Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Sunday, August 29, 2010
My homeless piece called "Wallflowers" is on the road! Her first stop was in Manchester NH where I got to see her hanging. The show was curated by Kathleen McCabe. Unlike many of the other quilts on display, this show was thought provoking and I am so glad I was chosen to participate.
This summer has been full of work and family fun and very little quilting, but in four days the kids go to school and I will have plenty of time to get the creative juices flowing again. I will be doing the Apple Harvest Festival in Amherst in September and TWIST in November, but I also have quite a few projects I would like to get done for some upcoming juried shows. This means I have to focus and get to work!
Sunday, February 7, 2010
More on art vs craft.
I'm reading Choosing Craft the artist's viewpoint, edited by Halper and Douglas. I find much of the artists' writing selections to be filled with semantics. However, I recently read through these quotes which were thought provoking and to-the-point.
"Crafts have to be made, crafts have to be objects, and crafts usually must have some connection to traditional materials, techniques, and histories. Being necessarily limited, craft is thus not fully commensurable with art. It is philosophically different. Like it or not, craft and art are somewhat different things... Crafters respond first and foremost to the material in their hands...I propose that a crafter will not subordinate his or her medium, whatever the medium, to intellectually interesting ideas." - Bruce Metcalf (metalsmith and critic)
I have been reading a lot about art quilters who do their work on fiber and spend inordinate amounts of reworking the cloth. They paint it, embellish it, stain it, rip it, and fuse it. Is this what makes me a crafter and them artists? I enjoy paring a landscape down to only the essential shapes and colors. I have no desire to manipulate the cloth other than with stitches and I always have three layers stiched and bound together which is the basic definition of what a quilt is.
Wild Turkeys in Amherst College Fields is one of many pieces I hope to sell this spring.
Tuesday, June 16, 2009

This past week has been about cards. Cup cakes, onions, peas, corn on the cob, cairns and chicks. There is a certain satisfaction in making paper cards: watching the pile grow, penning my logo on the back, inserting a finished card in a biodegradable plastic sleeve. And I know people love them. But eighteen cupcakes in one day is just too much for the "artist" in me so I will have to get better with my production calendar!
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