I have used Quilt National catalogues as learning tools for years and years. I own all of them and refer to them often. Even living in Northern Ontario Canada, I feel companionship with the excellent artists I meet through their work in the Quilt National biennial publications. These artists encourage me to continue working. I believe in the emotional power and the charged beauty of hand stitched bed-sized quilts.
I believe that quilts are connected to the bed and all the messy and beautiful things that happen there. Art quilts can carry this deep and primal energy should they choose to.
All through the history of Quilt National, I have found contemporary versions of the quilt - bed - life - metaphor that inspires me so much. This in spite of the usual description of this exhibition as one that embraces a departure from 'the tradition'.
After years of trying, I was accepted into the 2011 Quilt National. It was an amazing experience.
I attended the opening and saw the Dairy Barn in Athens Ohio and met some of my personal art-quilt heroines. (Judy Kirpich's Circles No. 4 is on the cover of the catalog that year)
My piece (Cross My Heart) was well received. In the QN catalog (page 58 and 59) it is opposite Kevan Lunney's Archeology: Fragment #14, Enso). Cross My Heart sold on opening day and a detail of it was published widely on the internet. Being included in the 2011 exhibition gave me inner confidence. I began to really trust my own voice.
I am thrilled to be included in Quilt National 2017. It's the 20th biennial since Nancy Crow founded it in 1979. One of my heroines, Nancy is one of the jurors this year.
my studio book shelf |
All through the history of Quilt National, I have found contemporary versions of the quilt - bed - life - metaphor that inspires me so much. This in spite of the usual description of this exhibition as one that embraces a departure from 'the tradition'.
After years of trying, I was accepted into the 2011 Quilt National. It was an amazing experience.
I attended the opening and saw the Dairy Barn in Athens Ohio and met some of my personal art-quilt heroines. (Judy Kirpich's Circles No. 4 is on the cover of the catalog that year)
My piece (Cross My Heart) was well received. In the QN catalog (page 58 and 59) it is opposite Kevan Lunney's Archeology: Fragment #14, Enso). Cross My Heart sold on opening day and a detail of it was published widely on the internet. Being included in the 2011 exhibition gave me inner confidence. I began to really trust my own voice.
I am thrilled to be included in Quilt National 2017. It's the 20th biennial since Nancy Crow founded it in 1979. One of my heroines, Nancy is one of the jurors this year.
Soft Summer Gone 2016 Judy Martin detail plant dyed silk with hand stitched quilting |
26 comments:
congratulations, Judy
Congratulations!
nothing. it means nothing to me. It is so FAR BEYOND anything to me, my small world
of Making. Which to me is my world, tho small and Nothing in comparison.
Congratulations, Judy! Alas, like Grace...no...I've never even entertained the thought of entering either QN or Houston. I am slowly moving outside my comfort zone when it comes to exhibiting but those two? Nope! Terrified at the thought!
wonderful wonderful wonderful!
Congratulations! ❤️🌻👏🏼
Such a great honor for your great work, congratulations
congratulations!
How great for you, especially with Nancy Crow on the jury. It will be a show to look forward to, I'm sure.
I'm afraid that I'm perhaps one of the egregious non-traditional folks, but was also delighted to be juried into QN in the past. It is an honour, and a lottery both, I think.
Congratulations. Recognition and appreciation are always encouraging.
Oh congratulations--Your non-traditional tradition is so very special.
The title of this post comes from a question that the organizers of QN asked us to answer for a page in the catalog.
I finally answered it yesterday and the thought process made me realize that Quilt National has been important to me as an artist looking for authenticity in my own voice.
For years I made art quilts based on traditional patterns that I used like a secret code for women. I felt connected to the women artists who had come before me and how they responded to their lives and surroundings by finding the patterns within the patterns. And they found time in those busy lives to lay out their artist souls into large cloth art works and use those art works to cover and protect their families.
In the Quilt National books, I saw that this tradition of pattern could be stretched or outright abandoned and quilts used to communicate personal truths for the artists as if they ere paintings or poems. And as I have matured, my own work has veered away from traditional pattern and become more and more poetic and painterly.
Was it Quilt National that pushed me closer to the creative edge, or was it my recent degree studies, or was it my own slow maturing and finding time? Now my quilts do not rely on the traditional patterns to tell stories.
They do rely on something that lasts from that tradition however. Emotional truth. Hand stitching as expression of body and love. Ideas of protection and safety, destruction and reparation. Mending. Covering.
Congratulation Judy! Your work and your musings are very inspiring.
Beautifully said, Judy. We make work from our inner authenticity, and also need those who are our contemporaries and those who've gone before us as touchstones.
I've been to the show a couple of times and it is fabulous. Congratulations...
Congrats Judy! A well deserved honor.
Congratulations, Judy. It looks like a wonderful piece that was accepted. I enjoy your soulful posts so much.
judy, congratulations! great news.
Congratulations and wonderful!
Congratulations Judy!
Congratulations.
I must admit I have never looked at Quilt National. I live in a small bubble. Maybe when I grow up!
How fabulous. Looking at the list of exhibitors I spotted an old colleague of mine from the days at the Art Institute of Chicago, Petra Soesemann. How small our circles are. Amazing days to come.
Congratulations, Judy!
Congratulations, Judy! I don't know much about Quilt National. I live too far from America. But I make an idea of how much it represents in the contemporary quiltmaking.
Congratulations! You know I am thrilled for you. This year's challenge has its rewards.
Until the recent change, the quest for QN felt like a two-year commitment to solitary confinement. No more excuses!
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