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Archive for August, 2008

Journal quilts 2008–rejected

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

Well, I’m TOTALLY bummed.   BOTH my entries to the Journal Quilts exhibit were rejected this year, the first year that it has been juried.  There were 150 entries, 48 got in, none of which were mine.  They were GOOD.  Sigh.  I’m just depressed.  I know rejection is part of the game, but I’ve had so many rejections for so long, and the journals mean so much to me, that I was really hoping to get one in this year.  Guess not.  Sigh.

The journal quilts debuted in 2002 I think… the year I joined the QuiltArt list.  I have participated in the non-juried exhibit every year since.  This is the first year there were limits on how many quilts.  Karey selected FIVE of my journals for the Creative Quilting:  The Journal Quilt Project book, and even opened one section of the book with three of my journals because she liked them so much.  So I know my work isn’t awful.  Sigh.

I won’t share the rejects yet…. someone online is going to organize a “latecomers” online exhibit to debut about the time of the real exhibit, so I’ll send mine in to that.   Sigh.  I’m just bummed.   Really bummed.  Kinda makes me want to not quilt and not work.  I’ll get over it {grin}!  Actually, since I first wrote this I’m doing better… I’m going to enter them somewhere else… off to look for a venue!

Lowell (Mass.) Quilt Show, August 2008–a ribbon!

Monday, August 18th, 2008

I had the great good fortune to be invited to teach at Lowell Quilt Show earlier this month.  I’ll blog about one of my classes in a couple of days, but today I wanted to give you an overview, starting with this overview of the show, which is held in the Tsongas Arena in Lowell, which is northwest of Boston (about 45 minutes by car, I think….it’s about 3 1/2 to 4 hours from Camden, Maine). Note:  photos in this post are clickable to be viewed larger.

Lowell, overview

The vendors are on an upper level that surrounds the arena, so you get a bird’s eye view.  This photo was taken early on Sunday (hence the lack of crowd).   I got over to the show earlier in the week, after class was over, and was thrilled to spot my Koi quilt for the first time….when folks were looking at it!  I guess a white glove lady was near it a lot of the time to show the back (LOVE IT!):

Looking at Koi

I had not realized until shortly before the show that the 2007 journal quilts would be there (I am not sure if this viewing included all of them or not, but I think it did).

Long view, journal quilts 2007

As always, the journals are a popular exhibit (sure hope one of my entries gets in this year… I need an acceptance!!! instead of a “sorry” letter!).  On Sunday, I was thrilled to see someone really looking at mine… my journal is quite subtle, not a grab-you-from-a-distance piece, so it was really rewarding to see someone drawn in and taking a long time to take it in…thank you to whoever you are in this picture!  I hope it is OK for me to have posted this photo of you:

My journal quilt

Wow…just realized I never uploaded this quilt to my website… I’ll do that when we get back from vacation in a week or so!   There is a lot to it… it is about Hiroshima, peace and all that….

One of the best things about quilt shows is the teachers.  If you ARE one of the teachers, one of the best things about a quilt show is getting to hang out with the other teachers!  I was thrilled to run into Nancy Prince, whom I had briefly met in Paducah, Joanie Zeier Poole, Judy Cisneros, Nancy Brenan Daniel and others….. dinners were a GAS.  This first night we each and every one of us had lobster of some sort at the hotel restaurant:

Dinner with the teachers

Nancy lives in Arizona, so she decided to splurge, and ham it up a bit… I totally love this photo and need to send it to her before heading out on Wednesday (and yes, she did take the meat out of the shell before eating it LOL)

Nancy Brenan Daniel eats Lobster:

On Sunday I got to have breakfast at the locally famous Four Sisters Owl Diner, a real OLD diner, with good old fashioned cholesterol-heaven breakfast:

Owl Diner

To my great astonishment and pleasure, I got an e-mail a couple days before leaving for Lowell informing me that I had won an honorable mention for Naiads!  After viewing the other quilts, I’m thrilled even more…. here’s  a picture of Naiads with the ribbon alongside and the “neighborhood”:

