Beaded Flapper Dresses

October 8th, 2010

While in Perth recently I was taken along to the WA Historical Society in Nedlands, where the display at the time was of 1920’s era beaded evening gowns,  collectively known as ‘flapper’ dresses.  I had my camera with me, of course, and was delighted with the display of beautifully preserved and conserved garments on display.  I don’t know when that display comes down but if you are in Perth you might inquire – it is well worth going to see if it is still up.I should have blogged this at the time, but time and will did not come together in a busy visit back to our home city. 

Enjoy these – and I will put up a couple more some time.  Every display I have seen there has been interesting, so keep an eye on what’s going on there.  Worth popping in if you are visiting Perth .

Antique Fragments

October 5th, 2010

These and some other interesting Andean artifacts from Precolumbian times are on display here in Montevideo at MAPI – the museum of precolumbian and indigenous art, in the Cuidad Vieja / Old City. Handily located near the port where cruise ships and the buquebus ferry come in, it’s well worth a visit if you happen to be passing through, just two short blocks up and one block over from the Mercado del Puerto, which is a marvellous place to enjoy lunch amid the lively crowds and music, browse and perhaps shop, before visiting local galleries.  A visitor can easily spend a whole day in this interesting part of the old city.  

This woven fabric, of cotton and alpaca wool, is from the Peruvian Wari culture dating between 600-1000AD.  I just know if had been able to reach inside the glass case and touch it, it would have been sooo soft… you could tell just looking at it.  Each motif+hole was about 1″sq.

This knitted cotton fragment of two joined pieces, comes from the same time and area.

In a case on its own beside the case containing the other pieces, was this fascinating 4-cornered cap/gorro, missing one of its horn-like trims.  It was made of cotton and alpaca wool, with a fine geometric design worked in a tufted or velvet like texture.  I felt from the back appearance of the loose fagment lying beside the cap that it was embroidered, with something like velvet stitch – or maybe the velvet texture was woven in – either is possible, and I am only going by what  I saw without being able to touch.  I recall seeing a similar piece in a museum in Lima, I think it was, where it was made clear this kind of hat was worn by a very high status noble.  From the same area and era.

Recent Travels

October 3rd, 2010

We were recently in the city of Barcelona for a few days en route back to Australia – where we hit Perth in time to vote in the breathtakingly close election  that took weeks to decide absolutely.

We so enjoyed the city of Barcelona on the southern edge of the Mediterranean, an area that has been lived in by people since Paleolithic times – the history museum there is fabulous.  The food, the architecture, the museums we visited, the ambience – it was all great, we didn’t see everything we could have but well, you have to leave something to go back to, right?  I did paddle in the Med though.  Wandering down the Rambla that goes from the central plaza down to the coast, in one long zone there are lots of living street sculptures we enjoyed – here are a couple to give you a smile today:

Two New Collectors

October 3rd, 2010

It’s always a joy when someone wishes to exchange their hard earned money for some of my art. Since I enjoy creating and making textile and fibre art I don’t think of it as ‘work’, even though it is, and as ‘work’ is occasionally frought with difficulty or stress even, between concept and completion.  Today I am hoping that my two newest collectors will have many years of enjoyment with my works in their collections.

This week I was pleased to see my 12″ square in the online 2010 SAQA Benefit Auction was purchased by a collector in the USA, Francie Gross.  I am embarrassed to say I forgot to photograph it before sending it off, but it is in the style of Timetracks 11

  a portion of which is shown here.

It is still up on the auction pages, 2b, at the SAQA online auction which enters its third week this week with the works shown on pages 3a and 3b – just click the link on the page above the pics andyou will go to each in turn.  Perhaps you’ll make a bid for some of the interesting pieces still to come under the hammer in the next few days.

A few weeks ago I sold two works to an international collector, a personal friend, who chose “Timetracks 16” and also this one:

 

It’s not shown in my website, partly because I haven’t ever decided just which category it belongs in, or exactly what name to settle on it.  For a long time it went as ‘Untitled’ which I always think is an artist’s cop out. 

