Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Yay!! My Work Selected For A Challenging Call

Thursday, September 28th, 2023
“Below The Tideline” / “Debajo de la Linea de Marea” 2023, 20cm x 20cm Fibreglass, glass beads; beading plus hand and machine stitch.

A few months ago I saw a call for entries for an exhibition here in Uruguay early next year. South American artists working in glass and/or textile were invited to submit a 20cm x 20cm piece combining both textile and glass materials and techniques in some way. The January exhibition will be along the coast at Maldonado, part of Punta del Este, the summer season playground for the rich and beautiful from Europe and other latin Americn countries. An online catalogue will be presented, too, so for exposure alone I thought it definitely worth trying for. 

My first thought was “fibreglass, that’s a textile!”, and my next move was to rummage in the cupboards for a long forgotten stash of large glass beads. On a visit to Egypt years ago, a textile artist friend living there took Mike and me to a glassblowing artist’s studio. I simply couldn’t resist gathering up a heavy half-full shopping bag of these huge beads, with no idea of what I’d do with them. I strung some into a necklace, which looked great, but was so heavy I could only wear it for about 3 hours. I don’t remember what I did with it, but probably gave it away.

I called a carpenter friend, PJ, who had some remnants he gave me to experiment with. through sample making I learned how to handle this stuff – and it is not at all like stitching on even weave linen!  For one thing it’s pretty slippery to work with, so there were handling problems requiring creative solutions.  After a week of fiddling around samplising, I followed PJ’s recommendation to visit a store where I could buy some fabric and was able to buy just one metre. I also bought some velo – (trans. veil) It’s very like a single layer of unwoven facial tissue and similarly delicate, which disappointed me a bit. Velo’s used as the final finishing layer on surfboards, for example, giving a smoother finish to the board, and probably making a difference to the performance in the water. I had decided not to get into the area of resins and toxic fumes etc, but did look up health and safety concerns for fibreglass itself, and that’s ok on its own, though it bothers some people when they get it on their skin (I didn’t). As a fibre it’s fairly heavy, and any tiny pieces fall, they don’t waft around in the air.

Considering techniques, to use,my first thought were of the counted thread and drawn thread embroideries I made when young, but the piece of fabric I had wasn’t closely enough woven, and so I turned to the creative embroidery I worked with in the 80s, in the style of Constance Howard and the other, mostly British, embroiderers of that era. Perfect – because in recent years, after a long period making quilted contemporary patchwork, my layered stitched artworks are again featuring hand stitch as a vital surface design element.

Glass beads from Egypt! The fabric is fibre glass, and the other bobbly things are another purchase I simply had to make in Egypt… they’re thread ‘buttons’ for traditional men’s clothing. I’ve always thought them quite beautiful but they’re not very robust – several are unravelling even though about all they’re ever done is travel a day or two in a suitcase, then sit in a drawer and about once a year just slip through my hands for a few minutes….

In this pic are several things I auditioned for the piece I eventually made. I had thought I’d hemstitch the edge, but the glass is too brittle to fold over into a hemstitched edge – in addition to which it is very slippery indeed – so although it looks like even weave linen, it doesn’t behave anything like it!! I had a fairly steep learning curve to handle and control it, while adapting my expectations a bit! And, in the end, I didn’t use the hemstitching, the grey ribbon or the two glass flowers.

Appliqued puffs, and crumpled fibreglass was machine sewn down before being hand embroidered over.
These large pieces of glass are heavy ~1.5 – 2.5cm across and ~0.5cm thick. Barely visible strips of nylon organza cut on the cross secure them under the strands of wandering fine glass beading.
Strings of beading and lots and lots of French knots add the textures that suggest encrustations in rock pools below the tideline.

I avoided googling to see what other artists are doing with this stuff, as I wanted to keep what I already envisaged within the exhibition’s prospectus, and it will be exciting to see what people have produced within those 20cm x 20cm measurements!

When I did get round to googling the uses of fibreglass fabric, I was astonished at the number of industrial, engineering, automotive and architectural uses of this material. It wasn’t easy to work with, but I would consider using it again if it was appropriate, or if a bright idea strikes me!

The exhibition opens early in January, and I’ll post the details of that closer to the time.

Looking Back From Quilt National 23

Monday, September 25th, 2023

As documented on the Dairy Barn’s website one of the jurors of the first Quilt National exhibition (1979), Gary Schwindler, wrote “American quilt making is now at a stage of experimentation and development as it prepares to take its place as a major form of artistic endeavour. This notion is supported by the variety of media employed and the number of directions indicated by the artists represented in QUILT NATIONAL ’79.….There has also been an increased interest in industrial materials and processes for artist purposes and a willingness on the part of “serious” artists to explore and enter into modes traditionally excluded from the status of “fine” art.” Further down that website, under History and Philosophy comes: “The works in a Quilt National exhibit display a reverence for the lessons taught by the makers of the heritage quilts. Many of the works hold fast to the traditional methods of piecing and patching. At the same time, however, the Quilt National artist is intrigued by the challenge of expanding the boundaries of traditional quiltmaking by utilizing the newest materials and technologies. These innovative works generate strong emotional responses in the viewer while at the same time fulfilling the creative need of the artist to make a totally individual statement.

