Auditioning Skies For Tiny Landscapes

October 5th, 2020

The piece I have in mind involved one of two options, one being hand sewing over strips of coloured fabric, as I’ve done a bit of lately; or placing lots of little landscapes against some kind of ‘sea’ background. That really needed me to make a bunch from which to choose, so in the past few days I made these 35. As I worked on them, it was easy to forget how tiny these little landscapes really need to be, with some ending up too big to go into the layout on the 40cm x 60cm format. Clearly some I want to use I’ll have to trim down to the size of the smallest ones here:

I mean these earthy coloured abstracts to convey the variety of landscape colours in our huge continent nation, not to be actual pictures of anywhere. They’re really memories of ‘home’ and all that word conjures up, meaning I can’t listen to certain songs without tearing up a bit, as in “Our home is girt by sea.”

In the group photo above, the difference between the sprayed blues I’ve used conveys different moods that can be felt in a landscape during changing weather. Each was carefully auditioned before I cut into a sky colour. Here’s an example – the blue spray was onto a couple of pieces of light grey shibori fabric, and using one of these I felt would give the feeling of an approaching storm across a flat landscape that I have so often seen and experienced, so I went with the upper left option.

Auditioning sky fabric options: final choice upper left. Mood – stormy.

I find I can do a maximum of 3-4 hours only on this each day, after which I need a change of activity, or other things call for my attention, anyway, so the plan of action from here on is:

  • Select the 24 little pieces I most love, bearing in mind that not all Australia is iconic red sandy desert, so include plenty of greeny ones.
  • At least some of those will need to be trimmed or even re-cut and sewn to make much smaller. They’re so fiddly that for one or two it might just be simpler to find more of those little scappy bits and sew another.
  • By ‘trimmed’ I don’t mean cut to a square or rectangular shape; I mean to preserve the irregular edges to a degree.
  • Arranging them in their 24 spots on the background.
  • Decide if any stitching or applique needs to be done to the ocean part of the background before attaching the landscapes.
  • Making some samples to help decide whether to applique them by machine or hand, and what thread(s) to use for that.

The Challenge Of Hanging Irregular Shaped Quilts

October 1st, 2020

An art quilt maker FB friend recently asked for suggestions about how to display a 6ft diameter round work she had finished. That’s a large round piece right there.

Someone suggested putting several hanging sleeves containing slats or what Americans call cover strip (wood approx, 2.3cm x 0.5cm x width of work minus 2-3cm) between close to the top and down to the widest point of the circle, leaving the rest hanging – I’ve often seen this done, and to my ctitical eye it never ever sits properly – there’s always a combination of sagging and stretching, making it both impossible to get the textile sitting flat and also drawing attention to the multi-rod hanging system behind the quilt. And the hanging system should never distract the eye from the work itself.

Though I’ve never felt the need to make a round quilt, I have made plenty with serious shaping across the top, and two layers of cotton fabric with some standard batting in between will in time flop forward if it doesn’t have some support. Here is “Tropical Waters” that led to the Ebb&Flow series and became known as “Ebb&Flow 1”

I made this quilt to illustrate the article I was invited to write for Down Under Quilts, published in 2004. In the article I outlined how I reinforced the shapes that rise above the line your eye draws across from left to right at the lowest points in the wavy shape – behind which is a standard sleeve+hanging rod. Those shapes have some template plastic cut to fit up into during the construction phase, before quilting – and yes your sewing machine will stitch through the plastic inside. That plastic extends down below the level of the sleeve, and the diagrams and text go into that, so that on the wall it doen’t have anything flopping down.

Diagrams 4-8 detail use of reinforcing plastic as outlined in the text.
Presented with permission, https://www.practicalpublishing.co.uk/

I think these diagrams from my article are self explanatory for someone who sews moderately well, but if you want further detail, the next images are scans of the text of the article:

Presented with permission, https://www.practicalpublishing.co.uk/

And finally, intructions on how to make the quilt using the freehand improvisational construction, still not so well known back in 2000 as it is now. Sorry they’re just a little fuzzy, but contact me if you have any questions.,

Presented with permission, https://www.practicalpublishing.co.uk/

But there’s another way to tackle serious shaping, too. You cut or have a carpenter jigsaw cut for you, a shaped board (just a bit smaller than the outer edge of your quilt, see black line of approximate shape) with several holes drilled into it for hanging on the wall; these match up with the nails or picture hooks you installd where you want to hang it. On the front side of the shaped board, you position and either glue or staple strips of Velcro just in from the edge.

Kimberley 1″ 70cmhx 100cmw, 1996. Photographed on black background.

To hang the quilt, first put the board in place. Then position the quilt so that the velcro strips stick together, and before you press into place firmly, check so that the whole work hangs straight down and flat against the wall.

The 3 pages scanned and included in this post were originally published as an article by myself, “Irregular Shapes” Down Under Quilts Magazine  #78,  pp 33-37.

Sky Fabrics For Tiny Landscapes

September 30th, 2020

As I commented recently, I use very litttle blue fabric, and so don’t have many bits in my scrap bags. As I auditioned the scrap bag contents for this project, it was clear that what I had wouldn’t be enough for the ~30 tiny landscapes I have in mind. Australian skies are bright and clear, though perhaps not as intensely blue as in the little landscapes on the right, all of made about 1996-7.

