Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Alice in Wonderland, Elizabeth in Dartmoor

In the deepest part of the shade in the middle of this pic will soon be a small fire pit so I can do eco printing next to my outdoor studio while I'm rusting a few feet away.  Can't wait.
My oakleaf hydrandea's blooms are turning from white to pink.  I have so few flowers in my yard that I get goosebumps looking at this plant.  Alice (variety)-my big oakleaf is doing well in this acidic soil under the walnut trees.  She survived nearly 3 years in a pot before I got her planted. 

One of these days I'll have to get some gardening advice from my dear friend Elizabeth.  Now SHE has a garden!  Can't ask now though as she is in England having the time of her life and coincidently is traveling with my rusted scarf again--this time in search of Sherlock (rather than Doc Martin).  Read all about it at her lovely blog 2ndhandpaper here.  Gorgeous pictures!  Thanks Elizabeth! 

Here's Alice in all her oakleafed glory cozying up to my studio lattice fence.

Friday, June 15, 2012

My helper


Darcy likes to get involved.  Actually she attacked the fabric as I spread it out because the wind was lifting it.  Despite having only one eye she is pretty dang quick with those claws.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

First Crop

So glad to be back in studio.  Injured knee has prevented me from getting around on the uneven ground since before Memorial Day.  Feeling a little braver now.  These are soaking wet after hosing them down.  Expect a shift in color when they are washed and dried.  Seeing some pale yellow now which might not be clear in the photos.  
Water and tea--no vinegar this time around.
Both ends are pinned to clothesline here to prevent the wind from whipping the silk and ruining the hem.  Really gusty today, but oh so beautiful outdoors.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Fabienne's Gift

Fabienne Rey, a dear online friend from the Netherlands has sent me a wonderful gift.  The package arrived last week, chock full of crocheted doilies and embroidered dresser scarves with little bits and bobs of color.  I haven't photographed the color pieces yet.  But here are the doilies.  The one at left was knitted rather than crocheted.  It only measures 5 inches across!

I have a collection of doilies that started with saving ones my mom made.  I've added to it over the years and found several last year on a couple trips to antique stores. Recently, I've become very interested in square doilies.  Fabienne sent me two.  This pinwheel design is gorgeous.
Some of the pieces are really small.  Perhaps they were meant to be coasters, or placed under a vase.  I'm not sure.  This one (at left) is only about 3 1/4" across. 

Below is the largest that Fabienne sent.  Heavy thread and stiff with starch, this one measures 14 1/2" in diameter.
It has occurred to me to continue what I started last year in the collaboration show-- of incorporating the vintage doilies into my rust work.  I will have to think on that a while. 
I've never seen a doily like this one.  It is unique in color and pattern. 
This is a pineapple doily and was my mom's favorite pattern.  We had doilies similar to this over our house.  There are lots of variations on the pattern.  Mom once started to crochet me a pineapple table cloth.  The portion I have is over 30 inches in diameter and far from finished.  Unfortunately I don't know how to crochet! 

In closing I have to announce that Fabienne's beautiful work with eco dyeing and printing is now on exhibit in France.  I wish I could sprout wings and fly over to see it.  You can see pictures and read all about it here.  (use the translator if you don't read French!) 
http://manomanie.over-blog.org/article-exposition-captures-d-empreintes-textiles-de-memoires-105406646.html
Thank you Fabienne for the fabulous gift. 

Friday, April 20, 2012

Lucky me!


This gorgeous piece is mine now since I won the bid at the Friends of Art auction last week.  It's by Erica Iman, an MFA candidate at SIUE who usually works in ceramics or sculpture.  The piece is called Formation and it measures about 19x17 inches. The media is iron oxide on paper (mounted on board).   I suppose you can guess why I had to have it.  Another of Erica's donations won the Founder's Award and $500.  Her thesis show opens Saturday night April 21 at the Historic Lemp Brewery in St. Louis. Congratulations and much success to her!

Besides the relationship to rusting, I meant to add that the way the iron oxides behaved on the paper is very similar to the reticulation that occurs when tusche dries on a litho stone.  I love the effect.  It's also possible to coax it happening on copper plates as well for etching.  Such a beautiful thing when it happens.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

33rd Annual Friends of Art SIUE Auction-the fiber connection


Pardon me for not posting lately--I tend to have a one track mind and my mind has been on some volunteer work I do for the Friends of Art, a non profit organization connected with my alma mater.  We are planning an art auction, the proceeds of which benefit the visiting artist program in the Department of Art and Design at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville.

