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Archive for July, 2005

Quilt du Jour

Tuesday, July 12th, 2005

Sunrisesunset_1

(Here is a new photo taken this morning sans flash. Show the colors better. I also did some maintenance on the zigzag (ravioli) edges.)

This quilt is about 14" by 18" and is made from silks hand-dyed – some by me and some were purchased. The title of this is Sunrise, Sunset. The inspiration came from a rug I once saw in a catalog. I love working in the grid format and I think this design warrants a larger version. I just took the photo tonight and I think I need to photograph it during the day without a flash. The colors are not quite true.

This quilt a day is turning into a very wonderful experience for me. I am actually working on them after dinner so I am not spending all day. I am proving to myself that I can come up with a design idea and execute a prototype fairly quickly. It is good to get some of these ideas out of my head and into fabric.

Finding Inspiration in Strange Places

Monday, July 11th, 2005

Pressure, pressure! Must produce a quilt today! This is an excellent exercise for me because I am a procrastinator – always wait for the deadline. With my current challenge, I just have to DO IT!! No staring at the design wall for days on end. Just choose the fabric, sketch the design and do it!!

I a finding inspiration in strange places. Yesterday while waiting for pizza to cook, I found the ad that inspired last night’s piece. Today, I was wearing a new Chico’s tee shirt with a wonderful leaf pattern. The bookkeeper at church, (a guy) told me I should make a quilt like the shirt. So here it is:

Birdofparadise


I call this the Chico Bird of Happiness! The background is from one of the pole dyed pieces I did. I managed to use a lot of Mrs. Mel’s scraps in this!

I wanted to say more about the art that Allegra does. She was the hostess for the Surface Design meeting yesterday. She has an installation piece that has been shown in many venues and is now going to a show in Germany. She has taken The Koran, The Torah and The Bible and cut each page in each book in such a way that it unfolds and hangs down from the book. The three books are suspended from meat hooks in the ceiling and the pages just co mingle as they cascade down to a globe which looks as if blood as been spilled on it and it has symbols of the three religions on the globe. It is very powerful. Since the current installation is in Oregon, I only got to see photos.

It is past my bedtime. John Stewart and The Daily Show is over – that is how I know!
 

A Better Day

Sunday, July 10th, 2005

First, I want to apologize for the maudlin and inappropriate post yesterday. I would like to say that it was my evil twin, but it was me.

Today, I attended a meeting of the Surface Design group here in Sonoma County. They meet every two months. I have only been one other time because they meet on Sunday and I often can’t make it. The last time I took something for show and tell and never got it out of my bag because I was so intimidated – that was probably a year ago. This time I took my Deadly sin piece, The Essence of Inhumanity and  also my  Zen Forest. I also shared some of the fabric from the pole dyeing day. I got such positive feedback, it was wonderful. This group of artists works in all sorts of media from weaving, dyeing, altered books, rug hooking, knitting, etc. The hostess and her husband do incredible art using found objects and recycled materials. Their home was a feast for the eyes. I took this photo on the step on the deck. These are stones and pieces of wood shaped like feet that are painted.

Stonefeetjpg

It was a fun afternoon and I made some great new artsy friends.

Inspired by others on the Artful Quilter’s webring, I am going to try to do a quilt a day. I saw this ad in a magazine today and was inspired by the trees and the graphic design that looked like quilting lines.

Adinspiration2

So, I quickly whipped up this little quiltlet – Three Trees, inspired by the ad. I worked very quickly with the fused top so that I could have time to play with the quilting line. It is now past my bedtime. Ta Ta.

Troistrees

Blue Saturday

Saturday, July 9th, 2005

I have had a teary day. I really love having the house full of family – cooking, doing things together. It may not seem like it at the time, but it is so important to me. So today was my first day home alone and I felt really lonely and sad. Stevie was busy at church working on the youth building. It is getting a new roof and will not longer leak and have mold so they removed the carpeting and painted today. Yesterday they removed the old roof.

I spent the day doing laundry – lots of sheets and towels and making a birthday postcard for my sister, Jean. Her birthday is next Tuesday. I pulled out some photos – all black and white and scanned them and printed them on fabric. Then I colored them with pens and pencils.

0709

Steve and I went to Sonoma tonight to have dinner and walk around the plaza. It was a beautiful drive and a delicious meal. I feel better and full of gratitude for my life and my family,

Political Rant Time

Friday, July 8th, 2005

I had to update my new banner because I realized that my manifesto was missing. My niece sent me this which I just have to share with all my political rant fans. I know it is long, but it is worth the read!!

"Things are never as they seem, but as they are"
An essay by E.L Doctorow. Edgar Lawrence Doctorow occupies a central position in the history of American literature. He is generally considered to be among the most talented, ambitious, and admired novelists of the second half of the twentieth century. Doctorow has received the National Book Award, two National Book Critics Circle Awards, the PEN/Faulkner Award, the Edith Wharton Citation for Fiction, the William Dean Howell Medal of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and the residentially conferred National Humanities Medal.

