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| Sunflower Sky |
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| Sky With Many Moons |
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| The Beauty of the Green Earth |
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| Lake Full of Stars |
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| Trembling Heart |
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| Field of Light |
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| Mothering Bundles |
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| Sunflower Sky |
![]() |
| Sky With Many Moons |
![]() |
| The Beauty of the Green Earth |
![]() |
| Lake Full of Stars |
![]() |
| Trembling Heart |
![]() |
| Field of Light |
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| Mothering Bundles |
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| The Beauty of the Green Earth, hand stitched quilt, Tree Everlasting pattern by Judy Martin 2026 |
My quilts are objects that come together from materials I can touch, but also from some kind of fantasy of what I hope and dream yet can not name.
Slow to make, with many repetitive tasks that put me into a meditative state, they are listeners for the things I can’t say out loud in my normal life.
When I made my first quilts, and even later, after I had been going along for years, I had a fantasy.
My fantasy was about my own work. I thought it was unusual.
I thought that it was creative. I knew that it was art.
But when I look now at what has been done and continues to be done by the giants of this immense world, I realize that my work is rather ordinary. This realization does not mean that I am going to slow down or stop making it. And it doesn't mean that I am going to stop having the fantasy that what I'm making is something new and true and different.
It only means that I realize that I'm a speck, and that it is a big world.
“I’m sorry for forgetting how small I was in relation to an inlet.
Every day is a last day, and it is more than enough. Max Porter
Jingle Spiral (2015) (pictured above) references the Ojibwe sacred powwow dress. Such dresses feature hundreds of metal cones that creae a soothing sound when the dancer moves. In her 2017 exhibition at the Power Plant in Toronto, Jingle Spiral was presented mounted on the wall as well as in a performance video. Watch the video at this link.
Maria Hupfield is assistant professor in Indigenous Performance and Media Art at the University of Toronto in Mississauga where she runs the Indigenous Creation Studio and is also the Director and Lead Arrtist in the Department of Visual Studies / English and Drama. As well, she works with graduate students at the St. George Campus of U of T. Hupfield states: "My research brings together studio based practices and processes with expansive definitions of art that are informed by knoweldge from nations connected to the campus in the Great Lakes region."
Maria Hupfield is number 9 in the Canadian Arists who work with Textiles series.
There is a room in Paris filled with the lady and unicorn tapestries. I thought about it the other day when I came across an old journal entry. I’m sorry that now I’ve misplaced those exact words, but maybe I can get the essence here.
And why it seems so important to me to share it?
The first question: Why do you write this blog, Judy?
The answer: I write it in order to have a record of when (and sometimes how) I made my quilts. This is why I show my work in process. The beautiful process of stitching is shown so well in the photos. The more difficult process of designing a new piece is something that I also try to write about, but that struggle is not as beautiful.
I write the blog so that my creative process is recorded.
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| Shredded Painting, unwoven canvas, by Mary Elizabeth Scott |
Mary Scott is a Canadian artist who was born in Calgary, Alberta in 1948.
Mary Scott holds a BFA (1978) from University of Calagary and an MFA (1980) from Nova Scotia College of Art and Design. She was assistant head to Banff visual arts from 1982 - 1984, and then began teaching drawing and painting at the Alberta College of Art and Design, retiring in 2012. She refused to accept the paintbrush as the only way, and in the 70's and 80's, used a syringe to apply paint to alternative surfaces. Around the same time, she started to incorporate text into her work and words by Gertrude Stein and Luce Iragary are featured in some pieces. Scott's work is in several major public collections including the National Gallery of Canada.
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| In you more me than you Mary, safety pins and acrylic, no date, by Mary Scott collection of Owens art gallery, New Brunswick |
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| Imago (viii) "translatable" *is That Which Denies*, by Mary Scott, embroidery and unwoven silk, 1988 |
Mary Scott's feminist work is based on reading and there are layers of meaning in her work. Her labour intensive techniques include shredding cloth or removing the weave of various fabrics, embroidery, gold leaf, wrapping, crochet, and painting/writing with a syringe. Mary Scott's fabric and text-based paintings heralded the emergence of post modernism and feminism in Canadian art.
number 8 in the series: Canadian Artists who Work with Textiles