Anyhoo, since last fall I've been photographing all the work, posting on facebook and supplying images to our webmaster so that visitors can see the catalog of items.  If you are on facebook, be sure to stop by Friends of Art SIUE to see the catalog. The above item is my contribution to this year's 33rd annual auction.  You've seen the fabric before in previous posts here and here.  My friend Lillian Bates who owns By Design boutique in Alton agreed to partner with me.  She will make a custom garment with my silk for the lucky bid winner.  Lillian's been sewing for years and dreamed of creating her own fashion line.  Her shop is a little slice of heaven and now she is also offering classes in sewing for beginners to advanced techniques.  Here's a sampling of her work.  If you click on the picture above you can read the details of the donation.

Samples of Lillian's work above.  The fabulous fabric on the left is embroidered with bumblebees!  The 2nd dress is fabric of Lillian's own creation using thread and wash away stabilizer.  The 4th dress is a custom wedding gown.

Confluence Over Ogallala Reservoir c2009 Laura Strand
Friend, colleague, collaboration partner and Head of Textiles at SIUE, Laura Strand has donated this gorgeous jacquard weaving for the auction.  Confluence Over Ogallala Reservoir was woven for Laura's solo show at Jacoby Arts Center for the 2009 Innovations in Textiles event.  It is around 50 inches wide.  Laura is always generous for the auction.  She has donated weavings the last several years, but wow is this one a doozy!

Three scarves by Erin Vigneau Dimick, using tie-dyed t-shirts L and R.  Center is recycled wool, cashmere, and angora
Another collaboration partner, Erin Vigneau Dimick, who also teaches at SIUE, has donated three scarves.  Erin has been making scarves and other fashion using upcycled used clothing.  Erin was recently interviewed for one of the local papers in anticipation of the auction.  She is also launching a blog but it is in very early stages yet.  I'm sure she'll get some posts up when her bookarts class winds down this semester.  She does incredible work with embroidered text on vintage textiles and clothing in her other artistic life.  I'll be writing about her soon regarding our work together last year.

Another highlight of the auction is the work of Deborah Waldman-Pontious who has been whipping up dazzling coats for several years.  A former student of Laura Strand's she recently was invited to audition for Project Runway and we are all rooting for her success.  The wrap coat on the left is brown and turquoise rayon acetate outer with a pumpkin silk lining.  The jacket on the right is black print cotton velvet.  

More fiber work was donated from current and past students of Laura's.  And there is much much more to see of every medium of art-paintings, drawings, prints, sculpture, glass, photography, graphics and mixed media-donated by students, alumni, faculty and friends in the community.  With 195 items in the live auction and 75 items in the silent auction, this is one of the biggest events we've ever hosted!

Consider yourself invited!  If you live in southern Illinois or the St. Louis area this is a great opportunity to get in on the action and add to your art collection.
WHEN:  Thursday, April 12    6 pm preview, 7 pm live auction begins
WHERE:  satellite campus of Lewis and Clark Community College, 600 Troy Road, Edwardsville, IL
ADMISSION:  $5 (free to current SIUE students, donors, FOA members and volunteers)
Cash bar, free snacks and tons of fun await you.  

LIKE us on Facebook at Friends of Art SIUE
Or visit the website at www.siuefriendsofart.com

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Workshop on Rusting

Don't you just hate when you forget to do something important?  I taught a workshop on rusting last week at SIUE.  Brought home all my show and tell, my bags of goodies, my supplies and the three scarves I did -- and after lecturing students to wash their workshop fabrics, etc. etc.,  I dumped my stuff and went to work on a volunteer project I'm involved with.

One of Professor Laura Strand's experiments on cotton napkin


Eight days later--tonight I was chatting with one of the students who sat in on the first day of the workshop and chided her for not washing her fabric.  Guess what?  I hadn't washed mine.  And some rusting had continued on one I'm sure.  I should have neutralized it right away.  The others not so bad, but then I put two pieces in to soak a while ago.  One was very dark and a lot of the excess seeped into the water and further stained the cloth.  Lesson learned.  You'll see from the pictures how it changed.  Of course I'm looking at it wet now and the  scarves are in the washer now.  Will post an update farther down.

This student wrapped her fabric with a horse bridle made of chain.
Of course that's not my only regret.  I should have been taking pics throughout the workshop or had one of the students do it.  When I remembered my camera was in my purse the work was done and I only got shots of the fabric on the clothesline after students had rinsed their experiments in the textile lab.  Too many things to keep track of.  I was too focused on preparing my slide lecture and forgot to write down the note to take pics.  But all went well.  The students produced some fabulous first time experiments.

