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Friday, June 17, 2011

Jane Kenyon @ SDA



In the same gallery as Clare, Jane Kenyon is exhibiting a collection of large machine embroidered works she calls 'Transformation'.



Jane Kenyon is another artist whose work makes the viewer dance as they move back and forward, changing perspectives from macro...


 ...to micro.


These images don't even begin to give the impression of the depth, complexity and flow of of Jane's stitching. Posted by Picasa

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Clare Verstegen @ SDA

Clare has an exquisite body of work called 'Atmospheric Measures', in the Joan Mondale Gallery at the Textile Centre www.textilecentermn.org, here in Minneapolis.
(these are terrible images of some of the work)




She screen prints on thick industrial felt made of wool, which means she can then have fun with her other favourite technique....




...burning.




She takes the burn marks around to the edges of each work, which is most satisfying to discover.
Notice, above, her purpose-build hanging system that is in such harmony with her felt work.
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Wednesday, June 15, 2011

SDA Presenter - India Flint

India Flint's knowledge and her sense of humour were well received during the SDA conference.




She finished her presentation by unwrapping a bundle of Minneapolis bio-metal materials she had collected during her city wanderings and steamed in her hotel room.


The Minneapolis Cloth




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Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Tim Harding @ SDA

Another favourite exhibition at the SDA conference I attended is Tim Harding's work, also showing at the Katherine E. Nash Gallery.
These stapled squares of brown knit fabric....


...and this fabric pushed and poked through a grid....


...needs to be viewed from a distance to see the images.


There are large hanging panels composed of mosaics of squares, equally intriguing and effective.
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Monday, June 13, 2011

India Flint @ SDA Conference

Another 'favourite' exhibition at the SDA conference is India Flint's 'the WindFallMaps' exhibit in the Katherine E. Nash Gallery www.nash.umn.edu


Each garment has been printed and dyed with plant materials and metals found in a specific place.


So each is like a map or visual record of a place and time.




Floating garments are hung with hems at viewers' eye level so we felt dwarfed by evidence of places the garments came from. It was all quite ethereal.
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Sunday, June 12, 2011

Jason Pollen "Sentinels"

Jason Pollen, a founding member of the Surface Design organisation, has an exhibition of work in The Christensen Center Art Gallery. this was one of my favourites in the day of exhibition visits.


It was the day of the opening reception and Jason was there. We were able to ask him questions and hear him  talk about his work.


He is a master of surface design techniques so his is the sort of work where the viewer moves back and forth in front of the work to get distance then to get close enough to enjoy the details


In the gallery space it looks like a dance is going on.





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Saturday, June 11, 2011

SDA 2011 Gallery Day

I am attending the Surface Design Association conference in Minneapolis. After the Meet and Greet session the day was filled with gallery visits - too many to see all in one day so we had the difficult task of picking which ones we would go to.
One of my favourites of the day was work by Ann Hall Richards, called 'Repetition Meditation Revelation'.
The image shows a large curtain of leaves.


Each leaf is hand stitched into a chain. Ann's intention is to 'transform common objects into contemporary and contemplative works that invite and even challenge the viewer to consider not only the content, but also the process and choice of materials.' She was most successful with her intention.


I also enjoyed Teresa Paschke's 'New tools and Ancient Techniques' work. She printed digital images of graffiti onto large cotton canvas surfaces then added her own exquisite hand stitched graffiti.

The butterfly and floral motifs and the obviously slow process employed to add her own marks were in such contrast in every way with the printed graffiti image.


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Thursday, June 9, 2011

Excavating London's History

I see the images for my last post didn't show so I have reposted them - not quite in the right order but you will see what I was rambling on about.









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Monday, June 6, 2011

Digging Into the Past

While attending the JC graduates exhibition, I noticed a construction site across the road - a mosque building was being extended.


A construction crew had spent 6 weeks hand excavating behind the behind the building down to about 15 feet below grade. Access to the site was along a narrow alley way between buildings so no heavy machinery could be taken to the site. This conveyor belt carried the excavated soil up to grade level.



Micheal was one of the hard working people whose job was to run between the top of the conveyor and the skip outside on the street with a rotation of 2 wheel barrows, one being filled while he emptied the other.


Wherever I go I look for old glass and pottery shards, usually on beaches but I spied some in this skip. I got talking to Michael and checked that he didn't mind me looking for treasures in his soil. I told him he was like an archeological digging down into the past.


Then he told me about some of the things he had found. They had dug up many old glass and pottery containers and literally hundreds of animal horns.
Animal horns! I needed some for my art work. Micheal put aside some for me.



He also gave me this old pot that looks like what was used to hold beer and other fermented drinks. I was very interested in this because in the 18th century my family were malsters in London. I don't know exactly where they lived but other family members had lived nearby to this mosque in Hackney, when it was a trendy new suburb in the late 1700s.
So it was a great day for finding treasures.
I declared the cattle horns when I entered Canada because we have had major problems with mad cow disease. Even thought the horns are fossilized, the officer sprayed them with disinfectant and they are now drying out and bleaching on my balcony at home.