My fiber collage quilts serve as a soft entry into navigating complex social tensions, using whimsy to guide viewers toward deeper connections and collective understanding. By layering and fusing printed fabrics through a raw-edge appliqué technique, I create vibrant scenes that model radical acceptance and invite engagement through curiosity rather than judgment. These works function as a tactile reminder that we can navigate challenging topics together, when we lead with joy and celebrate our shared discoveries.

works with bright colors, bold contrast, asymmetry, and thinks outside the box. After being raised in Ohio and then raising her own family in Massachusetts, she now lives with her husband in Northwest Montana among a generous handful of her cousins.

A creative kid, as a child she was inventing backyard games, crafting witches brews, creating homemade gifts, designing rubber-stamped cards, and cooking. She danced in high school, attended non-traditional Hampshire College where she designed her own course of study, and trained in the martial arts long enough to earn her black belt. She soon after joined a recreational circus school as both student and staff. As excited as a kid in a candy shop, she started quilting as a hobby just after walking into a fabric store for the first time. That was twenty years ago and she has never looked back.

Her first notable projects were an eclectic collection of immersive experiences for the public.  She wrote grants and received funding for a traffic-calming stilt-walking quilt parade, a pop-up tour of a quilt in progress, and a city-wide outdoor front porch quilt tour in Massachusetts during COVID. In the midst of the pandemic shutdown, she moved west with the whole family. The relocation brought changes in her community, studio, rhythm, and her art practice. Working now from a side table in a bedroom, she started making more fiber collages and focusing less on community collaborations. Her quilted work has toured internationally through SAQA’s Opposites Attract exhibition, as well as nationally in Threads of Resistance. Regionally, she is excited to have work tour at multiple museums in Montana, Idaho and Utah, to have a design featured on an electrical box in downtown Kalispell and to have work available at the Radius Gallery in Missoula and the Walking Man Frame Shop and Gallery in Whitefish. She has the recent honor of receiving a Art Works Capstone Grant from the Montana Arts Council. She’s eager to continue discovering joy and playfulness in future bodies of work and to find new ways to expand her reach, inviting others to join in the fun.

Photo credit: Eileen Bobinski

Audrey Hyvonen

Learn about how Audrey from AudreyHyvonen.art (formerly Big Top Quilts) creates fabric collages with quilting techniques!

Learn more about her favorite community arts org: The Making Place: www.themakingplacemt.com

Thank you to our amazing volunteer member and videographer, Blake with ItsRSRVED for shooting, editing, and composing the music for this video! Follow them on Instagram @_itsrsrvd_/