Chains were used to make this beautiful piece.  On silk I think.
We had free use of the sculpture yard to experiment wrapping and laying out cloth for rusting.  Of course there was iron all over the place well rusted.  And though there were an abundance of pipes around, several people chose chains to wrap fabric around.

Lisa Forsyth, a fellow fiber artist from St. Louis who was in grad school with me came on the first day to wrap some fabric.  The piece at left is silk organza that was bundled around big washers inserted into folds of the cloth.  She had a 2nd piece but I haven't seen it yet.  I suspect it's the piece wrapped on the pipe in the wagon at the top of page.

Detail of student work on a lopsided piece of organza.  The results were spectacular.  Looks like natural stone

 

Another beautiful student piece that utilized chains.
In hindsight--we should have been running around documenting what everyone was doing!  I warned students that I rarely document my own work in progress and I know what it was like in grad school and since.  It was always a chore for me despite knowing how important it can be in process oriented tasks. I didn't then and don't now keep a sketch book and only remember to photograph half the time.

In three hours on that first day, there was my lecture, then showing of actual fabrics, followed by instructions and then a move downstairs to the covered sculpture patio to try our experiments.  I demonstrated my wrapping technique but everyone was so excited to get started on their own experiments and there was so little time left in the class that it was a mad dash to grab, consult, wrap and protect with plastic until the next class 2 days later.  At the end of that day I thought it would be a miracle if we had results.  Oh me of little faith!

I'm dying to see the silk gauze piece above...no room to spread it out on the clothesline.  Remarkable results given the transparency of this fabric.  The whole organza piece that I pictured above in detail can be seen on the left.



Shannon Norton, a metalsmith student at SIUE, who also happens to be one of my long ago high school students, came for the first day of the workshop by skipping out on her metals class.  (Thank you Professor Paulette Myers!)  I caught her just as I was packing my car on the last day to leave and urged her to open her bundle before it went to far.  It was Shannon I was chatting with this evening when I realized I hadn't washed my own fabric.

There were 10 or 11 students in the workshop.  My photos have only showcased about half.  Hoping to go back out to SIUE soon to see the end results and more experiments and perhaps sit in on a critique.



My own experiments.  At this point they had not been rinsed...just shaken out and taken home to dry on the line outside.  That was March 15.  They were washed late tonight (23rd).  The design on the left was a complete shock. As the demo piece, it had been done hurriedly with very little tea and no presoak.

The middle scarf as you will see has lost the almost white background near the top because I left it to soak too long instead of doing a straight rinse first.

These 2 details are from the scarf on the left that surprised me.  Though I'd had students presoak their fabric before the experiments were started, I completely forgot about doing it to my fabric.  If memory serves this was spritzed with water, folded, and sprinkled with tea dust in a wavy pattern.  The range of color and design is amazing and I'm anxious to try more dry starts in future.

I usually use vinegar.  And of course I can never predict the outcome anyway.  The pipe was from the sculpture yard and had never been used for this purpose before.  Its special qualities might very well have been unique to the process.

This scarf was done at home for the workshop.  It was wrapped closely around a large spring (perhaps from a garage door?) and tied with string that fit into each groove.  As I wrapped I inserted ivy leaves against the rust.  No clear leaf prints are visible-just vague shapes lighter in color.  The string made some wonderful hazy violet colors.  The range of color in this scarf is also delightful especially with the many little black spots that are created by the spring where the string touches.

I attempted another zebra print using my auger and the results are somewhat similar to a previous scarf, but no near white areas.  In fact this design's lightest areas darkened considerably through the soaking I mentioned doing this evening.  You can see the difference here in this detail from near the top of the scarf as compared with the picture of the scarf on the clothesline.  A lot of purple/violet colors developed throughout the piece as well as rich blacks and some strange greens at the bottom and almost pure yellow as you'll see from the center portion of the scarf. The streaks you see are a result of the auger standing nearly upright while it rusted.  All the juices were running!


The dark is inky black--a result of reduction rather than oxidation.  There is no trace of orange rust on this piece.



Detail 3 of the bottom of my new zebra scarf .  Am puzzling over what created the greenish colors.  It is unique.  String marks seen in other details of this scarf have been obscured by the migration of juices.  

Having done this first workshop I am contemplating the future.
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...