Cave was born in 1959 in Missouri. As one of seven brothers being raised by a single mom, Cave often wore hand-me-down clothing. He used things he found around the house to alter the clothing to fit his own tastes. In the process, he developed a skill for giving new life to discarded objects.
Cave’s mother encouraged his creative interests and, after high school, he studied fiber arts in college. He also spent summer breaks studying dance through a program run by Alvin Ailey, an important Black choreographer. Back at college, when it came time to display his work, he didn’t simply drape it over mannequins. Instead, he had his friends wear it while dancing.
After graduate school, Cave moved to Chicago. Then one day in 1992, he was sitting in the park. “I just started collecting these twigs. I brought them back to the studio and started to build this object,” he recalls. “Subconsciously, yes, I knew it was a garment of some sort, but I was not thinking about it in that way. I was thinking about it as a form, as this sculpture . . . and then I realized I could put it on. The moment I put it on and started to move, it made sound.” Cave had just made his first Soundsuit—and it was the start of something big.