Sunday, July 14, 2019

White on white in the West!

Oh. My. Goodness.

I have returned safe and sound to the mountain after the most amazing week in the west teaching Quietly and Gently...

It was a a fabulous class with a great gang of students who worked so hard and so collegially it was incredible.  They were all colour-focused type people and they worked with the challenge and restraint of only white on white with gusto and great success.

We covered mark making; sewing by hand and by machine; embossing and debossing; and cutting...
They sewed a coptic bound book and filled it with their samples, then they made  slip case to tuck it into.
Then they let loose and tested out ideas that they liked, found the things that were 'them' and made beautiful work.

On the Friday morning I reminded them all that only they can make their own work.  Their work is theirs. It' not the teacher's so if they were dying to add a little bit of colour - they should.  I would prefer if it was discrete, but if they felt a touch of something would complete the work for them; then they should add it in.

What's the point of forcing folk to make work that isn't them?

I think I have a shot of something from everybody (in no particular order) - the bits I remembered to photograph, the bits that I felt were unique, the bits that remind me of the work, the bits that show a few of the things we did.

Anne's second book with beautiful letter design and cutting. Lots of design thinking went into this piece and was executed brilliantly.


Shirley's second book - with embossing and pierced letters and threads dangling...finding pouches and pockets a wonderful home for small treasures.


Another Anne used her daily words - and hand-wrote and debossed them in a wee keepsake book. It is tiny but precious piece.


Erin's elegant bird and cloud motifs - here with embossing and the finest embossing of wire for the birds to perch upon. The other pages share the motifs in different sequences and techniques.


Jennifer's second book - a container for thoughts and leaves and nuts...a wonderful way to keep and display keepsake, memories, reminders.


The final page of Virginia's second book - the narrative led you through visually using all the techniques and the pay off for turning the pages was this fabulous mark.


Deb's second book - with so much subtlety, detail, repeat motifs and the perfect words...the act of hiding and revealing slows you down and makes you want to know where next? what next?


Marianne often preferred the back story, the page behind, the back of the work; and worked to create a book that was true and reflected those moments of confusion we all feel.


Frida found ways to produce the finest of hand embossings - getting right into those tight corners and lifting the image off the page with a bounce!


One of Lesley's sample pages - with the subtlest use of stitch and spacing to produce calm...the simple elegance of this work is beautiful.


Sharon popped her 5 days' worth of daily words into her sampler book, and loved that her final word was 'do' - I so hope they all get to make and do when they return home.


Penny has a ritual/routine/practice of stitching each day onto fabric. So for the week of the workshop she stitched white on white and chose to use them in her second book.


The final class display was a real delight. It was a vision of calm; an oasis in an otherwise brilliantly-hued room! So many folk commented on how beautiful the work was and how it made them feel.



The dawns were exquisite and we knew when it was 'corella-hour', as hundreds of corellas flocked to trees.


As ever, I love the remnants and the remains showing the marks of the making...



 We had a list of four letter words with no repeat letters to use with the old tattoo kit and came up with some new ones as well!


 We had a wonderful time.  It was a friendly, chatty, connecting and sharing group. We worked less than quietly at times; but that is the point of gathering and sharing is it not?  I wrote in my journal notes of - "happy murmurings as they hand stitched".

Even if at times there was raucous laughter, the work in the end is quiet and gentle and the processes meditative.  I imagine when folk return home they will both work quietly and gently; and produce quiet and gentle work.

With huge thanks to my gang for making it such a delight to teach them; and for all of the amazing work Fibres West, Martien and her team, did to make us welcome and have so many amazing opportunities to talk art, see art, watch art and share our passions.

On Saturday evening, heading east with the flying kangaroo as the sun set in the west...




Thursday, July 11, 2019

Thursday Thoughts...

“I’m using tons of steel to make the situation look lighter”. 

Richard Serra

What a way to think about it.  I have pondered this one a bit, this way and that, and can't really quite pin point what I think he might mean!  Enigmatic perhaps?

Perhaps Richard Serra is suggesting that with the presence of huge amounts of steel; everything else is in sharp relief and that by virtue of the steel's heaviness; the rest appears lighter?

I can only think that he is referring to the space around the steel; the context in which the steel is placed, the counter space, or the negative space?

But then he refers to making the situation look lighter and I am left wondering all over again.

Whatever he meant here, I am grateful that he makes his work - stunning, inspirational, breathtaking and awesome.  I have felt very restful and calm in the presence of his work; so perhaps that's all it is - he wants us to feel lighter...


Richard Serra, New York, 2013.

Sunday, July 7, 2019

Set up and ready to go in the West!

