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Sunday, October 24, 2010

More 'Before' Shots



The main room of the studio set up for an Illustration course.

Coming down the stairs from the main floor there is this small entry room.
Now to get cleaning!
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Friday, October 22, 2010

Studio 'Before'

I spent today at the college getting my studio classroom ready for a class starting November 8th.
This is a 'before' shot of the bathroom/storage room.

Previously the 3 rooms were the Sculpting and Molding Studio so you can imagine the amount of fine dust and grit that has worked its way into everything.

Hand basins and lockers.

These are the 'Before' shots. I'll keep you posted on the transformation.
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Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Writing-Reading-Gardening

I haven't posted for a while because i have been spending a lot of time each day editing my dissertation, this semester's module towards my BA.
Last week i received, in the mail, 2 books from Anne Gott in Calgary. She has been following on my blog the reorganisation of the Victoria College of Art library. She noticed the mention of starting a Textile Arts section and sent 2 books as her contribution!
Aren't there some wonderfully generous and caring people out there. And Anne is one of them.
This Colette Wolff book happens to be on the Book List for the 1st 2 courses i am teaching at the college. It came out in 1996 and there hasn't been another book published before or after, on this particular technique, that comes anywhere close to the quality of this one. There is a lifetime of exploration between its covers.
Every time i use this book i get the urge to write to Colette to thank her. Yes, i need to follow through on that urge.


The 2nd book Anne donated is another valuable resource holding its own. It was published in response to schools in the UK expecting textile art students to present their work on worksheets. Later, when I did City and Guilds courses, work was glued directly onto boards. The expectation for this BA degree program is to fill sketchbook after sketchbook with ideas in a more informal presentation People are now interested in the actual process the artist works through.
You may have noticed an increase in the number of art exhibitions where the artist's sketchbooks are included in the display.
It is interesting how things evolve.
What will be next? I have a hunch about what it will be and i will be using it in my classes.

The other activity that has kept me away from my blog is happenings in the garden. I have been waiting for the fall season to experiment with a method to convert a weedy area back to Douglas-fir natives. I pulled out the blackberry and my husband cut short the rampant grass with his trusty weed-eater blade.

We covered the area with newspaper then a layer of soil/mulch.
I don't know how long i have to wait until i will be able to dig through the newspaper to plant natives transplanted from other areas.
I'll keep you posted on how this experiment progresses.
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Saturday, October 9, 2010

Dialogue

It must have been cold last night because this morning there are a lot more fallen leaves under the maple.
The tea cloth I put under it is quite covered.
I hope lots of interesting staining is going on under those leaves.
I have to watch it closely now to catch it before the cotton threads start disintegrating like they did in a previous sample.

This was an unexpected surprise. Even though it is October here in Victoria and I knew the lawn was still growing, I didn't expect grasses to grow up under the cloth.
They have found their way through the eyelets in the tea cloth. It looks like threading.
I could do something with this.
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Thursday, October 7, 2010

Victoria College of Art Library

This is the 'Before' picture.
Barbara McCaffrey and I have put in a couple of days of work reorganising the library at the college.
We are going through the contents of every shelf and developing an organisation system that will reflect the courses taught at the collage.

After 2 days work we have managed to make it look worse than when we started.

But, look what happened as I was picking up my bag to get ready to leave.
A Student walked by, stopped, opened her back pack and got out a binder then started looking at books in a specific section.
It works!!! Even the make shift, tentative set up is already looking more approachable.
Barb and I have donated some books to start the Textile Arts section. And some angel donated what initially looks like the complete set of Threads magazine, including the premier issue. What a treasure trove.
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Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Victoria & Albert Beach Art

http://www.vam.ac.uk/collections/textiles/lawty/world_beach/map_gallery/



While Articulation was exploring the Bay of Fundy, we did some beach art and sent pictures of it in to the Victoria and Albert Museum to be added to artist Sue Lawty's World Beach Art project.
On the Google map zoom in on the Bay of Fundy and click on the flags at St Martins beach and Hopewell Rocks.
If you go in to Google maps over the next few days you can get to the 2 beaches quickly by clicking on the 2nd & 3rd pictures on the right, below the world map.



Sunday, October 3, 2010

Dialogues Continue

Last year i wrapped the 4 the trees i decided to have a 'dialogue' with. After a few months the unbleached cotton i had wrapped them with showed no signs of the staining i had expected. So I left the trees wrapped and continued the dialogues in other ways.
Yesterday, while i was outside doing fall clean-up in the garden, i checked my wrapped trees and this is what I found.
Staining on the Arbutus wrap...

...and the Douglas-fir (image above), and also on the wraps of the maple and the cedar.
It made me realise i can't rush these dialogues because i am wanting to respond to cycles of time that are different to my own.

I also checked on another dialogue going on out in the garden at the present.
Leaves have started to fall on the table cloth lying out under the maple. The cloth is no longer white but i don't know if there is just dirt from rain and animals walking on it or staining is starting to take place.

I spent today working on sessions for the class i start teaching in November, 'Mark Making With Thread'.
People have been generously donating materials and books for the students to use. I went through the bags and sorted them according to how they could be used in the different sessions i have planned. One lot of fabric is big enough for everyone in the class to have a piece so i planned a session around it.
I also did lots of reading for my dissertation and some brainstorming on a white board to organise my thoughts for the next few chapters. I have done enough reading for now. Tomorrow i get back to the writing.
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Friday, October 1, 2010

Spore Patterns

With the warm wet weather we have been having, all sorts of fungi have been sprouting up.
Here are some images of spore patterns made by some of them.


They look like those retina images one now gets when having one's eyes examined.
Or is it mushroom iridology?
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Sunday, September 26, 2010

Bay of Fundy

Ferry crossing to Deer Island.


Beach combing.

Checking out of Jonah B & B.
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Saturday, September 25, 2010

Articulation in Bay of Fundy

I continue to sample the seafood chowders when we stop for a meal. I couldn't go past the beet salad so ordered just a cup of chowder (6/10).

Results of beach combing as the sun was setting.


The locals collect other things.
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Thursday, September 23, 2010

Articulation's Fundy Study

Deborah and Phil, our hosts of the Jonah Place Bed and Breakfast Inn we stayed at while based in Sussex, prepared a delicious evening meal for us one night.

Here is the 2010 group shot in the front room of the 1884 inn.

The low bush blueberry fields were starting to turn red.

A blueberry picking comb ReBecca's grandfather made.
We enjoyed lots of blueberry flavoured food wherever we travelled around the Bay of Fundy.
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Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Fredericton - Bay of Fundy

While exploring the streets of Fredericton, we came across a group of legal graffiti artists decorating the side wall of a skate shop. The 1st 2 are local artists while the far 3 were commissioned from Montreal.



Graffiti art is becoming mainstream.
What will be next?
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