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Archive for the ‘12X12 challenge’ Category

Eggplant ala Albers

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

I had so much fun with the eggplant theme for our Twelve X Twelve theme that I could not stop at one. I made 5. They are all silk. I love the color studies done by Josef Albers and decided it would be fun to use the square in a square composition.

I have a disclaimer. The colors are not very truein most of these pieces. The reds in pieces 2, 3 and 4 are not as red as they appear in the photos. I am going to try to photograph them again in natural light.

I need help deciding which one should become part of the Twelve X Twelve colorplay mosaic. So, I am asking for your help.

Now, go on over to the Twelve Blog and see what every one has done.

Eggplant Color Play

Wednesday, January 5th, 2011

I am having so much fun playing with the colors for our Twelve X Twelve color play theme. I am using the same layout, but different color ways and fabrics. I went to Mill Ends this morning on a quest to find silk in colors that really nailed the theme. This photo is not a good replication of the colors at all. The red is winier and the eggplant is a really deep aubergine. So far it is my favorite of the three I have done. I am going to do one more tomorrow, switching the wine and green.

As you can see, I am trying to do some perfectly spaced stitching on these. Not an easy feat for me. I did buy some Guttermann silk thread that matches the fabrics perfectly, and it sews beautifully.

I had this really ugly fabric in my stash of fabric for backs.

I have to wait a week before I can share all of these with you. I plan to do one more and then move on to other pending deadlines.

Something you won’t see on my blog are sketches. This will be a sketch free zone. LOL! It seems every one is doing it in some form for the new year. I am not against sketching, but I don’t feel that concentrating on it will help me achieve my goals. If you want to see some excellent sketching, I recommend the Urban Sketchers blog. Much of the work there is just fantastic.

I am really interested in experimenting with innovative surface design techniques and surveying the art world for contemporary abstract artists whose work might inspire me. So that is what I will be posting this year in addition to my own creations.

Back in the Studio & New Artist Crush

Tuesday, January 4th, 2011

I finally broke through the morass that was holding me back from getting any work done. It is not earth shaking or very imaginative, but I cut, fused, sandwiched and stitched up two possible pieces for the next Twelve x Twelve eggplant  color play theme. The three colors are eggplant, wine and emerald green. I have posted a couple of sneak peeks. The top piece is silk organza and the other is silk dupioni. None of the colorways is perfect, but I am trying to have fun and get as close as I can. I may do a couple more pieces until I feel that I have the right combination of colors.

Another plan that I have this year is to find artists whose work speaks to me and to find out a bit about them. I recently came across the work of Beatrice Mandelman (1912-1998). She started her career in New York, but eventually settled with her husband in Taos in  19944 where they were part of the art scene. Here is photo of her at work. I was intrigued that all of the photos of her working show the work on a table rather than an easel.

Much of her work is in large, bold, colorful amorphous  and wonky shapes.

Untitled from the Space series: 1972

Blue Moon; undated, 1960s

Jazz II, 1986

I love her fearless use of color and the shapes that are repeated.

The following is from and article in Art & Antiques Magazine, Dec/Jan 2011

Despite Mandelman’s considerable distance from modern art’s most active centers, her work is noteworthy for its strong affinities with certain artistic developments of its time. Much of it is a fusion of post-Cubist, gestural-abstractionist techniques; much of it is also a record of her experiments with bold, often primary, colors and ambiguously emotive forms. Mandelman’s art could be quiet and meditative in light-toned compositions featuring gentle washes of layered-on color or boisterous and rollicking in paintings like those of her late-career Brazil or Jazz series, with their patches of black and bold, solid hues.

In the 1980s, Mandelman said, “I’m an original. I broke all the rules. I’m using a very primitive language—squares, circles, triangles, primitive colors. And I made a very sophisticated art out of it.” Years later, she added, “I don’t have an external story in my paintings, and that’s difficult for people to accept.”