Yet it is an important work, because it took me into the “Desert Tracks” works that followed and will probably be added to over time. It is a work focused on those aspects of the traditional ancestors of modern art quilts that appeal to me and appear repeatedly in my own work – blocks/units, repetition, and hand quilted surface patterning.  The finished edges are applied with a gold metallic fabric, double layered and cut on the cross, left ufinished – also from a time when I was beginning to consider less conventional bound edgings on my work, and burned edges appeared soon after making this one.  It has always looked good in local exhibitions here, and I know it will be well placed in  its new home.

It just occurred to me that someone with some clout in the art world should declare a day each year to be designated “International Art Collectors’ Day”.  I still have the very first painting I bought, nearly 55 years ago with 8s 6d of the 12s pocket money I was given to spend at the annual school fete.  It is a postcard-size watercolour of a landmark mountain range in northern Tasmania where I grew up, and I remember choosing it from a whole table of perhaps 50 or so little watercolured landscapes, probably done by the art teachers at the school, and certainly framed by one of the parents’ framing business – handy use for the their framing offcuts, probably!  It’s still in the original frame – I think I will do it the honour of having it framed in a more modern frame next time I’m back in Aus – I have always loved it.  In addition my parents had several watercolours painted by a cousin of my father’s, John Nixon Gee.  Dad took me along to JN’s house one morning when I was maybe 6, and I remember watching him paint a little while I was there.

Naming A Quilt

September 2nd, 2010

… or any other art work for that matter.  In fact, until today, since I know I have some way with words, I had never considered ‘naming’ much of a problem really.  I realised too that I have always considered naming my art works an actual part of the whole process, from initial design idea to last stitch.  The naming process may be a pop-up , the-lightbulb’s-on kind of moment at anystage; I may make little memos to myself at various times to return later; or I may need to do some serious deliberation at the end, even if I have been vaguely thinking about it a while.   To do this, I write lists of words or pairs of words, get help from Roget’s Thesaurus of synonyms perhaps,  and develop a short list of 2-3 titles to try for size against the finished work.  It could take little bursts of activity over hours or several days- sleep on it, etc.  If I still can’t decide I might consult with DH, but by one of these means I do arrive at the final choice, name it by writing the title on the back of the work, and it’s done.

What brought these thoughts to mind is  that today a well known quilt artist, Nancy Cook, asked two or three thousand of her art quilting colleagues on two lists for their suggestions for a name for her most recent work, which she commented is an entry for Quilt National’11 (entries close in a week, she is running against the clock here!)    Occasionally people do this, giving us a blog link to check the piece out and give feedback.  I just had never seen someone openly looking for a title for a QN entry although probably it has been done often enough –  but usually who would know? 

I linked through to the image on her blog.  Nancy said this is not the exact one she was entering but (as many of us know she does work in beautiful series)  contains important elements of her actual entry.   Because of my strong view on this -my readers would expect no less ;-p   on principle I didn’t make any title suggestions, but sent her the possible naming approaches I outlined above – which were probably not new to her, and no doubt people have others.  That QN entry form can cause a bit of panic as we all know.  And, most likely, Nancy probably thought of a great name all by herself as soon as she put the call out.   

In my mind anyway, this raised the following issues:

  1. If  she were to choose a title suggested by someone in the comment section of her blog, ie this is in a very public way, would it then mean she should include this person’s name on the entry form as a collaborator? 
  2. Should the person who suggested the chosen title then expect some % of prize money the maker might be awarded ?

I emailed the kernels of this post to Nancy a few hours ago, before even thinking about blogging on this today – she thanked me for my coments in such a way that I feel sure she will not take this as any kind of personal attack.  So those of you getting up a head of steam to hit me with fiery riposts defending Nancy Cook and her work, please hold your fire, re-read my post and understand this post is not about Nancy and her work, it’s just an interesting entering issue I hadn’t considered before.

And good luck to fellow QN11 entrants!!! – mine’s  already there and processed, according to an acknowledgement email  yesterday.

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