Showing posts with label bird image. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bird image. Show all posts

Saturday, December 14, 2024

Murmuration

murmuration 

This is a post about a new quilt top, murmuration.  I want to write about the process and how it made me feel as I machine pieced pinwheels from silk samples that were given to me by my daughter April and her friend, Em J, who works in film costuming. 

I want to write about how I let this obsession happen and how I loved that it happened.  I was in a rare place of creativity and had to keep sewing and pinning to the wall until finished.  

I used silly rules things like having to sew the four half square triangle blocks of a pinwheel together when I ran out of pins and then eventually having to sew two pinwheels together when I ran out of pins again.

And I want to tell you how I used my body, not my mind, (unless it was my mind that made up the limits and rules). For example I didn't let myself change the size of the gifted strips of cloth.  If they were 5 1/2 inches wide, I left them that size and therefore had to pair them with another strip the same size.  Eventually, when I was forced by to change colour, I would trim the larger piece, and that is why there are smaller triangles.  They are the trimmings from the wider strips.                    

I also added some pieces from my own supply of shot silks, but chose not to have any reds or yellows in order keep to the rather sombre palette in the original fabrics.  

Usually when I work I turn the phone timer to one hour but for the ten days that it took me to do this piecework, I turned it to two hours at a time.  Even then, time went by so quickly.

And yet, physically, I tried to slow everything down.  I used my body and moved a fair amount for each step.  I cut the four squares needed for a pinwheel at my cutting board and then marked them carefully with the diagonal lines for seams and then I would walk around the table to my sewing machine and sew them together and cut them.  Then I had to get up and go to the iron in order to press them flat, and then walk into another room to the pinwall and place them.  Then I sat for a while in my chair and look at it all, eventually getting up to go back to the cutting board to cut out two more sets of squares.  My rules said that they had to be a different pair than the previous time which made it interesting for me.  My point is that I did not try to cut a whole bunch of squares at one time, or do any chain piecing, or iron everything at the same time.  Each block was done one at a time and then looked at.  Regarded. It was like painting with my body and the sewing machine and the iron and those beautiful silks.

I wanted to tell you this thing about moving my body more than I needed to because of the feeling that it was necessary to slow down the machine sewing.  I used the wall as if it was a piece of paper or canvas and worked by intuition in that arbitrary placement.  I was obsessed with getting the whole thing finished though, because of the placement.  It wasn’t as if I could just pile up the blocks and put them in a drawer, I had to finish it in the one go.  At least that's how it felt.  Urgent.

When I finished I put my coat and boots on and took my cane so that I could manage my way down the gentle slope that was deep in drifted snow and pinned the sewn assemblage on the line I have there, down in the cedars.  


It had snowed three or four inches overnight and the east morning light was delightful on the moving lake.  

Now I've chosen a backing cloth from the silk fabric that my instagram friend, Fabia, gifted me earlier this year (two shades of gold), and I will hand stitch this not-square shape.

I love that it is shaped like a cloud and I may make another.  

The thing is, I thought I'd lost this almost erotic passion of losing myself in creativity for such a long period.  I realized that I was in that rare place where reality was outside of me. I was in a dream world and I knew it.  I was in another place.  I was aware of this and I loved it.

It's hard to write this so it makes sense, but maybe you understand.  

I think you do.  

Saturday, January 19, 2019

meanwhile

 
Dear journal
It's been a week since I last wrote.
I've been working at collecting images to upgrade my website so it has been busy.
This blog rarely posts my finished work.
If I want to share finished work, I need an organized site.
But it is computer work and that gives me a neck ache.
Seeing artwork in real life (irl) is so much better.
All this week I've stayed indoors.
I've started to use the stationary bike again, after a long break from it.
The bike is in my studio so that while I do my pedaling,
I am able to look at what's on the design wall.

Penny and I are having another show together, and we've started planning more seriously.
I've been making brand new work for that, and feel happy. 
 
I'm  also getting to the edges of this sunny-rainy piece. 
It is becoming distorted.
I pull the threads very snugly to encourage the distortion
I stitch around thoe velvet rainy-mushroom shapes three times
 
 
 Not sure if I love it anymore.
 

meanwhile the world goes on
meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain
are moving across the landscape
over the prairies and the deep trees,
the mountains and the rivers....
mary oliver 

the images of the sweaters with holes are from the book, Habitus by Ann Hamilton. 

