It has been a busy month! I have an exhibit coming up at The Anderson Arts Center in Kenosha, Wisconsin that starts on January 29. I will have 10 art quilts in a room of their own - my part of the exhibit is called Water Colors and it displays both art quilts and art cloth based on water reflections. It is part of a 5 person exhibit called Quilts In Color. At the same time the Women's Journeys in Fiber group that I am part of will have the Aprons: Myth, Memories and Fantasy going in the same venue. I will post some photos after next Sunday's opening.
http://www.andersonartscenter.com/
I have also been working on the ACN catalog, postcard and banner for our upcoming exhibit in Philadelphia. I think the items came out well and will enhance our exhibit and raise more awareness for the ACN. Here is a photo of the banner laying on the floor.
And in the studio I am working on 3 art quilts that I hope to submit for Visions (due mid February!!!!) and a very large piece for submission to the SAQA A Sense of Scale exhibition. That piece is made up of individual leaves (about 100 at last count) that I have been scanning, enlarging, printing, backing, stitching , cutting and stiffening. I envision the whole piece to look like a forest floor in autumn.
I have been following a blog that might be of interest to others called Slow Muse. Here is a link to it. I like the thoughtful writing about a variety of subjects.
http://slowmuse.wordpress.com/
That's it for now. More photos coming after Janaury 29!
Monday, January 23, 2012
Friday, January 13, 2012
Art Cloth in the Making
Art cloth is all about layering. Any given piece of cloth has 10-20 layers of dyeing, printing, color removal, stitching, applique, etc. I love the richness that layering lends to the cloth. Each layer may not be apparent to viewers, yet they all work together to create depth and texture. I like to think of it as similar to a symphony. One may not hear each individual instrument, yet each instrument contributes to the composition. Likewise, each layer of dye, resist, paint and stitch complete the cloth. Leave out one layer and it just wouldn't be the same.
The following narrative walks through the steps I used to transform a piece of white cotton into art cloth. (Action photos are courtesy of Lynn Luukinen and were taken during a demonstration I gave at the Hill Country Arts Foundation. Please excuse the blurs on some of the photos - I moved too much for Lynn to get a clear shot!) Below is a photo of the finished cloth.
![]() |
| Photo of finished cloth |
I use a lot of resists in my work, and they are often the very first step. I like to begin by creating background texture. There are lots of options for this - most of the paste resists work well (flour, oats, grits, potato dextrin, mashed potatoes). I chose flour paste for this cloth. I mixed equal parts of flour and water (this version used bread flour since that was all I had on hand) and spread it over the entire cloth, then let it dry. Once the flour was dry, I scrunched the fabric to crack the paste, then applied dye thickened with sodium alginate.
![]() |
| Painting over the flour paste with thickened dye |
![]() |
| The finished first layer |
Before adding background color, I created a layer of my chosen image - a stylized leaf. I applied the image using a hand-cut stencil with red and yellow-orange thickened dye.
![]() |
| Adding a stenciled image with thickened dye |
![]() |
| The completed second layer |
Before adding background color, I reserved some of the white space with another resist. I didn't want a stark white, so I chose Elmer's Gel Glue. It is a water-soluble resist that leaves a soft, ghost-like image.
![]() |
| Screen printing with Elmer's gel glue resist |
![]() |
| Adding background color with a scraper and thickened dyes |
![]() |
| The finished fourth layer - note the "drip" pattern created by the glue resist |
The piece needed more value contrast, so the next step was to remove color with diluted bleach. I wanted to add texture rather than creating an additional image, so I flicked the bleach on with a brush to create spots.
![]() |
| After completion of the fifth layer |
![]() |
| Adding more leaf imagery with textile paint - layer six |
Then I added more value contrast by stippling on dark brown paint with a stencil brush.
![]() |
| Stippling on brown paint - layer seven |
![]() |
| Applying copper paint with a finger - layer eight |
![]() |
| Needle felting with hand-dyed fibers - layer nine |
![]() |
| Applying metal leaf with acrylic medium - layer ten |
Isn't the transformation exciting?
Friday, December 9, 2011
Great News... details to follow
YAY! Art Cloth Network will be represented in FiberPhiladelphia. We will be showing "Beyond the Line" and 24"x80" at the Crane Old School in the White Space. We will be joining over 30 other shows in what is turning out to be a truly massive festival. Exact dates will follow but we will be up for all of March. So make plans to come visit Philadelphia this March.
Also follow along at FiberPhiladelphia.org. Our show will be listed on the site within the week.
I am thinking of this as an early holiday present.
