Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Bungle Bungles Series

Tuesday, May 5th, 2015

What I read about the structure of what’s inside these intriguing landforms took my attention.  So, I thought another in this series would feature the layered limestone and conglomerates using fine pieced strips in beige-cream/off white tones, surrounded by a solid band of brown to signify the outer and inner colours determined by the structure.  This outer colour is due to the tiny spaces in the stone being colonised by cyanobacteria which give earthy browns and golds to the outer few millimetres, and this deepens when the rocks have been rained upon.  Inside the rock remains white and nearly white/cream tones.

The time consuming work was the piecing. so when I’d done enough, I set the shapes I’d cut into the solid colours, darker to go to the front/nearest the viewer so to speak, thinking some sense of depth might result, and in a primitive way I think that’s been successful.  You’d think I’d have been able to work out that the black and white spotted fabric for the background just is not IT, though –

Bungle Bungles 4 blogbut, having just written that I am having second thoughts…..

  • I am not sure now if I will finish this off and quilt it etc, and it might remain a sample or study for something larger.
  • Then again, I could take the shapes out and re-set them in black – and might sometime when I’ve thought more about it.
  • I’m not sure about more cream piecing – but then again,
  • I could do cream cut-out shapes with machine stitched bands on them signifying the layered structure….

However – and here’s the reminder I periodically give about the value of making samples and small studies: this leads  the creative mind onward,  and I now have in mind something, perhaps two pieces, of much larger work.  After all, the BungleBungles are massive …. so with this in mind, there’s a considerable piecing I feel I will need to do now.  So some of this b/w dots plus some b/w print of work by a prominent Aboriginal artist designer, printmaker and painter, the late Jimmy Pike  have gone into a strong bath of black tea to tone down the white:

BungleBungles tea dyed blog

Many of Jimmy Pike’s beautiful linear patterns were reproduced on commercially available fabric and used in clothing principally I think under the Desert Designs label – having been away from Aus for so long I’m not sure what’s now available now, though.

 

Bungle Bungles 3 – Quilting Completed

Wednesday, April 29th, 2015

With the quilting completed – see previous post –

Bungle B ungles 3 quilting+ blog

and the binding sewn in pinned back for finishing, this piece is virtually finished.  The coverage by gold quilting is enough, I think, so don’t need to fill in small gaps with black quilting.

 

 

 

Bungle Bungles 3 – Quilting

Tuesday, April 28th, 2015

With the piecing all done, and layers in place, this afternoon I began the quilting  treatment.  Double lines of gold stitching have begun to appear on the piece, and I’m not sure where that will lead, and some of it might be black, but there is a fair bit more quilting required.  This is an area about 4″ x 5″.

Bungle Bungl;es 3 detail 2 blog

 

The dots I used on the fist piece are really too big for the shapes on this one, and so the bits of glitter provided by gold stitching seem to fit better with the smaller scale shapes.

Textile Exhibition Montevideo August 2014

Tuesday, April 28th, 2015

Last August I visited a wonderful textile show at MAPI, the Museo del Arte Precolumbino e Indigena.  A lovely small museum,  on Calle 25 de Mayo in the old city; you can easily find info on line at  http://www.mapi.uy/informacion_de_interes.html MAPI Montevideo

It was not until I found those photos today, that I realised why I hadn’t written anything about it at the time: late last August, several weeks before scheduled surgery ‘they’ suddenly brought the date forward – no emergency on my part, but there must have been a vacancy or something.  In the flurry of suddenly dropping everything, and the aftermath of recovery and rehab, this excellent exhibition was forgotten, and I’m sorry as it would have been nice to post it while the show was on.  Worse – and even though I remember the works – now I have to research some of the names and match them up with their works I photographed, as not all had a swing tag placed helpfully as this one!

This first exhibit is by one of my favourite textile artists here.   Siv Goransson produces wonderful garments and objects of felted wool.  Her work is found in the Manos del Uruguay shops and in the several artisan market galleries – one on the Plaza Cagancha and the other in the basement of the market building  on San Jose near Ejido, probably in other places too.   Some very special people have received one of her scarves that I buy from time to time, and mostly in typically glorious colour, and you can find lots of images here http://tinyurl.com/qy5hzvc.  This poncho however is in very dramatic black and white, with a lovely tasselled edge.  Very elegant.

 

siv goransson detail blog siv goransson full blog

 

 

As I now have some research to do for the others, I’ll make this into a series, the next post in which will appear in the  next couple of days.

Bungle Bungles, 3

Thursday, April 23rd, 2015

 

This afternoon I have been piecing – that is, cutting out different shaped pieces of fabric and sewing them together, which I know puzzles many bystanders around those of us who make ‘patchwork’ things including quilts.   Fabric is just a raw material to some textile artists, and thus no different from a skein of wool, a tube of oil paint,  a block of wood or stone, all to be worked by people with appropriate skills.  I’ve always loved sewing, and love piecing as a technique for surface design, which produces contemporary patchwork that despite appearances does in fact have connection with the traditional geometric patterned designs that most people think of as ‘patchwork’.  Patchwork, traditional and contemporary, is often backed with a layer or two of fabric and quilted by hand or machine to hold it all together in a completed object, usually bedding or clothing for warmth.

piecing #2

 

This pictured segment continues some piecing I began a couple of weeks ago, before undergoing surgery for a shoulder prosthesis.  My doc did say use the hand as much as possible, and this activity is well within the restrictions – of holding nothing heavier than a cup of tea, and not to try to raise the arm above shoulder level – well just now I can’t get it anywhere near the shoulder so there’s no danger there.  All the newly constructed left arm has to do is some gentle holding of small pieces of fabric as the machine slowly sews, and my other (good) arm whips out the pins, flying back and forth from the pin cushion as the machine gradually sews around the curved edge.  It’s all rather like setting in a sleeve.  Even as I was doing this today, a brainwave came for another piece in this theme, inspired by what I read recently about the structure of the sandstone karst formations in the The Bungle Bungles.   So as soon as I finish putting all these pieces together, I’ll start another to incorporate my new idea.  However, right now its time for a change of activity to include arm swinging and shoulder shrugging followed by a cup of tea.

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