Mark Making and Repetition in Artistic Expression

The iconic British embroiderer Constance Howard once said in a workshop I had the fortune to attend – “If you make a mistake or don’t like it, don’t unpick what you’ve done, just sew something more over the top of it.” Sooo very liberating – imperfections – work around them! Muslim artists and craftsmen always deliberately place at least one, but more likely several, mistakes in every work in acknowledgement that only Allah himself can create something perfect. You might have to look carefully to see them, but they will be there, whether it’s the mosaic lined dome in a mosque or a few stitches out of place in a richly coloured, exquisitely patterned silk carpet.

This morning I visited the website of an artist, Marlene Huissoud, onr of whose images on Pinterest intrigued me, and clicked to visit the site it was published on. At first I thought I was seeing a huge hand stitched buttonhole work, such as the beautiful works by @lindzeanne . As it turned out though, this artist’s work is produced by a lot of repetitive, very intense hand drawn mark making patterns, using black marker pen. Some of her works I relate to particularly, as any kind of decorative stitching is mark making with needle and thread, and I adore repetitive patterns, too.

In the text with some of her images was this statement “The A3 format is used to canalize the density of these simple geometric forms that I reproduce automatically with a simple pen. The mistakes of the hand process take an important part in this failure of reproducing geometric prints.”

Detail, “Odds and Ends”, 2023
Detail, “Make Do and Mend” 2023

Somehow related to this is the number of times I’ve been stitching along, quite absorbed in my podcast or recorded book, and suddenly realised that regularity has crept back into my stitching. Quite often in each of these two works I had to unpick a few stitches and re-sew them unevenly as planned. (Yes, yes Constance, I know, I know ….)

(I provide direct links in my text where I think readers might like further information, and always welcome readers’ questions and comments in reply)

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