I'm Mary Lee Fulkerson, a fourth generation Nevadan with a natural love for the wildness of Nevada and the people who live here. (If you raise a family amid slot machines and sagebrush, gallop your horse across the open range, and purify in a Shoshone sweat lodge, you are going to feel wild!) I express that in my non-traditional basket sculptures.

My father’s family came west before the Gold Rush of 1849, and I spent a childhood listening to stories of cattle rustlers, Irish lumberjacks, boarding house mistresses, midwives, and teamsters that really drove mule teams. Later, when writing “Weavers of Tradition and Beauty”, I met Washoe elder and storyteller Joann Martinez, and once again I dove deep into the land of imagination, where magic makes anything possible.

Lately I've returned to sculpting fragrant willow, a spirited little twig that has, like baskets, nearly 10,000 years of history in the Great Basin. Handling it, I feel both ancient  and contemporary, because I join other American basketmakers in blazing a trail to create a new art form that nurtures an old, old memory--one without words-- that lies deep within all of us.


As the warmth of summer begins to unfold, may you begin to open yourself into the knowledge that everything in the universe unfolds at its time. Every decision you've ever made was right at the time you made it, every path you've ever chosen unfolded as it was meant to, and every friend and song and dance you've ever done was the right one. Bless you, for you have always been right on.

Hello, Goodbye


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