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Thursday, June 30, 2022
Thursday Thoughts...
Tuesday, June 28, 2022
Little bits of peace
So in amongst the heart-sickness of Roe v Wade, I was printing about peace.
I finished the work and then decided to use up some ink and print white on white, overlaying the beautiful reminder:
We dream of peace, and peace dreams of us.
We are not alone in seeking peace; in fact peace is waiting for us to reach out to meet it. It wants to be with us as well.
This thought makes me feel less lonely about the continuing need to find peaceful resolutions, to join together in peace, to be able to live in harmony. (all sounds a little bit hippy dippy I know...).
So I continued to print it on scraps of paper, and make them into bookmarks, some worked better than others.
Keep on dreaming... and keep the dream alive.
Sunday, June 26, 2022
Fragile Gains - still very fragile
Over the weekend we learned that the Supreme Court of the US had overturned the Roe v Wade decision. I was despairing and enraged. The consequences of this decision for so many women, in so many ways - it is not just about abortion - are immense. The surveilling of women's bodies and lives and decisions and choices is unconscionable. I wept silent tears, and felt heart-sick once more, for women and this world.
For the past few months I have been re-working my Fragile Gains work from 2014-2015, this time exploring it with the fragility of eggshells.
I started out with colour, and pondered how they should stand. I had originally been playing with words about eggs; but then it became clear that the fragility was once again, about women's rights and gains.
And how sad I was when I realised just how relevant this one still was.
So today, I completed the set of seven fragile gains. I am yet to finalise how they will be fully presented, but they will be teetering. As are we all.
And by the end of today I was playing with the notion of individual ones, in a wee box...
It is so hard to work out what the next steps can possibly be; but solidarity, protest and persisting will surely be at the heart of it.
Thursday, June 23, 2022
Thursday Thoughts...
Tuesday, June 21, 2022
Notions of home...
Sunday, June 19, 2022
More Validation
Well some things are actually getting completed in studio time - and others are getting nudged along nicely.
Today I pretty much completed my Validation boxed pieces.
Last week I worked out how to sew that pesky Polyester thread by sitting under a table, and this week I trimmed the thread and fastened it in place.
I started by removing the matte sticky tape I had used to hold the fabric in place as I stitched through that very open-weave fabric.
Thursday, June 16, 2022
Thursday Thoughts...
Tuesday, June 14, 2022
A Flying Visit
Last week Barry and I took off again! From having been nowhere for years, we have flown to Scotland and back, Melbourne and back and now Mackay and back in just under three months. All feels a bit odd.
We headed to Mackay to view the Libris Awards - The Australian Artists' Book prize.
We knew we hadn't won but we did want to see our books and view the others in the show and get a lovely fill me up of artists books.
However.
On arrival, we found this!
Part of me thought it was hilarious that we had travelled that far, and my book wasn't there. Part of me was astounded. Part of me hoped it was nearby somewhere.
And it was. The Council had purchased it to add to its Artists' Book Collection, and it was out the back having an archival box made for it. We went out the back to view the box making and then were able to have it taken back out into the show so that I could see it in situ. Phew.
And the burning sky on the flight home.
Sunday, June 12, 2022
New perspectives
I have been thinking about my three hanging works of old gauze bandages and letraset. Like their book-based counterparts (still underway) they are about validating our feelings around this time - from the ongoing pandemic, through lockdowns, to opening up again, through terrible natural disasters, to dealing with the soaring cost of living, to worrying about the Russian invasion of Ukraine, to fearing the worst with Roe v Wade in the US and all the rest of it.
Barry helped me drill holes in the vertical part of the hanging lid and I then sat down to sew them. How hard could it be?
Sitting at the table it was very hard! Using misbehaving thread, trying to work out how long the stitch needed to be so that they would hang evenly, trying to even make a stitch that would hold on the open weave gauze, trying to get my unwieldy needles and fingers to get behind the slightly angled lid bit and so on.
More and more often, I find that if I am awake at night and return to sleep isn't coming easily, I start to work my through my creative dilemmas; the things that are blocking my progression and so on. This either leads me back into sleep; or resolves a problem, so I shall keep using it as a technique for a while yet I think.
So, luckily, the other night I thought of a way to make it easier to sew: sew from underneath the lid as if I was in the box!
What follows is a photographic story of what it looked like.
Before I began, this piece sitting on a book cover which harmonises so well.
Underway - with tape on the back to temporarily stabilise.
My ingenious solution - blu tac the lid to underneath my desk so I could have easier access to the holes, the needle and thread moved better, and the height and position of the piece was easier to work out.
The view from where I worked.
Looking down.
So much easier to deal with the fly away thread.