Doctorow was born in New York City on January 6, 1931. After graduating with honors from Kenyon College in 1952, he did graduate work at Columbia University and served in the U.S. Army. Doctorow was senior editor for New American Library from 1959 to 1964 and then served as editor in chief at Dial Press until 1969. Since then, he has devoted his time to writing and teaching. He holds the Glucksman Chair in American Letters at New York University and over the years has taught at several institutions, including Yale University Drama School, Princeton University, Sarah Lawrence
College, and the University of California, Irvine.

=====================================================================

I fault this president (George W. Bush) for not knowing what death is. He does not suffer the death of our twenty-one year olds who wanted to be what they could be.

On the eve of D-day in 1944 General Eisenhower prayed to God for the lives of the young soldiers he knew were going to die. He knew what death was. Even in a justifiable war, a war not of choice but of necessity, a war of survival, the cost was almost more than Eisenhower could bear.

But this president does not know what death is. He hasn’t the mind for it. You see him joking with the press, peering under the table for the WMDs he can’t seem to find, you see him at rallies strutting up to the stage in shirt sleeves to the roar of the carefully screened crowd, smiling and waving, triumphal, a he-man. He does not mourn. He doesn’t understand why he should mourn. He is satisfied during the course of a speech written for him to look solemn for a moment and speak of the brave young Americans who made the ultimate sacrifice for their country.

But you study him, you look into his eyes and know he dissembles an emotion which he does not feel in the depths of his being because he has no capacity for it. He does not feel a personal responsibility for the thousand dead young men and women who wanted be what they could be.

They come to his desk not as youngsters with mothers and fathers or wives and children who will suffer to the end of their days a terribly torn fabric of familial relationships and the inconsolable remembrance of aborted life…. They come to his desk as a political
liability which is why the press is not permitted to photograph the arrival of their coffins from Iraq.

How then can he mourn? To mourn is to express regret and he regrets nothing. He does not regret that his reason for going to war was, as he knew, unsubstantiated by the facts. He does not regret that his bungled plan for the war’s aftermath has made of his
mission-accomplished a disaster. He does not regret that rather than controlling terrorism his war in Iraq has licensed it.

So he never mourns for the dead and crippled youngsters who have fought this war of his choice. He wanted to go to war and he did. He had not the mind to perceive the costs of war, or to listen to those who knew those costs. He did not understand that you do not go to war when it is one of the options, but when it is the only option; you go not because you want to but because you have to.

This president knew it would be difficult for Americans not to cheer the overthrow of a foreign dictator. He knew that much. This president and his supporters would seem to have a mind for only one thing — to take power, to remain in power, and to use that power for the sake of themselves and their friends. A war will do that as well as anything. You become a wartime leader. The country gets behind you. Dissent becomes inappropriate. And so he does not drop to his knees, he is not contrite, he does not sit in the church with the grieving parents and wives and children.

He is the President who does not feel. He does not feel for the families of the dead; he does not feel for the thirty five million of us who live in poverty; he does not feel for the forty percent who cannot afford health insurance; he does not feel for the miners whose lungs are turning black or for the working people he has deprived of the chance to work overtime at time-and-a-half to pay their bills — it is amazing for how many people in this country this President does not feel.

But he will dissemble feeling. He will say in all sincerity he is relieving the wealthiest one percent of the population of their tax burden for the sake of the rest of us, and that he is polluting the air we breathe for the sake of our economy, and that he is decreasing the safety regulations for coal mines to save the coal miners’ jobs, and that he is depriving workers of their time-and-a- half benefits for overtime because this is actually a way to honor them by raising them into the professional class.

And this litany of lies he will versify with reverences for God and the flag and democracy, when just what he and his party are doing to our democracy is choking the life out of it.

But there is one more terribly sad thing about all of this. I remember the millions of people here and around the world who marched against the war. It was extraordinary, that spontaneously aroused oversoul of alarm and protest that transcended national borders. Why did it happen? After all, this was not the only war anyone had ever seen coming. There are little wars all over the world most of the time.

But the cry of protest was the appalled understanding of millions of people that America was ceding its role as the last best hope of mankind. It was their perception that the classic archetype of democracy was morphing into a rogue nation. The greatest democratic republic in history was turning its back on the future, using its extraordinary power and standing not to advance the ideal of a concordance of civilizations but to endorse the kind of tribal combat that originated with the Neanderthals, a people, now extinct, who could imagine ensuring their survival by no other means than pre-emptive war.

The president we get is the country we get. With each president the nation is conformed spiritually. He is the artificer of our malleable national soul. He proposes not only the laws but the kinds of lawlessness that govern our lives and invoke our responses. The
people he appoints are cast in his image. The trouble they get into and get us into, is his characteristic trouble.

Finally the media amplify his character into our moral weather report. He becomes the face of our sky, the conditions that prevail: How can we sustain ourselves as the United States of America given the stupid and ineffective warmaking, the constitutionally
insensitive lawgiving, and the monarchial economics of this president? He cannot mourn but is a figure of such moral vacancy as to make us mourn for ourselves.
E.L. Doctorow