Naiads at Lowell

I taught Thursday, Friday and Saturday, so got to see the show on Sunday to my hearts’ content.  But even tired teachers wear out.  And get hungry.  So mid-afternoon I set out on the town to see the shows at the Brush Gallery, The Whistler (more on those two in future posts), and get some lunch.  I was fortunate to be able to wait to pick up Naiads and my teachers quilts (Koi and Garuda Dances Under the Ocean Moon) at 5:30, after show take-down (thereby saving a bundle on  shipping) before heading home.  So, while waiting, I had an iced coffee…perfect:

Iced coffee

Book Review/ Masters: Art Quilts

Thursday, August 14th, 2008

For the past month or so I’ve been enjoying the Lark publication Masters:  Art Quilts (subtitled Major Works by Leading Artists).   This book is one in a series of fine arts and crafts such as Porcelain, Beadweaving, Gemstones, Glass Beads and others (forthcoming) on Wood Turning and Gold.  This series is a nearly square 9×8 inches, and hefty…the shortest is 300 pages, with the Art Quilt volume the heftiest at 416 pages. (Note: all photos in this post are clickable to see them a bit larger–scroll down for LOTS of great review pics.)

Masters Art Quilts Cover

How author and curator  Martha Sielman, executive director of Studio Art Quilt Associates (SAQA ) and an art quilter herself, managed to whittle her selections down to a mere 40 of the many, MANY outstanding art quilters working today I do not know.  What I can say is that she did a smashing job of selecting a representative sampling:  from some of our trailblazing artists to some newcomers who deserve to be included in the top tier, from abstract to highly representational, from those who work exclusively with fabric and thread to those whose quilts are nearly encrusted with embellishments, and from around the world, Martha has included something for everyone’s taste, and introduces us to some quilters we may not have known–well, even though I read voraciously and troll for news of the art quilting world outside the United States, there were some artists that were new to me.  The artists (in the order in which they are presented in the book) are:

  • Jane Sassaman
  • Michael A. Cummings
  • Ita Ziv
  • Cher Cartwright
  • Noriko Endo
  • Deidre Scherer
  • Carolyn L. Mazloomi
  • Hollis Chatelain
  • Linda Colsh
  • Charlotte Yde
  • Joan Schulze
  • Judith Content
  • Kyoung Ae Cho
  • Jette Clover
  • Eszter Bornemisza
  • Pauline Burbidge
  • Yvonne Porcella
  • M. Joan Lintault
  • Katie Pasquini Masopust
  • Nancy N. Erickson
  • Susan Shie
  • Caryl Bryer Fallert
  • Jeanette Gilks
  • Jane Burch Cochran
  • Pamela Allen
  • Therese May
  • John W. Lefelhocz
  • Miriam Nathan-Roberts
  • Jenny Hearn
  • Terrie Hancock Mangat
  • Wendy Huhn
  • B.J. Adams
  • Inge Mardal and Steen Hougs
  • Chiaki Dosho
  • Inge Hueber
  • Michael James
  • Velda E. Newman
  • Anne Woringer
  • Clare Plug
  • Elizabeth Brimelow

The book begins with a brief Introduction by Martha Sielman, and is followed by profiles of the artists.    Forty art quilters are included, each with 10 pages.  Each “chapter” begins with an introduction written by Martha and a detail photo on the left-hand page, while the full quilt is showed as large as can fit on the page on the right.  Each photo has the title, year it is made (which allows one to see progression in the artists’ work and style), size, and a brief summary of techniques.  On the subsequent pages, full-shot photos of an representative sample of that artists’ quilts are accompanied by quotations from the artists that give insight to their style, goals and personality.

With only a few exceptions, the photography is outstanding, showing even the stitching detail.  For those not familiar with taking photographs of quilts, it is challenging (to say the least!), so the ability to see this level of detail throughout the book is a rare treat.  Here are some of my favorites, beginning with one of my quilting idols, Hollis Chatelain:

Hollis

I had not known of the work of Michael Cummings:

Michael Cummings

or Kyoung Ae Cho before, but I am certainly glad I do now….time to go surf the internet, eh?

Kyoung Ae Cho

and a photo of another of her pieces:

Cho, second piece

Ita Ziv of Israel uses highly unconventional materials, like the bags you get while shopping!