Most of my other blues were very pale or greyish, including a couple of pieces of light grey sashiko dyed fabric. Solution: spray paint them all! I watered down some ultramarine acrylic paint, put that in a small spray bottle, took them all out onto the back lawn and did just that.

I’m thrilled with the result that all the pieces are colour related but different; and I love those formerly light grey shibori pieces which remind me of approaching stormy skies. I need to do a couple of broody landscapes featuring them.

I love working this way, and there’s something very zen about sifting and selecting colours and textures, strip by strip, to compose a tiny landscape. The process is for every seam: select two, cut at the same time, sew, iron, repeat… my iron’s within reach, just beyond the RHS of the photo. At this scale it is certainly fiddly, but listening to an absorbing Harry Hole mystery (Jo Nesbo’s “Knife”) I really don’t notice the time passing.

Planning A New Small Work

September 26th, 2020

After a couple of great weeks doing 3D textile sculptures with Clarissa Callesen, https://www.alisonschwabe.com/weblog/?p=5918 and https://www.alisonschwabe.com/weblog/?p=5942 the next workshop by Vinny Stapley isn’t something I want to launch into just now. Though her textile art is lovely, I have downloaded the workbook, watched the video and put it aside for another time.

Right now I’m more interested in the 40cm x 60cm art quilt I will make to submit for SAQA Oceania regional exhibition for next year, themed Oceania: Distance And Diversity” That’s broad enough that I can produce a piece that both fits into that concept but which also belongs within my body of work. I’ve been thinking about how to convey in fabric and stitch something distinctive about our Australian continent nation. I have approached this many times, and it’s something I never tire of.

Top L-R: On the Edge Of The Golden Mile 1986, Distant Shores 1986, Outback Landscape 1987. Lower L-R: Pilbara 1996, Ticket To Munmalary 1997, Small Landscapes ~1998-9

Landscapes have either appeared literally in my works or underlain abstract expressions of it. Shapes and textures resulting from the geomorphological cycle or erosion/deposition translate to how I see landscape as a metaphor for life itself. I’ve been browsing pics of my own more recent works, plus things I’ve pinned to my own Pinterest boards, especially those titled lines and shapes, and contemporary hand stitch.

Detail views: Top L-R: Timetracks 16, 2009: Pandemic Pattern, 2020; Desert Tracks 5, 2007; Lower L-R Regeneration 2, 2020; Untitled 2020; Decay 2, 2008.

The words ‘…girt by sea…’, a phrase from our national anthem, are on my mind, so I’m feeling Australia’s natural landscape elements need to be surrounded by, edged or backgrounded by, blue representing the sea. I have some lovely hand woven blue cotton I’m considering using as background to the ‘landscape bits’. I’ve done ‘auditioning ‘samples from two angles –

(a)

Hand and/or machine sewn lines suggesting waves: L-R: Pearlescent, hand better than machine. Blue metallic – too dark. Large silver cone great by hand or machine. Smaller silver one – brighter, great by hand or machine. Glittery hologram thread – really fiddly, impossible by hand, needs too much tension adjustment which is not worth it considering I don’t have a full reel, anyway.

(b)

Glittery party fabric bonded to the blue cotton … interesting potential.

On our continent, there’s a huge variety of landscape colours and textures to consider using in my work on this theme. I’m thinking of either a series of little landscape collages, or strip assemblies – and at this time, it could go either way.

3D Inspirations 4

September 25th, 2020

This morning I ‘finished off’ this second group of sculpted fabric forms I’ve made in this second week of the Clarissa Callesen workshop. You can keep going until eternity with all this – its very calming and soothing to make unit after unit, and though my composition might actually do with a few more bits, I think I felt I’d reached the point where I had to stop some time. Then I embellished a number some of them with stitch, using french knots, stemmed french knots, running stitch, simple chain stitch and a simple irregular couching. Wandering with a needle is just how I normally stitch whatever I’m doing.

The daily Q&A sessions have been compiled into a video you can replay – which is like another instruction tutorial, so definitely enriching. This morning Clarissa answered a question from a student on what sort of notebooks and workbooks she keeps. This blog being essentially my own artist’s diary or workbook, I was really interested to hear her approach – ie she almost apologetically outlined how she doesn’t keep the classical artist’s notebook (which many artists and aspiring artists have come to believe as being almost as essential as doing the work itself) In her own words she isn’t a particularly good drawer, and rather than draw or sketch, she takes photos of things she likes. She prints photos or parts of them off, and places them around her studio. She has no particular way to organise samples she makes. This has a lot in common with my own system, and was quite interesting to hear.

Another part of the discussion was of armatures, structural supports for creations that are not flat, ranging from low relief up to completely 3D, or in the round as a few students have been doing. Down the years, virtually all my art has been 2D, with a few exceptions such as these works dating back many years:

3 Tetrahedrons (Morse, Fairy Bread, Wave) 15cm, 2016.
Fabric vessels, each ~25cm x 10cm 1994-6; Crows ~15cm 1996;
Golden Eagle Nugget ~25cm x 9cm x 3cm 1987
Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS).

All images and text are © Alison Schwabe
Reproduction of any kind is expressly prohibited without written consent.

Translate »