Members Get 10% Off Every Order. Join Now.

Members Get 10% Off Every Order. Join Now.

Members Get 10% Off Every Order. Join Now.

Members Get 10% Off Every Order. Join Now.

Sign up to Save

Join our store's mailing list for 10% off your first purchase*. Be the first to know of new artist editions and other artful products, plus deals and exclusive shopping opportunities. *Exceptions apply

New
A square pillow made of fabric featuring a repeating textile pattern with stylized green snakes intertwined with abstract brown shapes and bright orange spirals on a dark brown background.The back of a square pillow made of fabric featuring a repeating textile pattern with stylized green snakes intertwined with abstract brown shapes and bright orange spirals on a dark brown background. The top and bottom panels of fabric overlap in the center to create an opening.

FWM Exclusive

Moki Cherry x FWM

Jungel (pillow, 18 x 18 inches)

1

Description

Although never commercially produced in her lifetime, Moki Cherry created bold textile designs meant to surround and activate everyday life. Nearly sixty years later, with the support of her family, The Fabric Workshop and Museum has brought a design into being—printing it as full yardage for the first time. This posthumous realization extends Moki’s practice into the present, a gesture she would have undoubtedly embraced.

Jungel
Designed by Moki Cherry, 1970. Hand screenprinted by The Fabric Workshop and Museum, 2025.

Printed on cotton sateen
18 x 18 inches

We Also Recommend

Moki Cherry x FWM

Jungel (yardage)

About The Exhibition

A photo of a fabric-based artwork of the face of a three-eyed dragon staring directly at the viewer. The face is cartoonish and mostly symmetrical, with different colors of fabric emanating outwardly from its nose. It has a large red upper lip that bows upward, with colorful tassels hanging under its teeth.

The Living Temple: The World of Moki Cherry

This major retrospective is centered around Swedish visual artist and designer Moki Cherry (1943–2009). The exhibition brings together textiles, tapestries, paintings and drawings, concert posters, clothing, ceramics, sculpture, music, video, and archival materials to explore her omnivorous and omnipresent creativity. Building on the artist’s collaborative and multi-sensory approach, The Living Temple tells the story of Moki’s visionary process.