Saturday, May 18, 2013

passage of time

 When Vincent Van Gogh was 32 he bought a stack of Japanese prints and studied them.
 
 He was influenced by the clear contour, the unshaded light, and the pure colour laid down with no attention to gradation of tone.
 "In studying Japanese art one finds out how the wise, the philosophic, the intelligent man spends his time."  Vincent
And still this project continues.  It must seem as if this is the only stitching that I am doing.  One skein of embroidery floss a day.

Now I am stitching the panels together into a long river of time.

Sunday, May 12, 2013

a simple poem for Virginia Woolf

This started out as a simple poem
for Virginia Woolf you know the kind
we women writers write these days
in our own rooms
in our own time
a salute a gesture of friendship
a psychological debt
paid off
I wanted it simple
and perfect round
hard as an
egg I thought
only once I'd said egg
I thought of the smell
of bacon grease and dirty frying pans
and whether there were enough for breakfast
I couldn't help it
I wanted the poem to be carefree and easy
like children playing in the snow
I didn't mean to mention
the price of snowsuits or
how even on the most expensive ones
the zippers always snag
just when you're late for work
and trying to get the children
off to school on time
a straightforward poem
for Virginia Woolf that's all
I wanted really
not something tangled in
domestic life the way
Jane Austen's novels tangled
with her knitting her embroidery
whatever it was she hid them under
I didn't mean to go into all that
didn't intend to get confessional
and tell you how
every time I read a good poem
by a woman writer I'm always peeking
behind it trying to see
if she's still married
or has a lover at least
wanted to know what she did
with her kids while she wrote it
or whether she had any
and if she didn't if she'd chosen
not to or if she did did she
choose and why I didn't mean
to bother with that

And I certainly wasn't going
to tell you about the time
my best friend was sick in intensive care
and I went down to see her
but they wouldn't let me in
because I wasn't her husband
or her father her mother
I wasn't family
I was just her friend
and the friendship of women
wasn't mentioned in hospital policy
or how I went out and kicked
a dent in the fender of my car
and sat there crying because
if she died I wouldn't be able
to tell her how much I loved her
(though she didn't and we laugh
about it now) but that's what got me
started I suppose wanting to write
a gesture of friendship
for a woman for a woman writer
for Virginia Woolf
and thinking I could do it
easily separating the words
from the lives they come from
that's what a good poem should do
after all and I wasn't going to make excuses
for being a woman blaming years of silence
for leaving us
so much to say


This started out as a simple poem
for Virginia Woolf
it wasn't going to mention history
or choices or women's lives
the complexities of women's friendships
or the countless gritty details
of an ordinary woman's life
that never appear in poems at all
yet even as I write these words
those ordinary details intervene
between the poem I meant to write
and this one where the delicate faces
of my children faces of friends
of women I have never even seen
glow on the blank pages
and deeper than any silence
press around me
waiting their turn

Poem by Kingston Ontario poet Bronwen Wallace  (1945-1989)
Paintings of the island she looked at in Lake of the Woods near Morson Northwestern Ontario by Pauline Johnson (1927-2007) (my mother)

Wednesday, May 08, 2013

sisu

sisu: courage, pluck, stubbornness, stamina, obstinacy
sisu: stick-with-it-ness, nerve, pride, spirit, perseverance
sisu: energy, gumption, heart
sisu:  facing down life and the changes ahead

Saturday, May 04, 2013

good news

 
Sometimes there is good news.
I have received a reprieve in regard to moving out of my studio.
Great Aunt Diana's 1956 wedding dress fits our bride daughter Grace.  (end of June wedding)
And Threadworks 2013 looks fabulous.  I spoke at the opening, click here to see that and here for more info about the exhibit.  More images of Threadworks 2013 are also up on facebook if you search.

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

welcomed

 Almost the first thing I noticed upon arrival at home was this second blooming of the Christmas amaryllis 
there in the window sill .  then I saw our bed with this quilt I made nearly 10 years ago, upside down on my half
title of quilt: husband and wife
see more of it here

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Rebecca Soudant

 "in this panel my water is breaking"   Rebecca Soudant
Sailing with John, cotton embroidery thread on canvas by Rebecca Soudant
Oh Rebecca.  Your hand embroidered tapestry, filled with colour and narrative, metaphor and beauty, time and power...communicates so much tenderness and pain.  
This tapestry panel is the first thing one sees upon entering the group exhibit I am Water, currently up at the steam museum in Kingston Ontario until May 2.
 Entirely covered with hand stitching, this is the second tapestry the artist has created about childbirth.
The earlier piece, "A tapestry of birth" is a thirty five foot documentation of the artist's first pregnancy .  For more photos and information about the artist,  click here. 

I believe I'm directly contradicting the way human beings are represented in our society.  
I think the universal is the male.  
And so in my deliberately turning this around and trying to universalize the female - 
-the rites of passage for women- 
birth, puberty, child-birth, death
would become the universal.  
I tried to challenge myself to look at the world as I wanted to,
as a woman artist, 
realizing the complexities of doing so because the world isn't really that way.
Nancy Spero
above photo of Rebecca by Asad Chishti,  

Friday, April 26, 2013

time

I'm glad that I have my stitch journal with me.
I don't get much chance to work on it here with dad, but every now and then there are minutes.
TIME by Kosso Eloul
Dad was discharged from hospital on Monday.  He has been back to doctor twice since then for new prescriptions.

The sculpture in the photo above is along the waterfront in Kingston. (more info here)
Notice the triangle of infinite space.  (photographed during one of my hospital-condo walks)
Not to know, but to go on.
A journal of a lived time (autumn 2010) visible...and also the time that I am living through right now because of my touching touching touching.

Monday, April 22, 2013

how it feels

art reflects how it feels to be a human being in this world
it just exists
it projects mystery, dignity, completeness

I made this in 2007
it still exists
it still reflects how I feel
how I feel tonight
and also how dad feels tonight

a survivor, but exhausted

Saturday, April 20, 2013

quote of the day

Karma is the eternal assertion of human freedom. 
Our thoughts, our words, our deeds are the threads of the net which we throw around ourselves.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

star chart

Star chart  painted with mineral pigments on tanned elk leather
The many tiny stars in the middle represent the milky way
A sacred object of the Skidi Pawnee tribe who lived in what is now Nebraska
Buffalo hunters
village livers
cosmic believers
It entered the Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago in 1906
it was already between 100 and 300 years old
the north star is the largest cross

Sources:  here  and here  with thanks.

Monday, April 15, 2013

not to know but to go on

 I took up stitching as my art form when I was an active mother of four.  With the quilt hoop next to the sandbox I was able to practice an art form larger than life, yet made during  it.
Herman, dad's cat
Thank you each very much for the supportive concern you've sent re: the recent loss of my beautiful studio.  I realize now that I was lucky to have had that space for six years.
I'm in Kingston again.  My father will be discharged soon from that rehabilitation hospital.  It's a new page for him, and I'm here to help him turn it.  I've picked up my art and brought it here to complete.
 Three years of panels need to be dated and sewn together with cotton tape.
"Our wills and fates do so contrary run
Our thoughts are ours
Their ends none of our own" 
       the player king in Hamlet

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Wah

big work table
 I lost my studio this week.
pin walls for holding ideas
 The landlord (the town) is going to fix it up and move their offices in there.
space and natural light
 I am to be out by the end of May.
storage
The rent has been month to month.  I always knew deep down that this would happen.
Still.
I'm devastated.