TAFA: The Textile and Fiber Art List

Friday, February 25, 2011

Empty Bowls Project in Paducah

Empty Bowls Project, Paducah, Kentucky


The Empty Bowls Project is a really cool way to raise money for the hungry in a local community.  Michael Terra, local ceramic artist, has been the force behind this happening here in our town.  Tomorrow is the big event:  local area restaurants provide donated food for the handmade bowls that have been made for project supporters.  In other words, you get to eat a great meal in a cool bowl for $15.  Money raised goes to feed the hungry and you get to keep the bowl.


Such an event does not happen overnight.  Michael has been donating his time, energy, studio space, and kiln firings for months.  One of the great side effects of such a project is that people who never get to play with clay were able to come in and make their own bowls, many for the first the time.  A great way to meet new people, try a new medium, form community, and just have fun.

Event Details:  The Actual Event is on Feb 26th, 2011, from Noon- 5pm at the Robert Cherry Civic Center in Paducah, KY. Tickets are $15 each and entitle you to a handmade ceramic bowl and the wonderful food donated by the area restaurants.


Interested in replicating this event in your own community?  I'm sure Michael would be happy to share some tips.  You can also check out the Empty Bowls Project facebook page:




I'm sure that Michael would be happy to also accept donations from those who cannot attend.  Email Michael.

Mitch Kimball with his bowl donation.
Paducah is known for its quilts, but there is a vibrant community of artists here who work in many other mediums.  happens to be one of my favorites as I also worked with it for three years.  Someday it may happen again!  Michael travels all over to art festivals to sell his work.  Mitch Kimball, a dear friend, has a gorgeous website, and earns his keep as an art teacher in the Paducah school system (bending those minds at an early age...). 


Whatever the medium or skill level, art can be used as a powerful force to promote social change.  Kudos to all who have participated in the Empty Bowls Project!  These have been tough times and I know that your efforts will be greatly appreciated!







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Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Allison Svoboda Showing at Woman Made Gallery

Allison Svoboda
Ubiquitous Fecundity
sumi ink on Japanese mulberry paper, collaged
78 x 72 inches
$ 2,400 each



It's a wonderful gift to watch a friend mature into a true artist.  Yeah, yeah...  we can all get into those endless, fruitless discussions on what is art, whether anything is ever really new, what the value of "art" is in our world, etc.  But, to me, I believe that being an artist is a process of discipline, maturity, and innovation that eventually, through dogged persistence, evolves into a unique body of work that contains a recognizable signature.

Such is the case with Allison Svoboda.  We have been friends for some twenty years now, both sharing an interest in cultural textiles and sustainable development practices.  I don't remember when she took the plunge to "become a real artist".  Ten years ago?  From the beginning, she was interested in contrasts of black and white, in microcosms and topography, patterns in nature and how all of this could be translated to paper or fabric.

Her latest work breaks through the two-dimensional, flat translations bringing sculptural elements that make her work truly come alive.  I believe that she has found her voice, her signature, and has something new and fresh to contribute to the art world.  Ubiquitous Fecundity is beautiful.  Go see it.  The show at Woman Made Gallery in Chicago runs from March 4-April 28th, 2011.
Watch Allison Svoboda.  We can only expect that this signature will continue to evolve into more surprises, more eye candy, and more beauty.  

Kudos to you, Allison!




 Allison Svoboda, Flora #3
30"x40" collage, ink on rice paper


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Sunday, February 20, 2011

Inspiration for Fiber Artists: Microscopic Images

Clutch of  butterfly eggs on a raspberry plant

A friend sent me an email with these photos.  I usually roll my eyes when forwarded junk comes in, but I really liked these and thought they would be great inspiration for fiber artists.  They are from the book, "Microcosmos" by Brandon Brill of London.