Dianne
What is Your Approach?
.
I spent last weekend facilitating a workshop focused on mixing dyes from primary colors. It's a class that I love to teach and I learn something each time I do. The objective was to give artists a good understanding of color mixing with dyes, the effect of using cool vs warm primaries and to train their eyes to really see the undertones in a color.
I am a strong advocate for using pure primaries to mix dye colors. When I first started dyeing, I did so mainly for financial reasons. Buying all those pre-mixed colors can get expensive! I started with 7 colors - a set of warm primaries, a set of cool primaries and black. And though I feel that mixed colors do have their place, I still work mostly with primaries. My palette has changed, though. Now I use one set of primaries. After a lot of experimentation, I've found that I can get most of the colors I want by using Sun Yellow (Yellow MX-8G), Mixing Red (Red MX-5B) and Basic Blue (Blue MX-R). (All names are the ProChemical version.) I also use Turquoise when I want a really vibrant green or violet.
Why do I like to mix my own? I learned so much about color in those first few years by mixing the primaries. I believe that early foundation has been instrumental in my understanding of color. It also allows me to develop my own personal color palette. There are a lot of olive greens out there, but none exactly like mine.
I know that not everyone uses this approach. Mixed colors are convenient. And they can be faster and easier than mixing from scratch. And some mixed colors separate out in beautiful and unexpected ways. Each of us has a palette to which we are drawn and a one-size-fits-all approach just doesn't cut it.
The workshop reminded me how much I love to experiment with color. It has inspired me to do some more color studies on my own. I do feel this is a life-long journey. I don't think we ever know all there is to know about color.
What is your approach? We'd love to hear your thoughts.
I spent last weekend facilitating a workshop focused on mixing dyes from primary colors. It's a class that I love to teach and I learn something each time I do. The objective was to give artists a good understanding of color mixing with dyes, the effect of using cool vs warm primaries and to train their eyes to really see the undertones in a color.
I am a strong advocate for using pure primaries to mix dye colors. When I first started dyeing, I did so mainly for financial reasons. Buying all those pre-mixed colors can get expensive! I started with 7 colors - a set of warm primaries, a set of cool primaries and black. And though I feel that mixed colors do have their place, I still work mostly with primaries. My palette has changed, though. Now I use one set of primaries. After a lot of experimentation, I've found that I can get most of the colors I want by using Sun Yellow (Yellow MX-8G), Mixing Red (Red MX-5B) and Basic Blue (Blue MX-R). (All names are the ProChemical version.) I also use Turquoise when I want a really vibrant green or violet.
Why do I like to mix my own? I learned so much about color in those first few years by mixing the primaries. I believe that early foundation has been instrumental in my understanding of color. It also allows me to develop my own personal color palette. There are a lot of olive greens out there, but none exactly like mine.
I know that not everyone uses this approach. Mixed colors are convenient. And they can be faster and easier than mixing from scratch. And some mixed colors separate out in beautiful and unexpected ways. Each of us has a palette to which we are drawn and a one-size-fits-all approach just doesn't cut it.
The workshop reminded me how much I love to experiment with color. It has inspired me to do some more color studies on my own. I do feel this is a life-long journey. I don't think we ever know all there is to know about color.
What is your approach? We'd love to hear your thoughts.
Sunday, November 27, 2011
What Inspires You?
I know there are many sources of inspiration for the artist. Still, each of us has a set of particular things that we love to look at for inspiration. I'm inspired by the forces of pressure on a variety of things, as well as surface tension. I find that these preferences are often reflected in the type of marks I make on cloth and paper. I challenge you to think about some particular things you are visually drawn to. Here are a few of my favorites:
Saturday, November 26, 2011
Small World
![]() |
| folded in half, dyed red, over-dyed next day with olive |
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
The Lure of the Resist
I've been experimenting with resists on cloth for the past six years. I think I am drawn to them because they are so enchanting. You apply the resist and let it dry. Then you add paint or dye. At that point, the cloth usually looks very ugly. But when you wash the cloth, the pattern and texture from the resist appear like magic.
There are so many resists to choose from. There are a number of commercially available products - waxes, water based resist, washable gel glue. But my favorites are those made from ingredients in your kitchen - oatmeal, flour, sugar, corn syrup, tapioca and grits.
Working with resists requires an ability to let go of your control impulse. They can be unpredictable and small changes in the process can have a big impact on the end result. Below are a few photos of cloth created with a grits resist. If you would like to try this for yourself, download the grits resist tutorial.
