Monday, October 31, 2011
All Packed and Ready to Go . . .
I'm heading out to the Quilt Festival in Houston, Texas this Thursday. Since I'm teaching three classes and a demo, I have a lot of "stuff". If you have never been, the Quilt Festival is amazing, overwhelming, inspiring, exhausting, and well worth attending! Even if you don't quilt, there are numerous workshops on a variety of surface design topics, a vendor exhibit with unlimited temptations, and some of the most beautiful and creative quilts in the world. Two other members of the Artcloth Network are teaching there this year, Leslie Tucker Jenison and Maggie Weiss. Maybe we will see you there!
Thursday, October 27, 2011
Monday, October 24, 2011
24 x 80 Exhibit
In 2010 the members of the Art Cloth Network created the exhibit "24 x 80". The final, curated exhibit showcases the work of 12 artists. The unifying concept of the exhibition was defined by the size of the pieces to be shown. Entries were created using any textile material that began with white or natural in color and then were manipulated embellished, and transformed using surface design techniques including but not limited to; dye, screen printing, stamping, lamination, discharge, stain, stitch, beads, folds, paint, slashed, etc.
Els van Baarle, internationally known art cloth and batik artist was the juror for the exhibition.
The first piece shown is Fission by Laura Beehler.
Monday, October 17, 2011
Art Cloth Inspiration
Posted by Susie Monday
Anything, as we saw at our annual Art Cloth Network meeting, can be an artist's inspiration. After the meeting I took a "vacation day" and headed for the beach. I'm already thinking about how this sunset could inform a series of dyed and printed art cloth. What do you think?
I'm planning to start with soy wax batik over a pale blue textured background, resisted with a tied shibori pattern.
p.s. These were all taken within about the span of an hour.
Posted using BlogPress from my iPad
Anything, as we saw at our annual Art Cloth Network meeting, can be an artist's inspiration. After the meeting I took a "vacation day" and headed for the beach. I'm already thinking about how this sunset could inform a series of dyed and printed art cloth. What do you think?
I'm planning to start with soy wax batik over a pale blue textured background, resisted with a tied shibori pattern.
p.s. These were all taken within about the span of an hour.
Posted using BlogPress from my iPad
Saturday, October 15, 2011
St. Pete Inspires
Art Cloth Network has record attendance here for our annual meeting -- members from across the known (U.S. anyway) universe have landed for talk, sharing our work, food, laughter, more food.
While we wrestle with a few procedural items, the majority of the time for we 22 is spent in sharing approaches, themes, techniques, and work. and with that comes inspiration for more, and not one person left the room yesterday without some version of, " gee,I need to get back home and get to work."
A few gems of info:
Katherine Sylvan shared the Medieval view on strips and spots-- banned and shunned because of (stripes) association with evil, and (spots) illness and pistules.
Ecco felt (JoAnn's poly felt) is a good backing to fuse to art cloth when you want a heavier, flatter hang for a piece.
Altering cloth through adding and subtracting spans a very broad range of techniques, approaches, attitudes, materials and ways of working. Scarves to yardage, all by hand, digital with additions, stitched, fused, glues, painted and printed. Go for it.