Evolution of a commission – part 2


After choosing fabric, the next step is to sew the individual pieces together into a single large piece called the “quilt top” (for any non-quilters who might be reading this). This process is greatly facilitated by having what is known as a “design wall” in one’s studio. In my case, I have one entire wall of my studio which is given over to said design wall. The studio wall was first covered in 8×4-foot sheets of Celotex, an insulation material which is light yet sturdy, and is easy to stick pins into. The insulation boards were then covered with gray felt. I had originally wanted white, but the fabric store didn’t have a sufficiently large amount of white. Not wanting to wait, I bought gray instead, and it ended up being a great choice – it’s less harsh and has a calming, soothing effect in the room. (In fact, I liked it so much, I’ve since painted several walls in my house a  nice cool gray). The felt was adhered to the boards with premixed wallpaper paste, a surprisingly easy process.

My design wall is 8 feet high, which was the outside limit of the size of piece I could make without radically altering my life. Practically, though, I needed some maneuvering room at top and bottom, so it ended up with 7.5 feet as the target size. I started with the smaller pieces, positioning them roughly about two thirds of the way up from the bottom, the area where I wanted the greatest amount of visual interest. The surface texture of the felt grabs on to cotton fabrics and lets you keep smaller sized pieces in place without using pins. (After putting lots of pieces together, though, it will eventually become too heavy to stick by itself and will require pins.) My main goal at this point was to fit the pieces together in the most efficient manner with a minimal amount of trim waste – rather like putting together a puzzle.

I use an industrial Juki to do all my quilting, but because of modifications made to my machine, it doesn’t work for the piecing process. For one thing, it only does a straight stitch, and I use a narrow zigzag to stitch my top fabrics together. Second, the Juki’s feed dogs have been removed. So I’ve kept my Bernina for piecing and some other purposes.

Working on a large piece like this was challenging, but on the upside, I got a lot more exercise than usual because it required a lot of up-and-down on a stepping stool to get to the upper reaches.

The piecing process was completed over the course of a couple of days. Here’s a little stop-action movie I made of this process.

December 4th, 2011|Art|12 Comments

Evolution of a commission – part 1

Eastern Plains with hayrolls - Deidre AdamsEastern Plains with Hay Rolls, Summer – ©2006 Deidre Adams

This kind of a field, with rolled hay bales, is a very common sight in eastern Colorado and Kansas. I’ve always loved these colors – pale yellow greens, straw golds, and the faded pale blue of a midday summer sky. It’s a typical scene that feeds my love of the horizon line.

As part of the process for the Anythink Library commission, I met and talked with members of the local community who live in the area near the towns of Bennett & Strasburg, about half an hour east of Denver. The interviews were part of an oral history project that the library is doing in conjunction with the artwork commission. We had some standard questions that we asked all of the participants, although the format was freeform and many of the people also contributed some personal memories and anecdotes that were quite entertaining. They were asked about how they had come to live there, what they liked and didn’t like about it, and what kinds of life lessons they had gained from living there. Some of the questions also focused on determining their impressions of the sights and sounds and smells that they experience living on the plains. In answer to the question about colors, by far the most common answer was green, golden brown, and blue (skies). That was a validation for me of the picture I had in mind of what I was thinking of doing; I was on the right track and ready to go.

As another aspect of the community involvement component, I wanted to make the quilt from fabric supplied by the local residents, so I asked them for donations. I was overwhelmed by the response – I received enough to make the entire top layer of the piece from fabrics supplied by the community. Some of these pieces have special meaning to the people who donated them, so I wanted to keep a record of each one. I kept a tiny swatch of each one in my sketchbook with the name of the person who donated it.

I also made a video to document the fabrics. I’m still not over the cringe factor of watching this with all its many faux pas, but at least it’s a good record for posterity.

December 2nd, 2011|Art|7 Comments

SDA conference – gallery day, part I

Henny Penny by Ann Hall Richards

Henny Penny (detail), cast handmade paper, wax, and dye. Hand sewn. ©2011 Ann Hall Richards.

Thursday at the Surface Design Association conference was gallery day. We spent the afternoon being shuttled from one great exhibition to another. There were so many, I didn’t get to see all of them, but here are some highlights of the ones I did see.

Esperanza – Carolyn Kallenborn

Gordon Parks Gallery, Metropolitan State University, St. Paul, Minn.
Through July 28, 2011

The works in Esperanza (“hope” in Spanish) come from a melding of prior exhibitions that share a common thread, all based on concepts Kallenborn became familiar with throughout her extensive time spent in Oaxaca, Mexico. Deseos comes from a desire to respond to feelings of hopelessness and fear with a message of healing. Cascada is an interactive installation piece in which viewers are invited to write on a silk rose petal a single word describing an admired characteristic of a person who has passed on, and exchange it for a painted stone from the installation. Ofrendas includes works inspired by the public ofrenda (“offering”), a kind of altar, and the milagro (“miracle”), a small charm left as a prayer for healing. The long banner-like pieces are made from handwoven cloth from the markets in Oaxaca, to which Kallenborn meticulously hand stitches beads, shells, silk flower petals, and other found objects. She says each object “is chosen and placed to reflect the specific emotion or desire expressed within the piece. The time and the attention in deliberately attaching each individual object is itself a meditative process. The finished pieces become the physical visual reminders of my intention.”

 

Flotsam and Jetsam – Erica Spitzer Rasmussen
Repetition Meditation Revelation – Ann Hall Richards

Concordia Gallery, Concordia University, St. Paul, Minn.
Through July 1, 2011

These two shows, exhibited concurrently in two different rooms of the gallery, were very different in concept but worked beautifully together due to symbiosis achieved through visually similar materials and process.

Ann Hall Richards uses “techniques that transform common objects into contemporary and contemplative works that invite and even challenge the viewer to consider not only the content, but also the process and choice of materials.” The aptly-named exhibition features works in which the artist takes a common object or an unrecognizable yet oddly familiar form, and repeats it until the units together create a new form compelling further consideration and contemplation.

Erica Spitzer Rasmussen’s works also use repetition and familiar objects, but her themes are more personal, based on childhood memories, experiences of family and motherhood, and cultural references. She says, “I sometimes find body-stories or body-experiences to be simultaneously comical and horrifying.  It is often these extremes in emotional reactions that drive me to produce the work, in an attempt to better comprehend each situation.”

 

In the Garden of Earthquakes – Vernal Bogren Swift

AAW Gallery of Wood Art, Landmark Center, St. Paul, Minn.
Through June 26, 2011

Vernal Bogren Swift says she regards making art as a form of questioning. “I think of myself as much as a scientist as an artist. I suppose I would like to replace the word ‘artist’ with another term such as ‘visual thinker.’” Her exhibition consists of 9 batik panels depicting a narrative inspired by the ongoing tectonic plate movements between sea and land. The meticulously rendered drawings are whimsical yet beautiful, fascinating in detail. My only complaint about the installation was that most of the work was hung too high to get a good look at all of it. I would have liked to be able to get a better sense of the story within.

I did have a chance to talk with the artist briefly. She told me that with this work, she has only about a 40% success rate. I asked her what she does with the “failures” (the term would have to be relative, in my opinion), and she says she destroys them. As a quilter who challenges myself to use up everything and try to waste nothing, I was both very surprised and frankly somewhat horrified to hear this. I thought of all the lovely quilts that could be made from what I envision to be piles of lovely fabric. But I certainly respect her integrity in not wishing her work to be used in such a way.

 

June 11th, 2011|Exhibitions|2 Comments