There are so many resists to choose from. There are a number of commercially available products - waxes, water based resist, washable gel glue. But my favorites are those made from ingredients in your kitchen - oatmeal, flour, sugar, corn syrup, tapioca and grits.
Working with resists requires an ability to let go of your control impulse. They can be unpredictable and small changes in the process can have a big impact on the end result. Below are a few photos of cloth created with a grits resist. If you would like to try this for yourself, download the grits resist tutorial.
![]() | ||
| Grits, painted with dye when dry |
![]() | ||
| Grits, painted with dye while still damp |
![]() |
| Grits applied with a silkscreen |
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
XXI: An exhibit of cloth by Carla Veliz
Artcloth is not only that which we make "pretty". Sometimes we use destructive processes to make a statement or create meaning on the cloth. A powerful example of this is an installation by artist Carla Veliz, titled XXI: Who We Are and Who We Could Become. The exhibit was shown at Gallery Nord in San Antonio this past September. In an effort to represent the abuse humans have inflicted on the planet, each other and themselves over the past 21 centuries, Veliz spent 21 days ripping, burning, burying, cutting and destroying a 16-foot long piece of silk. Then she spent 21 days repairing the damage.
She documented this process in a 21 minute video. Watching the video is an emotional experience - seeing the cloth tattered and damaged and then lovingly cared for and mended. The exhibit included still photos from the video and several assemblages created from the tools she used on her journey with the cloth.
Read more about Veliz on her website.
View the following links to read more about the exhibit:
http://utsa.edu/today/2011/09/artistsofmo.html
http://glasstire.com/2011/09/09/gallery-nord-21-abusive-centuries-earthly-bodies/
http://www.mysanantonio.com/entertainment/visual_arts/article/Tortured-silk-nudes-in-nature-on-exhibit-2161531.php#photo-1594072
She documented this process in a 21 minute video. Watching the video is an emotional experience - seeing the cloth tattered and damaged and then lovingly cared for and mended. The exhibit included still photos from the video and several assemblages created from the tools she used on her journey with the cloth.
Read more about Veliz on her website.
View the following links to read more about the exhibit:
http://utsa.edu/today/2011/09/artistsofmo.html
http://glasstire.com/2011/09/09/gallery-nord-21-abusive-centuries-earthly-bodies/
http://www.mysanantonio.com/entertainment/visual_arts/article/Tortured-silk-nudes-in-nature-on-exhibit-2161531.php#photo-1594072
Sunday, November 13, 2011
Monoprinting on the new Gelli Plates at the Houston Quilt Festival
I was recently introduced to Gelli Arts reusable gelatin plates, which are used to replace a "gelatin plate" made in a similar fashion to "Knox Blox", an ideal surface to perform monoprints on both cloth and paper.
These reusable plates are ideal for me when teaching in a place that is difficult to make gelatin plates from scratch. Plus, these do not require refrigeration! The plates come in two sizes: 6 inches by 6 inches, and 8 inches by 10 inches.
The idea is to spread a thin layer of paint over the surface with a brayer, brush, or other spreading tool. The paint can then be manipulated by a variety of stamps or other tools and the pattern can be "picked up" from the surface with cloth or paper.
Here are a few images taken during the Sketchbook Challenge workshop by Sue Bleiweiss and myself of the round robin workshop in Make-It-University during the quilt festival. Among the four technique stations featured, I taught gelatin monoprinting. I gave each student two types of paper and two types of cloth to experiment with:
These reusable plates are ideal for me when teaching in a place that is difficult to make gelatin plates from scratch. Plus, these do not require refrigeration! The plates come in two sizes: 6 inches by 6 inches, and 8 inches by 10 inches.
The idea is to spread a thin layer of paint over the surface with a brayer, brush, or other spreading tool. The paint can then be manipulated by a variety of stamps or other tools and the pattern can be "picked up" from the surface with cloth or paper.
Here are a few images taken during the Sketchbook Challenge workshop by Sue Bleiweiss and myself of the round robin workshop in Make-It-University during the quilt festival. Among the four technique stations featured, I taught gelatin monoprinting. I gave each student two types of paper and two types of cloth to experiment with:
Things are still pretty "neat" at this point!
paint is applied across the gelatin plate surface
students selected among the large variety of texture tools to create marks
left foreground: student places her paper onto the gelatin plate to "pick up" the paint
After use, the plates can simply be wiped off with a damp paper towel and stored for future use. Any type of acrylic paint can be used, and each print can be "layered" repeatedly by this method.
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!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)






















