroidered drawings inspired by period photographs link past and present. Together, these works offer a tender tribute to women whose contributions often went undocumented, revealing the poetry embedded in everyday survival.

Seen in tandem, the two exhibitions illuminate the breadth of McFerran’s artistic inquiry. Both are rooted in empathy, material sensitivity, and a deep respect for lived experience. Whether addressing climate change through sculptural garments or honoring farm women through stitched narratives, McFerran approaches her subjects with humility, curiosity, and care.

Storm Dresses stands as a vivid and timely meditation on vulnerability, endurance, and connection. In the lingering cold of a Catskills winter, McFerran’s colors and textures bring warmth, while her ideas invite thoughtful reflection. It is a compelling reminder of art’s capacity to engage urgent issues with beauty, intelligence, and humanity.