As this post goes to print so to speak, I am in WA getting ready to teach Quietly and Gently at Fibres West.

The preparations for such a course are a bit mammoth and many hours were spent cutting paper, revising and photocopying handouts, getting samples together and making sure I have enough of everything to share around.

Given we are so far out of town (100km from Perth itself) and knowing that supplies won't be easy to get hold of if I forget something, I dedicated a whole bag to resources and supplies. Fingers crossed.

We work on 10cm x 10cm squares of different papers, and here they are all bundled up ready to go.  I think I need well over 400 of these squares, so much chopping was done.


My desk looks completely overwhelmed, but my checklists have been working and I think I have got most of the things I need in that stash. Everything from containers for sharps to cutting boards to feathers to tools for sale.


And brayers, and lino cutting tools and rulers and threads and lino and pre-cut covers!


Ans always there are samplers...


There is a shop one night so I have prepared a bunch of small things for sale - these wee journals with embossed poppies are rather sweet.


I have made name tags for my students - I always appreciate a name tag!  One,  like to have nice ones myself; but two I really like it when folk wear them, it helps my name memory so much.


I also do folders for all their handouts.


I will also be presenting a 45 minute talk on my work so the powerpoint has been timed and finely tuned I hope, so that it lasts long enough but not too long!


And as the say, let the workshop begin!

Thursday, July 4, 2019

Thursday thoughts...

"Reading is a life-long collision with minds not like your own". 

Jeanette Winterson

Ah, perhaps a slightly more action-oriented description of reading than might come to mind initially; but perhaps it describes something more than a coming together, or an association with, or an intersection even.

Ms Winterson's work  is so full of vitality and energy that it shouldn't surprise me she would think about reading like this. It isn't passive, it isn't always just a romantic, gentle flow; it can knock your socks off!

In some ways the image that comes to mind is the ricochet of a pin ball machine. Not that I have ever really played one, but I get the sense the levers push the ball around and it bounces off the sides and tops and the bottom. Constantly colliding in order to stay alive; stay relevant.

When I read, I am often in awe of the way people can analyse things, pare them back, express them; or imagine them and it is a lovely adventure to meet and collide with so many different minds!


Brooklyn Art Library, 2013 - a collisions of so many beautiful minds!!!

Tuesday, July 2, 2019

A random selection

This post is a collection of a bunch of random things that have been happening in and around the studio and life of late.

When I taught in Toowoomba  few weeks ago, Barry drove me over  and returned home - a 5 hour drive. On his return trip he went to a market and bought me these nib holders!

What a delightful and random gift to receive. Their joyous and exuberant colours and patterns make me most happy.

And the next day he drove back to Toowoomba and collected me and we drove home - a big effort and muchly appreciated.



And Thursday afternoon last week, working away in the office I thought that the light was so odd, it made me go look out across the valley. As the sun set, there were storms and showers about and this partial rainbow looked as if it were a torch or a lighthouse beaming light...


On Saturday, my letter to the editor of The Saturday paper was published!


On Sunday morning the valley was so beautiful.


And when we went into own for coffee on Sunday morning we found it is now being yarn-bombed in time for KnitFest which is this weekend - it looked so chirpy in the sunshine!



And my eyes went all a-boggles as I set this this 8pt type...

You can see how each piece of type is around 1mm wide, which is pretty tiny, and working out each letter upside down and back to front is quite the challenge.


 I am yet to properly proof it, so when I do I will find out how good my eyes really were!

Sunday, June 30, 2019

Compassion opens

Barry and I managed a trip down to Nambour on Friday to view the exhibition as it was in its final stages of set up... a chance to quietly view the work before the big hurrah of the opening on Saturday.

It was a lovely opportunity to wander around and see the work; gaze at it without interruption; turn pages where we could.

It was nice to see our work amongst so many...

I would have loved a sunburnt country



In a nice piece of synchronicity, Barry's and my works are together here. Light and Love by me with his Precious Library of Peace above.


Peace Mends the World was on show again.


And my Peace Emerging book-ets had their first outing.


The opening on Saturday afternoon was huge!  It was so amazing to see so many folk turn out for artists' books - really really delightful.




There were a lot of lovely works on display. Here are just a few...

Judy Barrass

Marieke Stagg

Sandra Pearce

Ellen Appleby

Katherine Nix

Noela Mills

Ken Munsie

Saffron Drew

Ulrike Sturm

It was wonderful to see so many friends, so much beautiful work and the result of such hard work by Ardleigh and Ken - what an amazing job they did.

It really is worth a visit on a day when you canwander and explore - it takes several times around the gallery to get the full experience!