Claire Fall Blanchette

Claire Fall Blanchette is an artist working across multiple disciplines including sculpture, printmaking, and drawing.
About Claire Fall Blanchette

Claire Fall Blanchette (b. 1994, Maine, USA) is an artist working across multiple disciplines including sculpture, printmaking, and drawing. She is the recipient of the Marcia Grand Centennial Sculpture Prize (University of Arizona), Reba Stewart – Genevieve McMillan Travel Fellowship (Massachusetts College of Art and Design), and was an artist-in-residence at Konstepidemin Arts Center in Gothenburg, Sweden. Claire has exhibited in the US and abroad including at the Lionel Rombach Gallery (Tucson, AZ), Environmental Natural Resource 2 Building (Tucson, AZ), West Valley Art Museum (Peoria, AZ), Evelyn Peeler Peacock Gallery (Corning, NY), 440 Gallery (Brooklyn, NY), Ejecta Projects (Carlisle, PA), and Konstepidemin Arts Center (Gothenburg, Sweden). Claire holds an MFA in Studio Art from the University of Arizona in Tucson and a BFA in Printmaking and History of Art from Massachusetts College of Art and Design in Boston.

Claire Blanchette
Preferred Pronouns: she/her
https://cfblanchette.com/
"Tangled Currents" shown installed at the Joseph Gross Gallery, University of Arizona, in May 2025
Tangled Currents

Tangled Currents
2025
Reishi mycelium, hemp hurd, hardwood shavings, clay, cardboard, paper, xanthan gum, & steel
20’ x 8.5’ x 7’

Reclamare, II installed in the Joseph Gross Gallery at the University of Arizona, part of the exhibition "Tangled Currents," May 2025
Reclamare, II

Reclamare, II
2025
Screen print and reishi spores on Rives BFK
15″ x 22″

Ruins, installed at The Land With No Name, a sculpture sanctuary outside of Tucson, AZ
Ruins (mycelium wall #3)
This project is an evolving and interactive sculpture created in collaboration with mycelial networks. Made from modular bricks, the work is currently in it’s third and final iteration, Ruins, installed permanantly at the Land With No Name, a sculpture sanctuary west of Tucson, Arizona. Installed outdoors in the Sonoran Desert, Ruins will invite both new growth and decay as the material begins to decompose. Ruins (mycelium wall #3) 2023-25 (on-going) Wall #1: 68”h x 80” w x 8”d Wall #2: 66”h x 64” w x 8”d Reishi mycelium, hemp hurd, and steel

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