That was a bold mission statement, and since my first appearance in a Quilt National (1993) the face of fibreart has changed enormously, so that what techniques and materials were deemed extraordinary back then have entered the textile art mainstream. However, I’ve always understood those words to be one of the main things QN jurors look for, and therefore have entered works that I felt went some way towards that ideal. They have influenced me to experiment a bit with technical ideas or consider using ‘different’ materials. I myself have never won any of the most innovative use of the medium awards, but I am proud of my works selected in 1993, 1995, 2005, 2007, 2021, and 2023, because in their time they were different, original, and well within the scope of Quilt National’s search for creativity and innovation in contemporary art quilt making.

These are my QN pieces, in order of appearance:

“Ora Banda”, 1992, 127cmh x 150cmw
LHS: “Obiri”, 1994, 70cm x 50cm (irregular shape photographed against black)
RHS: Colours in this detail are more accurate.
“Timetracks 1”, 2006, 109cmh X 94cmw
Timetracks 7″, 2008     74cmh x 99cmw      
  
“”Pandemic Pattern“, 2020, 72cm x 94cm      
Abstract Landscape Textures”, 2022, 190cm x 95cm

“Abstract Landscape Textures” was selected for Quilt National 23. I was unable to travel up to Athens OH to attend the opening last May, and my Exhibitor’s Copy of the Catalogue took several months to reach me here in Montevideo. So when ‘everyone’ online was discussing the exhibition, talking about the opening itself, the awards, and posting pics of attending exhibitiors pictured with their works, I had little to refer to or contribute to the discussion! But even so, there seemed less discussion of this year’s collection as a whole, and so far online I haven’t yet found an actual review or critique of the whole exhibition, either. I hope that once the collection comes down and is divided into the three touring groups that go to regional galleries and museums around the USA and several other countries, that more review articles will appear.

From what post-opening discussions there were, I had the impression that QN23 was a bit ho-hum, a view confirmed when I opened the pages for a good look at everything, including careful reading of the jurors’ statements and gallery director’s introduction. Of course, there’s no substitute for seeing the exhibition in real time, is there, but with the exception of John Lefelhocz’s beautiful work (“Like Words That Shape Poems…Like Notes that Shape Music” ) nothing leaped off the pages as ground breaking in technique or materials – and goodness I miss those close detail images that used to be included in the QN catalogue! There was nothing controversial, and it all seemed pretty safe to me. I even felt several people had studied with the same Big Name workshop teachers, and so yes, I am suggesting some works seemed more derivative than original. The two award-winning pieces I really did like were Cecile Trentini’s “Puzzled” (Most Innovative Material award) and Judith Martin’s “Under Drifting Stars” Handiwork award. The other award winners may have been spectacular, but the catalogue failed to show me that – detail shots of at least the award winning works would have been helpful. And, of course, the jurors can only select from the submitted entries!

Knowing some of the artists and their works, I felt the colour printing in the catalogue was a bit dull. But another angle is that perhaps these days there are many more high quality, equally prestigious calls for ‘the best contemporary quilts’. I will always try to have something to enter for future QNs, but several makers I know feel QN has lost some of its prestige, and there are probably some newer makers who know little of this biennial exhibition’s historic role in the art quilt world.

New Life For A Beloved Textile

Thursday, September 14th, 2023

In a previous post, “A Packable Souvenir From A Previous Life” , I described a Bima Wear caftan I bought over 45 years ago in Darwin, and which I wore for many years. Eventually I guess caftans went out of fashion, or maybe I just needed to wear something different on the occasions for which it had been so suitable, like informal drinks and BBQ gatherings. (It also doesn’t fit me well any more! )I could never send it to a thrift shop though so I brought it back from Australia last time we were there just months before the pandemic.

Anyway, we have just had a 2-week visit from our daughter Anna, who lives in southern New Jersey, only blocks from the coast, so she’s used coastal colours featuring blues, greys, white, and sandy colours in her living areas. On her last day here, she asked if she could have it, but after trying it on it wasn’t quite the kind of garment she’d ever wear. However, she felt it was iconic and even used that word for it, because she must have seen me in it hundreds of times. After a bit of brainstorming though, we agreed that the fabric, with those screen printed Big Birds / aka jabiru could make wonderful cushions, or better still a table runner! As I unpicked all the seams and hems to get the maximum use of the fabric minus the wear lines, I marvelled at the sturdy hand stitching still intact after all the countless machine washes…. which I’d never noticed, I guess because I’d never had to repair a section of the hem!

Cutting into the beautifully screen printed fabric just as little as possible to maximise the use of the printed area, it worked out really well, I think –

Jabiru table runner, 2023, ~1.8m x ~40cm, recycling the print border of a Bima Wear caftan c.1977.

As I worked on it the quite soft but clearly durable fabric it reminded me of early school uniforms Anna had in Mt. Isa, and the name Prestaline kept coming into my mind – so I checked online, and Prestaline is still being made in Australia, recommended for uniforms dresses tops etc – so I’m pretty sure that’s what the fabric is – a polyester/rayon blend, which fits with the feel and durability of the now former-caftan, and which I used several times for garments for myself back in my dressmaking days. Good to know I’ll be able to visit this beloved piece of re-purposed textile occasionally.

