• Sometimes I can understand why some people are closed-minded. My head is so full of ideas that it is almost painful. If I had a month to myself in a beautiful isolated place, I might be able to make my way through it, but since we have to play the cards that we are dealt, here I am. In the world.

    I am still weaving paper. It is an easy activity I can do on my office desk during this slow time at work and still answer phones, emails, and do the occasional paperwork until my work world starts to rock at the beginning of August. Or maybe when I get back from vacation next week, since the budget uncertainty is still looming over our heads. I’m not worried about my job (yet) but it’s possible that I might have to deal with some of the fallout.

    I especially like this one, because it looks organic and antiqued. It also is leading my mind to a rabbit tunnel book, along with Robbie Rabbit.

    My thoughts are turning more towards Sunset Beach next week. I plan to take a few clothes and lots of art supplies. Since we will have four people and luggage in our Honda Fit, something has to give. Fortunately there is a washer/dryer. We may not have Internet access there. If not, I will not be blogging. I might not blog anyway, we’ll see how it goes.

    Last night I cut bookboard for covers. I thought that I would glue down papers and cloth on them before the trip but now I think that I might do that on the back porch of our oceanfront house. I can hardly believe that I will have this opportunity to play at the beach for a whole 6.5 days. I may have completely different ideas inspired by the beauty there. I’ll take the copper loom too and play with some found object and fiber weaving.

    I’m not sure that I shared this before. This is a woven cloth strip square that I made a few months ago and overstitched with my new sewing machine, trying out the different stitches. The cloth strips are from the soy wax batik class that I took with Melanie Testa last year, and some onionskin dyed cotton.

    HA! Look what color it is!

  • I’ve been thinking more about this aversion that I had to the patchwork squares, and how my first reaction was that I don’t like pink or shiny. When, actually, that is not true at all. Now I think that was a knee-jerk reaction – a tomboy response. (Here’s a link to one of my very favorite songs, one that describes me so well.)

    It is true that I am not drawn to pastel colors. But I love a bold magenta, and the pink edges of clouds. I love the glow of silk, and reflections on water. All I have to do is look at my own tapestries.

    I think it is that the color combinations are bugging me. And that can be remedied in many different ways.

    So this has set my thoughts off in a different direction – gender, the expectations of others concerning women, what I expect of myself as far as my gender, and my rejection of the “girly-girl” culture for myself. I guess that I have seldom felt really feminine, yet I have always been attracted to men and masculinity. Never thought about it that much – I yam what I yam. This color bias and gender thing is interesting.

  • As I shared earlier, I am in Jude Hill’s Magic Diaries online class, which is full of the most amazing ideas and people. This is a Slow class. One of my new goals on this blog is to share my work – beginnings, mistakes, ideas – as well as the finished work or work that looks great. I guess that I am trying to make this point: being an artist does not mean being perfect.

    So many people say that they aren’t artists. Well, that’s just not true. Art is how you express yourself. If you don’t express yourself, then you might not be an artist. But is there really anyone out there who does not communicate at all, even just within herself? Therefore, we are all artists. There are many who are harsh judges of their art, some who don’t judge at all, and the middle few.

    Anyway, this intro is all about the beginnings, the wispy ideas swirling around this magic cloth. I got excited about the theme of an autobiographical, visual quilted/stitched cloth, maybe starting at the center and radiating out through my life, so it is not finished until I am. There will be lurking in this cloth a lot about change (the Slow Turn theme has always been about change as well as vaudeville) and growth, the “magic” being the change from one thing to another, the basic change of my self growing outward from my soul.

    When I found the box of patchwork squares, I was excited. Until I spread them out on the bed. As I lifted each one from the box, I confronted the reality that it was not going to get better at the bottom. Truth be known, I like maybe one of these squares – the one near the top left. The rest of them are pretty ugly.

    These are not my colors. I don’t like shiny. I don’t like pink. But if there is one good thing to come out of this, it causes me to reflect on what was going on at the time when I made these squares. I didn’t like pink or shiny then either. But I was trash-picking for cloth (some from the theater costume shop) and I was flat broke. I had a compulsion, and still do to some degree, to use things up, to not waste anything. So these combinations are pretty hideous. I think that I was so unhappy that I was churning out crap to give my hands something to do and my brain something to rest upon. I was also drunk most of the time and had a very low self esteem. I didn’t know how to be kind or true to myself.

    So, in a way, these squares are the perfect reflection of who I was then. That’s valuable, but I still don’t want to look at these colors or be reminded of this unhappiness. I put this out to my classmates and got a lot of great ideas of how to incorporate or alter them. I want to share the beginning of this here. It’s possible that they will go back into storage or I’ll give them away but I have a feeling that they will make it into this cloth somewhere and be transformed, like magic, into a happier reflection of my life now.

