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Archive for the ‘This and that’ Category

Thursday This and That

Thursday, November 8th, 2007

Oops! It seems that some of you were missing me. I have been busy working on that Good to Be Green quilt and I can’t show it to you. I didn’t have anything else worth putting on the blog. I have been too depressed about the state of the world to even do a rant about it.

We have been having gorgeous weather. Bright and sunny after the fog burns off. I think it is about to end. Here is the view from my studio:

studioview.jpg

Today was crit group with June and Terry at my house so I had to spend yesterday spiffing up the place. Mary, who was my roommate at the Tacoma symposium, joined us today with a really wonderful political quilt. I have no photos so you will have to believe me that it was a great piece. June and Terry showed their Good to be Green quilts so no pictures of those, either. I didn’t have mine quite ready for critiquing so I pulled out this piece that has been plaguing me. I knew it wasn’t working.

pathways.jpg

One hour after I was home from lunch with my friends, I took their suggestions to heart. And now I have a series!! (These are clickable.)

zenpaths.jpg zencirclesvertical.jpg

Does the second one look better in vertical or horizontal?

zencircleshorizontal.jpg

Do they work as a diptych? If so, which orientation?

diptych2.jpg

diptych1.jpg

OK! Have you seen enough of this quilt(s) yet?

I am going to bury this at then end. At WW yesterday, I was not down one iota! But, I shall hang in there.

A Wacky Wednesday

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

Thank you to every one who checked in and made such lovely comments about my dandelions. I so appreciate hearing from you.

Happy Halloween. Warning!!!! Cute grandchildren photos are coming. Mia as Pippy Longstockings and Milo as a Ghost of Halloween Past (he wanted to wear his costume from 2 years ago!)

I love the hair. I wanted to borrow the spray hair paint!!

Mia designed this Jack-o-cat and her Mom carved it.

You can see more silly Halloween photos on my Flickr.

We do not get any trick or treaters on our street, but a few streets away there is lots of action — steaming cauldrons with witches, screaming ghouls, bats and pumpkins galore. This is a neighborhood that loves Halloween.

Yesterday, I received a belated birthday present from my good friend, Judy, in Georgia. We have so much in common that it is sort of spooky. We are not sure how we found each other, but I think she stumbled on Lisa’s blog and bought one of the Mod birds which she was making and selling at the time. Back then, my girls had links to my blog so a lot of people who read their blogs would come and visit me. I must have embarrassed them at some point because they stopped linking to me!! So, anyway, I think Judy found me that way. We are hoping to take a class together this summer up at Coupeville Art Center. I hope it works out. Judy’s sense of humor is just as wacky as mine – maybe even more so.

This is what she made for me this year. It has an aluminum base which is cut out and covered with fabric embellishments. We have our dogs with us. We are wearing our silly hats and our endless/end this war tee shirts. I love that she has given me the body that I aspire to have. So I will treasure this. Thank you, Judy!!

She also gave me one of her gorgeous cards made from her silk sorbet fabric.

Speaking of svelte bodies, today was weigh-in day. I was down, but then, I was up two weeks ago. I am really stuck at this weight, but I definitely am losing inches so I am not going to stress. I am doing up to 70 minutes of aerobic walking a day.

I Heart Orygun!

Sunday, October 28th, 2007

These signs abound in the countryside of Oregon, promoting a yes vote on proposition 49, which will keep developers from running rampant in the rural areas of this state.

As we drove home today and I began to see the signs, it made me realize how much I love my adopted home state. The northern California landscape was so bleak compared to what awaited us in Oregon. I managed to get some drive-by photos. They are all clickable or you can see them all at my Flickr site. Having grown up in upstate New York, I have always missed the colors of fall when I lived in California and North Carolina.

Back to our trip to San Francisco — on Friday morning, we went to the SFMOMA, to see the current exhibits. I enjoyed seeing the assemblages and collages of Joseph Cornell. We were also blown away by the life size photos of Jeff Walls of Vancouver, Canada.

Friday night we had dinner with the SF core family — Mark and Jayme and Lisa. We went to a new restaurant in Mark’s neighborhood with a very eclectic and unusual menu. One of the desserts was chocolate cake with a blue cheese filling. Since I didn’t get back to Lisa’s shop for another photo, I stole this one from her so that you can see the interior. They have been doing great sales since they opened, so we are all very happy. Thank you all, from Lisa, for the best wishes. We are really proud of her. In the midst of all this, she is still working 20 hours a week at her old job (which she is leaving at the end of December) and producing work for a show in Venice, CA, opening next week. What a girl!

Saturday, we had the pleasure of attending our great niece, Viola’s, first birthday party. It had a Halloween theme. Viola was dressed as Princess Leah or Princess Violeah, as I called her. That is her beautiful Mom, Jessie.