“In Fourteen Hundred And Ninety Two…

Monday, August 14th, 2023

Columbus sailed the ocean blue” go the famous first two lines from a children’s poem on American history of which I first learned while we lived in USA, 1987-94.

Probably in 1991, before the quincentenary of the discovery of what became known as The New World – the Americas, Quilters Newsletter Magazine announced some competition or call for an exhibition to go in their pages to help mark this huge event in modern world history. I don’t remember the exact details of it, however I clearly remember making my entry, which unfortunately was not selected:

“In Search Of The New World” 1992, 130cm x 130cm

Last week I realised that although this quilt was listed in my ‘master list’, I hadn’t noticed a photo of it anywhere for a very long time. Since then I have been searching, knowing it has to be in my computer somewhere – and eventually just an hour ago I found it in an external hard drive I haven’t accessed for years. Please share my joy! One possible reason for not finding it is I didn’t have the title exactly right in the search – duh. Anyway, I immediately re-saved it into this computer, and now it will probably pop up somewhere just because I’m no longer looking for it…

Detail “In Search Of The New World”, machine pieced and quilted.

I was a bit disappointed when my work was rejected, but I’d already had acceptance and rejection experience so took it philosophically. When the selected ones were published later that year, I saw there were some some much better ones than this one.

Now looking at it, I know the shiny blue fabric said ‘water’, and the earthy coloured strips said, to me anyway, ‘earth’. If you look carefully, in the detail shot you can see spherical shapes representing the round earth, (as many at that time still believed the Earth to be flat) but now I see those spheres were way too subtle, but it’s an interesting idea I might revisit some time. Probably the horizontal strips of fabric should have had some green in them, to suggest ‘land’. Plus the strips themselves were perfectly straight edged, not at all land like… I had not yet learned the basics of improvisational cutting and piecing, but If I’d known them then, those strips might have looked more like islands in the blue, and been more appealing. The best features of this landscape+history inspired work are the wonderful cerulean blue polished cotton furnishing fabric, and the inspired freehand watery machine quilting pattern.

Innovative Irregularity In 1993 …

Friday, August 11th, 2023

As so often happens when I’m looking for something in particular, although I haven’t yet found the thing I was looking for, I did come across a couple of older pieces I’d quite forgotten about, like this one, “Forecast Cooler, Windy”.

“Forecast Cooler, Windy” 1993, 98cm x 98cm, irregular edge, photographed against black.

I made this nearly 30 years ago, in 1993, while we were living in Denver. In that part of the country as the end of summer gives way to the Fall, leaves turn mostly yellow-browns as colour fades from everything except the evergreens in their dark to smoky greens. As the season advances and the weather becomes colder, it becomes quite windy, blowing the dry leaves to the ground.

Having recently learned the basics of improvisational cutting and piecing, I had begun to insert or reverse applique strips into backgrounds of freehand pieced designs – here signifying air movement across a vague suggestion of ‘Landscape’. The Bernina machine I had at that time had embroidery stitches that were programmable to either just keep sewing until you stopped them, or to have the machine stop after completing just one motif, so that was great to embroider individual motifs in gold metallic thread, scattering them across the quilt’s surface like leaves blowing in the wind. Machines like mine were being used to give some wonderful machine quilted textures as quilters explored their potential, producing relatively innovative stuff, with ‘art quilts’ still being a fairly new thing. What was really innovative in this work, to me, was the irregular shaping of the quilt’s edge. There was very little irregularity in edges then as not too many people had worked out how to use serious shaping on the sides and along the tops of quilts in such a way that the shaped bit didn’t flop forward, so any shaping was pretty modest by today’s standards.

Art quilt exhibitions were still relatively new, too, but rapidly spreading. I’m not certain, but it is very likely I made this to enter into a local art quilt exhibition like Front Range Contemporary Quilters, as Colorado textile artists were right at the forefront of these developments, which already included Quilt National, Visions; and most quilt guilds by this time had some art quilt sections in their members’ exhibitions. Wherever I entered it, I remember feeling I had to note on the paper entry form that the edges were deliberately irregularly shaped and that the quilt hung flat against the wall – I feared someone would see the image as incompetent workmanship 🙂 Within the next 2-3 years I’d produced several works with far more extreme shaping along the top, such as “Waterweave”. As I remember it, the Quilters Guild of New South Wales, as part of their effort to promote all forms of quiltmaking, traditional and art quilts, asked me to design an irregular shaped quilt with instructions to make it and finish such edges, to be a chapter in a book compiled by various art quilters in Australia… something like that, but the detailed factual info is in storage in Aus, along with my copy of the book, sigh.

Planning diagram and finished art quilt, Waterweave , 1996, 110cmw x 130cmh.

The link in the text just above the photo has some ideas on how to finish irregular edges – email me if you need further help. Of course these days, quel horreur – some people are just leaving torn or raw cut edges, without any binding or facing at all!

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