Tuesday, November 21, 2017

Bird Images from Cape Dorset

Qupanuapak (Big Bird) by Sheojuk Etidlooie  stone cut 24.5 x 28"
On southwestern Baffin Island is the Canadian Arctic Territory of Nunavut.
The artists of Cape Dorset have been pulling prints for nearly forty-five years.
Bird Song by Nikotai Mills  Lithograph  22 x 30 inches
The artists depict important elements of their culture.
Language and stories and their connection to the Arctic.
Images in this post are from this book, one that I gave my Alaskan grand-boys a while back and noticed here, on the book shelf.
Young Goose Preening Kavavaow Mannomee  stonecut and stencil 25 x 18.5 inches

Illustrious Owl by Kenojuak Ashevak  lithograph 22.5 x 30 inches
I'm in Alaska visitng our daughter Oona and her family.
This will be my first American Thanksgiving.
Mitiq (Eider Duck) by Sheojuk Etidlooie  Lithograph 30 x 22.5 inches
These bird images are for you my friends.  xo
just because 

Tuesday, January 17, 2017

the river beneath

I'm always taken care of by my work.
You let go of your own idea and let the work go where it needs to go.
And that's sometimes very uncomfortable.
One learns to linger in discontent and not be judgmental, but to have faith.
Kiki Smith

more views of this piece in   New Work,  the river beneath.

Friday, July 22, 2016

turning the air to cloth

turning the air to cloth
Watching the birds whirling gracefully across the blue sky with undulating curves, I think how they look like cross stitches.  Then they disappear, fly away.
I was inspired to make something that might hold that ephemeral moment.
In this piece, embroidery is used as a quilting stitch to connect the birds and the air around them into a kind of spirit cloth.
The black birds that move so beautifully in unison over the fields could be seen as a metaphor for those dark yet brief moments that happen in all our lives.

Or perhaps they just show us that it's time to make a change in direction.
Round Lake Mud Bay 1915 oil on wood by Tom Thomson
There is an exhibition opening this weekend at the Perivale Gallery and I am showing this bird quilt.
Images of the full quilt can be seen here.

It is a two sided quilt.
Above Us is the second side of the wall piece turning the air to cloth.  The dark outlines of the birds in flight are filled with white or light coloured threads to signify peace and calmness.  The underneath side of the common embroidery stitches that cover the body of the quilt mark it with an unexpected, subtle drawing.

Thursday, June 23, 2016

nigel peake birds

I am re-organizing the single level of my house so that I can resume work on the project I was doing in my new studio.  I have emptied a drawer and a shelf and have set up my sewing machine and iron.
This book by Nigel Peake was on that shelf.
I think that I'll pass it on to my grand-boys.  They like to draw.

Wednesday, March 02, 2016

roots and wings

Two things to give our children
One is roots, the other is wings
I've updated the page about my kids just now. x 

Saturday, January 09, 2016

looking at birds in textile books

The Songbird Arriving  by Janet Bolton  6 x 4.5 inches

crossing the border by Janet Bolton  7 x 4.5 inches
If you haven't fixed on a subject, I suggest that your first picture be a bird.  It allows for incorporating plenty of your own ideas and there is a huge variety of possible bird images to choose from.  Collect pictures of birds and pick elements from several to make your own bird.  Janet Bolton.
the golden star by Janet Bolton  7 x 5.5 inches
The top three images in this post are by Janet Bolton.  Janet uses the simplest of body and wing shape and gives us birds with personality, each holding their own in space.  These three are from her newest book Fabric Pictures)
Eastbound by Ginny Smith  75 x 44 inches  2008
Ginny Smith is fearless in her approach to bird imagery.  Huge black birds made from dark fabrics fly across the bold yellow and blue plaid sky.  Folk art playful!  I visited Ginny's website  and was quite inspired by the many folk art expansions of traditional pieced quilt patterns.  Birds are part of our natural world.  They have innate compulsion.  G.Smith
The photos of both bird pieces (above) by Ginny Smith are from Quilt National catalogues (2009 and 2015).  She speaks further about why she chooses birds to work with in this video.
cuckoo by Nicola Henley   33 x 48 inches  1988
Nicola Henley's birds are made with print making techniques on cotton with hand stitch.  All three of hers are from my beloved copy of Art Textiles of the World Great Britain 
vultures by Nicola Henley 33 x 48 inches 1990
Nicola lives in Ireland and wrote in 1996 why she chooses to use birds in her artwork.  "Portraying birds is a way of drawing people into the work.  It gives the viewer a real intimacy.  Often at private view people will talk to me about birds before they;ll talk about the art.  I want to make work that people can relate to.
Ravens, Coolawn 57 x 74 inches 1995
Stars and ravens are a combination I enjoy - one so black and earthy the other so bright and infinite."  Nicola Henley.  If you visit her website, you will see that Nicola has continued to work with birds.

I recall a poem about a bird alighting on my shoulder, singing a song without words, a song without meaning, without asking or giving.  If you know this poem, can you please let me know if it is Rumi who wrote it?    Thank you.