An ant, Formica fusca, holding a microchip

Eyelash hairs growing from the surface of human skin

The surface of a strawberry

Bacteria on the surface of a human tongue

Human sperm (spermatozoa)

Nylon hooks and loops of Velcro

Household dust: includes long hairs of cat fur, twisted synthetic and woolen fibers,
serrated insect scales, a pollen grain, and plant and insect remains

The weave of nylon stocking fibers

The head of a mosquito

Head louse clinging to a human hair

Mushrooms spores


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Thursday, February 17, 2011

A Weaver in New Harmony: Laura Foster Nicholson



A couple of years ago, Lou Hong, a Chicago friend, connected me to Laura Foster Nicholson on Facebook, "You just have to meet her!"   The quilt show was about to happen in Paducah and Laura was going to have a booth here.  We met, chatted, hit it off, and when I launched TAFA last year, she was one of the first people to sign on.  Laura lives in New, Harmony, Indiana- a two hour drive from Paducah.  Another friend, John Jeffery, also lives there.  (See my past post about his wife, Claudia)  Repeatedly, she has said, "You've got to come and see this place!"  Last week, I did.


Laura Foster Nicholson, Weaver and Designer

Life is full of serendipity and pleasant surprises.  Two new people in my life:  Brother Gregory Waldrop and weaver Ann Fraley.  Both are active at the Fountain Avenue United Methodist Church just a block from my house.  He preaches and she is one of the top lay leaders.  I've become a wayward Lutheran and started attending this church some time back.  Gregory grew up in this area and connects the dots:  art, economic development, spirituality, lay leadership, community involvement all mesh into what he sees as the core values behind his ministry.  He has welcomed artists into his church, along with other misfits.  Ann, a weaver, also completed seminary.  Although she did not choose ordination, she aptly calls herself "Woman of the Cloth".  Her weaving studio now sits in the church's annex.

Somehow, New Harmony comes up in one of our conversations and it turns out to be a favorite destination of Gregory's.  I tell them about Laura and John and we decide to all go.  Why does Gregory like this place so much?  Because New Harmony has a fascinating story.  This post going to be long enough without me going into the whole history, but basically it's a story about utopian dreams that failed yet kept coming back in various transformations.  It's a tiny little place, just a few blocks, really.  Residents can even legally run around the streets in golf carts!  But, there are a bunch of artists there, wonderful historic buildings, lots of sculptures, a couple of cool labyrinths, trees, trails, and awful bridge you have to cross right before entering the town.  This video is a bit dark, but it's a nice overview of what happened there.  (It also has a hysterical ending.)




Good old Wikipedia has more information on the Harmonists (kind of like Shakers) and others who settled and influenced the town.

So, off we went!  We had to cross four rivers to get there.  One was done by barge!  (When's the last time you were on one?)


Ann and Gregory in the car.


On the way to New Harmony, by barge...

We met Laura and John at The Red Geranium, a lovely restaurant.  (That link also has a bunch of info on the town).  Another couple, friends of Laura, also joined us, both artists.  Rita also sells vintage quilt tops and other cool stuff and will have a booth here in Paducah during the quilt show.  Unfortunately she does not have a website, but when the time gets close, we can leave the info of where she will be if you are interested in her wares.  (Leave a comment and sign up for email updates to get the info.)



Time to walk around!  Most of the buildings are old Shaker style houses which have been restored to their original specs.  A block away from the restaurant we got to see the "Roofless Church", a beautiful but strange structure, built by architect Philip Johnson.  Getting married?  This is a favorite place to tie that knot!





John Jeffery at the Roofless Church

Inside of the structure


Laura Foster Nicholson talking about New Harmony

Laura of LFN Textiles

More walking, seeing a couple of Laura's friends who have shops in town, and then, of course, the highlight of seeing her studio.  Laura is an incredibly talented weaver.  Her work often refers to bees (which she has- I bought some of her delicious honey!), stones, barns, vegetable gardens and other images from nature.  I have been looking at images of her work for these two years and was shocked at how different they look in real life.  There is no sense of scale in the images and I imagined the weavings to be thick and weighty.  Instead, many of the ones I was familiar with were light and airy.  She also incorporates threads that cast a metallic sheen which I never noticed in the images.  For example, barn roofs are done in a silver thread, capturing the effect of sun hitting tin.  See Laura's member profile on TAFA to find her web links.



Laura Foster Nicholson in her weaving studio.

Brother Gregory Waldrop enjoying the insider's view of New Harmony.


Ann Fraley and John Jeffery.


Rachel Biel and Laura Foster Nicholson.

