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During a residency at the Fabric Workshop and Museum, Philadelphia-based artist Jonathan Lyndon Chase created a vibrant purple and orange silk screened fabric which plays a recurring role in their exhibit, Big Wash. (Emma Lee/WHYY)
Jonathan Lyndon Chase is showing off their drawers.
The Philadelphia artist just opened “Big Wash” at the Fabric Workshop and Museum after five months of delays due to the pandemic. Chase transformed the second floor of the Center City museum into a laundromat, with black-and-white checkered flooring, rolling laundry carts, and a washing machine that generates soap bubbles. The walls have been painted a light milky blue, reminiscent of fabric softener.
a lot of shops and craftsmen to work in shops like this one used to be used as a staple for horses and this bakery has customers lining up all day long on fresh baked goods are just one reason this place is so popular. young minister this is a t.v. show in france called the best day korean friends and this takes we won that title in twenty fifteen or so that made us famous plus we bake bread and enough and that s more than two hundred years old next we follow bruno second tip and head to the fabric museum like most places in it is easily reached by foot the museum was established in eight hundred twenty five in houses a very diverse collection spanning several centuries to the modern day. the collection is very specific because it has been given by some artists who are from from the city and some collectors from the city for instance we have