Here she is with her dad, blowing out the cupcake candle.

The place was filled with young couples and their babies and toddlers, making the grandparents and the great aunt and uncle feel quite old.

My favorite party attendee was their French Bulldog, Lola.

Here are two more of my favorite people, Mark and Jayme!

OK, that is enough family stuff. We drove as far as Vacaville last night so we could get a head start on our drive home. It was nice to drive in to Portland at the end of October and find sunshine. I went out for a half hour walk after we arrived home. We found some soup in the freezer, and it felt good to eat my own food again. Tomorrow, I have to get back to counting WW points. Oh, one great thing that happened at the party, Steve’s brother looked at me and said, “You’ve lost weight, you look great!” Yeah, somebody noticed.

California, Here I Come

Monday, October 22nd, 2007

Tomorrow, Mr C and I are leaving for San Francisco for a very important event. Our daughter Lisa and her business partner, Rena, are opening a gallery/shop in San Francisco. You can read about them on this Design Sponge post.

Better yet, if you are in the Bay Area, come on by and celebrate with us. Here is the invitation:

I’ll be there to pour you a glass of wine!

We are also looking forward to some time with other family in the Bay area. It will be my great niece, Viola’s, first birthday, and we wrangled an invite to the party.

I do not have anything creative to show you as the only work I have done is for the Twelve X Twelve Journal Quilt project. And I really haven’t done much on that piece.

Yesterday, we had the family over for soup and salad. Today, I spent some time buying smaller pants. I was so embarrassed this week-end because the pants I packed were falling off. I hadn’t worn them for a couple of weeks.

I will have my camera and laptop with me so I will be checking in from the festivities. I am also going to try to get caught up on e-mails to y’all.

Evolution of the Art Quilt

Sunday, October 21st, 2007

This was the theme of the Contemporary QuiltArt Symposium. I thought I would share some of my thoughts on the delightful day.

Our first speaker was Robert Shaw who wrote “The Art Quilt” and the recently published Art Quilts: A Celebration.” He started by telling us that he doesn’t like the term Art Quilter or Art Quilt. When asked later, what we should call ourselves, he recommended calling ourselves artists who use fabric/textiles/quilts as our medium. I have started doing this because I find it unwieldy to try to get unknowing folks off the idea of a bed quilt that their grandmother once made them.

I digress! Robert gave us a very interesting slide show of the evolution of “art quilting.” He gave us examples of artists like Rauchenberg, Warhol and Cristo who worked with fabric. Here is the Rauchenberg piece. He reportedly ran out of materials and took the quilt and the sheets off his bed and created this piece.

He also gave examples of work by Albers, Ellsworth Kelly and Rothko which used a grid or geometric design, reminiscent of traditional quilts.

He mentioned some of the early quilters who were pushing the envelope: Joan Lintault, Therese May and Molly Upton. Of course, Nancy Crow was mentioned and he said that he had just seen her show of new work and that she is “moving voraciously forward like a shark!” Loved that comment.

Where are we going in the future? Digital, baby, digital! He specifically mentioned the new work of Michael James and the collaborative team of Gayle Fraas and Duncan Slade.

Next, we heard from Barbara Lee Smith who made the transition from city girl in Chicago to the island coast of Washington where she has learned to love and embrace “water filled air.” I was not familiar with her work. She paints lutradur which she then cuts and fuses into beautiful landscapes. She was influenced by a class that she took with Constance Howard. She does not consider herself to be a quilter. She uses no batting. She stitches her pieces from the back, using an industrial Juki. My favorite quote from her was a comment by Helen Frankenthaler, who said (in a strong NY accent) “Don’t make it gorgeous, make it good!”

After lunch, we heard from Cynthia Corbin, whose work I love. It was so much fun to see her slide show and watch how her work changed and morphed over the years. Cynthia showed us how she took the bad work and made it work — sometimes cutting it up and reassembling and sometimes, just painting or using oil sticks to change the surface. Like Ann Johnston, she now uses a long arm quilting machine. She does meticulous and heavy quilting as she found that her body could not take shoving a large quilt through a small machine.

Last on the program for Mary and I was the panel discussion with Erika Carter, Jeannette DeNicolis Meyer and Jill Nordfors Clark. They each gave a 10 minute synopsis of the evolution in their work. Again, it was fascinating to see their slides and to hear these women describe how and why their artistic endeavors changed over time. The most interesting part of the panel discussion was learning or understanding how they worked through the fallow times or of how they made leaps and changes in their work. Erika started with commercial fabrics and saw no need to use hand-dyes when others started down that path. She eventually went the route of discharging and painting fabric.

One theme of the artists who spoke to us was that at some point they stopped taking workshops and even attending shows of quilted art as they did not want to be influenced by the work of others. Finding your authentic voice as an artist requires getting in to the studio and doing the work.