Mandelman had a strong sense of herself and her achievements, even if big-name success eluded her during her lifetime. In 1971, after a Taos gallery presented an exhibition of work by women artists that was emphatically ignored by the media, she quipped, “If we’d thrown our bras into the Río Grande, we could have gotten all the attention we wanted.” Later on, she told an interviewer, “My own painting turns me on. I feel it in my heart, the same feeling I get when I hear good music….I’m trying to work from chaos into order, stripping away, using the basics; that part is intellectual. We’re all different, but I think all real artists are working toward the same thing.”

“What’s that?” her questioner asked.

Mandelman replied, decisively, “Freedom.”

That last paragraph tickled me. She was definitely a woman who knew herself and with a wicked sense of humor. You can read the whole article here.

The Tranquil Time

Tuesday, December 28th, 2010


This time between Christmas and New Year’s is always a laid back time in our house. There are left overs to be eaten. No meetings to go to. No deadlines. Mr C and I have been watching lots of movies that we download from Netflix, mainly subtitled foreign films that require my complete attention!!

I have spent some time in my studio and office and am happy to report that it is looking quite spiffy for the start of the new year. I have thrown all my silk fabrics in the colors for the next Twelve x Twelve  theme on to my work table. I must say – they make a glorious sight. I am not sure which ones will make it in to the final piece.

While I was cleaning up, I found my Flip Video camera that I bought on Black Friday. It is so tiny, I am going to have to be careful. I got it charged and set up, but that is as far as I have gotten. I hope to have some fun with it. Expect several goofy Scooter videos.

I am happy to report that Steph and family are all recovered from that crappy virus. She is planning a redo of Mia’s birthday celebration which was canceled due to her illness.

We are due to get some snow flurries tomorrow; it will be a relief from the incessant rain we have been experiencing. On Thursday, I have a conference call to start learning about and get training about administering the new SDA website which is to make its debut around the 15th of January.

So that is the news from tranquil Eastmoreland where we patiently await the new year. We are in better shape than this Santa that we saw on our walk in the neighborhood, yesterday.

If my photos seem different, it is because WordPress is unusually cranky tonight. Not sure what the problem is!

I Love Fabric!

Friday, December 10th, 2010

I am really trying to pull myself together and get with the holiday spirit, but truth be told, I am not feeling very festive. Mia got sick at school today and Steph and Jack were having a nice lunch together and had their cell phones off so I went and picked her up. When Steph came to collect her, I shared that I was feeling a bit depressed and didn’t care whether I decorate my tree or not. I am so concerned about my sister and her immediate family as they care for my BIL. I worry that the weather will be lousy if we need to fly to NY. I worry that the plane tickets will be out of sight. Etc.

She gave me some good advice. There are some things that are out of your control. You cannot change what will happen or how. There are also things that you can do and you need to concentrate on those things. I raised some very wise and intelligent kids.

So this afternoon, I got out of the house and went to the closest fabric store which always makes me happy. I found the perfect purple felt for the coasters that I made a couple of days ago. Love it! They have a lovely supply of  silk organza. I have been thinking that I want to use organza for the next Twelve X Twelve   colorplay theme quilt. The colors are eggplant, wine and emerald green. Look what I found. I love the women who work in the fashion fabric department and they are very curious about what I am doing with this. This is a store where the last 3 Project Runway winners shop.

I forgot to share the fabric that I purchased at the Guild meeting on Wednesday. Bonnie, of Handwerks fabric, had this grouping, titled Petroglyph. Aren’t they gorgeous?

This morning, I managed to fuse some more fabrics for another batch of coasters. This time, I used already fused vintage Japanese kimono fabrics. It is ready to quilt tomorrow when we are due for another monsoon day.

Mr C put the tree up this morning and added the lights this afternoon. The tree is smaller than we usually have, but I love its graceful shape. Mia and I were going to decorate it tomorrow, but that is on hold since she is running a fever with a sore throat and headache.

And here is my lovable Scooter who enjoys giving and getting hugs sooo much. We just took a nice walk in the waning light of the day, and he thinks he should have a cookie.