Diane Simpson’s Boshi refers to a Japanese word for ‘hat’, and its form represents the shape of farmers’ hats traditionally worn in East and South Asia. Simpson typically draws and sculpts from a single category of clothing at once, and so Boshi was made during a period in the early 1990s when she was exploring headgear such as bonnets, bowler hats, kerchiefs and hoods. Whilst each of these head coverings contains a particular set of cultural beliefs and rituals, the artist’s interest is primarily in the formal language: the fabric, the shape, the drapery, and the tension and balance between these qualities. She begins by drawing on graph paper, which she then transposes into sculpture; in Simpson’s practice, Boshi is unusual in its display not on the floor at a 45-degree angle, but mounted on the wall and viewed head-on like a painting. Constructed from enamel, steel and spunbond polyester (a web-like fabric often used in upholstery and medical clothing), the Headgear series represented the artist’s move away from MDF, which she used almost exclusively during the 1980s. In combining soft, translucent fabric with industrial steel, Simpson interweaves architecture with design and fashion.