    Here’s something that I’m much happier about – I haven’t only been weaving strips of paper. I’ve been weaving strips of cloth too. This will be a base of whatever I do, and maybe the bases of other small pieces.

  • Book covers in progress. Painted papers from Albie Smith’s workshop + trash pickings from Patti Grass’ workshop. I can never stay out of a trash can at a book/paper art workshop.

    The last two covers are for a book that I was stuck on for a long time. Finally I decided to ditch the idea and cover it up with these weavings. I plan to wrap the edges with foil tape or other strips of paper.

    Sometimes it is difficult to let an idea go – you don’t know whether you’re being a quitter or being lazy. Sometimes you have to do it to move on. Wisdom is knowing the difference. That applies to nearly everything in life. I hope one day to become an expert at it.

  • When I first began weaving this piece, some shadowy figures emerged from the painted paper. “What are you waiting for?” they whispered. I unwove it all and thought about the nature of waiting and what I am waiting to do and what I am waiting for as I wrote on the weft paper strips and rewove them around the watchers.

    Now I will have to push myself not to wait too long to mount and display it. That is something that I procrastinate terribly about, and I am trying to work on that this year since I am now in a co-op gallery.

  • Right now Theo has claimed his rightful throne, which is on my lap when I’m sitting and in my face when I’m lying down. Guido, our 15 year old tomcat, is preoccupied with his tail. I expect that he will start chasing it at any minute now.

    I didn’t do anything exciting today. We ran errands, and I made a leftover hash with black beans and jasmine rice and leftover turkey loaf and hot Italian sausage and tomatoes and sweet onions and one little banana pepper from my garden. Ah, I still love that walk through the garden to see what I can come up with even when there’s not a lot.

    I’m thinking forward to my trip to Sunset Beach for a week with family. I want to put together several book covers and text blocks ready to bind, and warp my little copper loom in case I want to make a tapestry with found objects from the beach. That idea appeals to me a lot, even though the last time I tried it I didn’t enjoy it. Now I have loosened up quite a bit and won’t be adhering to many “rules” that I used to set for myself.

    I looked at my Magic Diaries class online. I love the way Jude expresses her thoughts. She explores words and ideas and talks as she thinks, or she sure does seem to. She mulls over the word “magic” and what it brings to her mind – appearing and disappearing. Things that turn into other things. It is precisely the kind of dialogue that I have with myself when creating, but I don’t have that knack for expressing it to others.

    She uses a lot of woven cloth strips in her work, and there is that appearing and disappearing as the strips cross each other. It is one of the things that I love about the paper weaving I’m playing with. The connections of the two strips transform the whole into another thing, or a big group of smaller things. I’ve always thought of the space of the loom as being a magic space. It’s hard to describe, but it seems to me that the cloth comes to life out of those connections, not the fibers that go in and out, even though I know that the fibers are what make the connections.

    I got out some patchwork squares that I put together thirty years ago when I was a theater major working in the costume shop. I abandoned them when I realized that they were all of different kinds of fabric and not the same size squares and would be impossible to wash without some fabrics being ruined or shrinking. I don’t really care about that now. This cloth will be for me. I sort of like the idea of combining something that I made so long ago when I was really a different person with something I make now, reflecting some of that change, claiming the parts of me and my history that I don’t like and loving them.

    I’ll take photos and share from time to time, but this project will be personal, will be for me. And I might decide to do something completely different, but I like this idea at the moment.

  • I have had loads of fun weaving painted papers this week. This is why you should save your ugliest papers. Not only might they serve as a background layer for something else, but something interesting happens when you slice and dice and weave them with other papers (or the other half of the same paper). I learned a lot from these two weavings, although they are not what everyone might call pretty.

    Some of the small squares created by the weaving are incredibly beautiful when you zero in on the details. They are little works of art within the whole that I would never have noticed.

    In the second set of papers, I wasn’t especially pleased with what was happening so I decided to experiment with different colored strips. The pattern took off in its own direction. It is a “color and weave” effect, creating its own stripes through the weaving process.

    Play is good.

  • Grains of sand magnified 250 times…wow. You’re walking on beauty and never guessed…

    http://sandgrains.com/Sand-Grains-Gallery.html

  • wood

    stone

    metal grate around sidewalk planting

  • So, there’s this book. I ordered several great books a few weeks ago, but there’s this book, this one book, that I can’t get past. It is ringing my chimes and I can’t read it for more than a few minutes without feeling like I’m going to have an anxiety attack from sheer joy.

    The book is Drawn to Stitch, by Gwen Hedley. I just now looked up her web site and I haven’t looked at it yet, other than to make sure that it is indeed her. Amazon has the book too, but the Interweave site has a nice application you can use to look through it.

    I feel like all my buttons are being pushed and I immediately got back to work taking photographs of lines and textures to use for some exercises in this book and for an artist’s book and for tapestry. Here are a few from Oregon:

    It is so good to have a pocket camera again!