Just some cool weaving images:











I have a lot of patience, but the idea of threading a loom is beyond the pale, in my book.  I know I would just make a huge mess of it all, like a kitten with a ball of yarn.  I was heartened, however, by Laura's design space, about as messy as my own!






I always feel kind of ashamed of all my "stuff".  Fabric, threads, beads...  drawers of them, bins stacked high, tin containers filled.  Then, when I go into another creative space like this, I see that I am all right.  It's OK.  Really.

Laura actually has two businesses: one as a working artist and another as a designer of ribbons and home accents.  Crate and Barrel has carried many of her products.  She gets to keep some of the samples, like this gorgeous curtain:




From there, we went on to her home, a traditional Harmonite structure that has been restored.  Wonderful wood everywhere, big windows, lots of natural light, a gorgeous back yard....  The only two things that I didn't like were the stairs going up to the second floor and the kitchen.  The stairs were those narrow wooden ones, which always make me feel like I am going to slip and fall (I had a bad fall on stairs when I was a teenager).  The kitchen is just tiny.  I like big ones where you can sit around and talk as the cooking happens.  But, the Harmonites were utilitarian and their buildings and furniture were made for function and longevity.  The house has a wonderful fireplace, thick insulated walls (with some horsehair and clay mixture) and will probably last another one hundred years.

I also wanted to see John's farm.  We jumped into the cars, drove the two blocks out of town, went a little bit further and there it was.  (If you read the post on Claudia, there is a video there that shows the inside of the house).  The thing I will remember about all of these places in New harmony are the windows and natural light pouring in, looking out on peaceful scenes that nourish the soul.  John's house was also like that, a place where the muse could just take over.


John Jeffery, Laura Foster Nicholson, Gregory Waldrop, Ann Fraley

Each of us had plenty of stories to share.  As I reflect back on what we saw and heard, I think that what will stick with me is this desire we have had over time to find our own utopias.  New Harmony had several visionary people who left their mark there.  Some failed, other succeeded.  But, there does not seem to be a true formula for harmonious co-existence.  We certainly have not evolved in that direction as a society!  The chaos and hatefulness we have today among both our leaders and in our citizenry just shows how impossible it seems to build a heaven on earth.  Yet, there are pockets of peace and those places are precious.  In the end, the harmony that is found within is the one that makes a safe haven.
 
I was told that there are cheap cabins there that can be rented (someday? ahhhh....).  If you need a place of retreat, I point you in that direction.  As for us, the day flew by quickly and we had to head on home.  The sky blessed us in all of its glory.  A day well spent.








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Sunday, February 6, 2011

Fraser Smith: Turning Wood Into Textiles

"Floating"(Detail) by Fraser Smith
Carved wood & Watercolor
65" x 42" x 4"
2002


Wow!  What a beautiful quilt!  Right?  Hmmmmmm......  Wait a minute!  It's wood!  Fraser Smith transforms wood into lifelike quilts, clothing and textiles.  So, is he a carver?  A painter?  A textile artist?  How about all three?

I first saw Fraser's work here in Paducah at the Quilt Museum.  My parents were in town and we stood in front of his piece, stunned.  My father had a stint as an amateur carver and he quietly stared disbelievingly at the quilt we were looking at.  Surely it was a quilt!


 "Floating" by Fraser Smith
Carved wood & Watercolor
65" x 42" x 4"
2002


The quilt above is not the same one as the one we saw, yet it captures the same qualities of a textile hanging on the wall.  There is a small piece of wood near the quilt which unbelievers can fondle.  If you stand close to the piece and peer behind it, you see the natural wood.  


" The First Quilted Robe of the Reclusive Eccentric
by Fraser Smith
Carved wood, silk dyes & mixed media, 57" x 25" x 4", 2010
Surely, then, if these are made out of wood, they would be considered carvings, right?  Well, without Fraser's mastery of his painting skills, the illusion would fail.  And, without having an intimate understanding of how fiber behaves when it is sewn, draped, dyed, quilted....  Fraser would not be able to transform the wood and make it alive.  So, in my mind's eye, he has to be all three: carver, painter and textile artist.  Like Midas turning the ordinary into gold, Fraser Smith turns wood into treasure!

Visit his website for more of these beautiful pieces.
All images have been used with permission of the artist.
 Detail of a Quilted Tallit by Fraser Smith


 

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