Above you can see the outlines of what will be beaded cloud shapes. You can follow the progress of this quilt to date by clicking on Big Root Geranium to the right.
June 30, 2008
Big Root Geranium, part 5
Above you can see the outlines of what will be beaded cloud shapes. You can follow the progress of this quilt to date by clicking on Big Root Geranium to the right.
June 26, 2008
It's Not a Linear Process
Next there's the photography and photo editing, adding it to the website, and other documentation. I'll enter it into shows, hope it gets accepted somewhere, and keep track of shipping schedules.
I enjoy every part of the process, with the possible exception of the binding, but it's not a linear one. The physical work progresses in certain steps, but they are not always orderly. And the really important part, the conceptualization, can be encouraged but not forced.
So I am often at a loss when I am asked about a piece "how long did that take"? I am thrilled when someone cares enough about my work to talk with me about it, so I try my best to answer. Sometimes it's just an icebreaker of a question, a way to start a dialogue, and I can talk about the process and what's involved, and we go from there.
Other times there is genuine and understandable curiosity about the actual number of hours involved. I've read that some quilters actually keep a time sheet, but I am not one of them. Where would I start? The hike I took to discover the plants? The photography and editing? The time spend making prints? The years invested in collecting fabrics and working on technical skills? How could I possibly quantify the time spent corralling inspiration and wrestling design principles to the ground? So my standard answer in this scenario is, "this piece took several hundred hours", which is surely true!
June 24, 2008
On the Road
A Change is a Good as a Rest
Next is a stargazer lily, which has adjusted quite happily to a life in the garden after an early career as a potted flower:
Last year I made a quilt featuring the Wood Poppy:
June 18, 2008
Contemporary Colorations at NQA
June 15, 2008
Images 2008 at Penn State
Following are a few more gallery shots. Pictures of all the work in the exhibit are online at the Images 2008 site.
The fiber work/installation on the left above, Darcy Meeker's black hole/white hole, needs to be seen in person to be fully appreciated--layers of delicate, hand sewn silks with growing/diminishing circular marks.
June 10, 2008
Mystery Fern at Images 2008
And here's how it looked inside the rotunda:
This year, from reading the list of exhibitors, it looks like there is one other art quilt, a beautiful work by Cathy Kleeman that was included on the exhibition postcard. I'll be very curious to see how the art is displayed this time.
This was originally just my working title for the piece, while I waited to make an identification of the variety of fern portrayed. I never did make a positive id, but I realized that for me this piece symbolized the sense of awe of the natural environment and spiritual renewal that can be found on a good long ramble through the deep woods, so I kept the name.
June 8, 2008
Step Away From the Beads
Sometimes the tricky part is knowing when to stop. I've been spending all my time, not otherwise taken up by the necessities of life, for the past week adding beads to the Sycamore quilt. I would add some beads, put the work up on the design wall and look at it for a bit, then take it down and add more beads. It's a relatively big quilt, 69" x 45", so it takes a lot of beading to make an impact on a area that large.
I enjoy doing beading, in a somewhat obsessive/compulsive way, despite the difficulty of working on a piece of this size and the havoc it wreaks on my wrist. I'm not impatient about it, and I like watching the patterns unfold. I think in this instance it works very well to convey an impression of the tree bark.
But at some point, I realized the right balance had been achieved, and I put the beads back in their containers and shelved them so I wouldn't be tempted to add more. It's time to move on to other projects.
June 3, 2008
Quilt Odyssey Acceptance
This show treats the artists well, with a free admission pass, and exhibitors ribbon, and encouragement to "spend some time by your quilt answering questions from curious quilters and admirers." I spend a lot of time hunkered down in the studio, working, so to get out and talk to people about my work is a treat.
It's interesting, too, to hear candid opinions about my work from casual viewers. Kind comments are always welcome and appreciated, discussions about motivation and the fine points of the craft are stimulating, and sometimes I hear a point of view that hadn't occurred to me. It's stimulating to get my work out there, and I always come home from an exhibit excited and motivated.
June 2, 2008
Binding, Beads, and a Beetle
And I've started on the beading:
It's a fairly large quilt, so it involves a LOT of beading. I don't often do beadwork on a quilt this size, and my wrist and shoulder are reminding me why....But I felt very strongly that it needed it, and it's really adding to the textural effect of the sycamore bark that I'm aiming for. Plus it's a very meditative kind of activity. I'm just focused on which bead should come next, and where it should go. It's very restful.
I've added a Sycamore label on the right so you can bring up the series of posts so far.
And now, apropos of absolutely nothing, a spiffy looking American Carrion Beetle - Necrophila americana- I came across on the path down at the lake this morning.