Ita Ziv

Charlotte Yde’s name was familiar, but I got to see some new works:

Charlotte Yde

I love her bold use of color, her often monochromatic quilts, and in these pieces the repeated shield or banner shapes:

Yde, additional pieces

Jenny Hearn’s work reflects her South African heritage though it is not always obvious.  There is a rich complexity to the visual texture:

South Africa

and another piece (by the way…sorry about the flash glare!)

Jenny Hearn 2

Inge Mardal and Steen Hougs’ quilts always stop me in my tracks when I see them in a show.  They are very large….often between 5×5 or 6×6 feet!   They are densely quilted, and glorious:

Mardal and Hougs

I honestly don’t know how Martha managed to restrain herself to a mere forty art quilters….  each and every chapter is a feast for the eyes.  I also don’t know how Lark managed to publish such a sumptuous coffee-table book for only 24.95.  If you purchase this book from SAQA store, part of the proceeds will go to support the efforts of the Studio Art Quilt Associates promote our art form.   It is also available here at Amazon.com. Like The Art Quilt by Michael Kile and Penny McMorris, this book encapsulates the best of the best at a specific point in time.  I expect that this book, too, will become a classic and a valuable reference.  It’s also just a joy to sit down and savor.

Maine Quilts 2008, the last post….

Monday, August 11th, 2008

During lunch break from class on that Friday, Jan and I went down to the show floor to see the quilts, and what ribbons I might have won …… teeeheee!   I got lucky this year, and received two first place blue ribbons and, drum roll please, my first ever Judges’ Choice from (usually traditional-loving) Lisa Erlandson (you’ll have to read to the bottom for more!)!  The first of my quilts that I ran across was Nourish; when I walked up all sorts of folks were looking at it closely (way cool!).

Nourish with lotsa lookers

Here’s me doing the “Vanna White pose” and explaining to some viewers how I did it….

Me doing a Vanna

The next aisle had a wonderful exhibit called A Sense of Place, the annual Art Quilts Maine challenge for the year.  This year there were many entries (some years there are not so many!), and they were all wonderful, and some outstanding.  Of course I loved Kathy and Kate’s!   Kathy’s features her signature bright colors and many beads….as always not one too many, not one too few:

Kathy’s sense of Place quilt

This detail shows more of her fine work:

Kathy’s quilt, detail

Kate outdid herself this year.  She went to Italy earlier this year, and was so inspired by Cinque Terra.  She took her time with this quilt (as an overextended mom, we all tend to rush!) and it shows in the quality of design and workmanship.  This may be the best machine quilting she’s done… I totally love the piece:

Kate’s Cinque Terra quilt

Anne Walker, the President (aka Queen) of AQM, made this stunning aerial view…. her work is always tops—I wouldn’t mind owning a piece like this one!  The blue binding on the bottom is inspired!:

Anne Walker’s sense of place quilt

Across the aisle, the Coastal Quilters challenge hung on the ugly burgundy drapes.  Inspired by the Frayed Edges 5×5 grid (seen here in an older blogpost, and here and here), the chapter chose a photo by Jan’s husband and photographer Dwight P. called Ropes and Buoys.  The challenge was to make a 10x 10 inch quilt using any technique.   Many went for realistic colors….weathered wood and rope and a bright buoy, but some of us went hog wild!

CQ group challenge

Mine are the two close-ups….last one on the 4th row, first one on the 5th row.

I LOVED that some went traditional in their interpretation, and that others went totally wild.  What is astonishing is that some of the most traditional quilters who had never EVER made an art quilt did some of the most AMAZING piece….major kudos to Karen Martin and Leigh Smith for not only attempting the challenge, but excelling!

Roxanne’s round robin

This quilt was a round robin made by Roxanne Wells, Rebeccah Hokkanen, Susan Barry and Gail Galloway-Nicholson.   Despite serious medical challenges to them and / or their spouses for at least three of them, they did a wonderful job.  Alas, I somehow only got the picture of this one (not all four) of their challenge quilts.  Of course they are, all 4 of them, part of my awesome local Coastal Quilters chapter.  I’m so glad I’m here! What luck to find so many kindred souls.

As promised, here is Rana O’Connor’s tiger….he is totally, completely amazing.  The tiger himself is ALL THREAD….and then appliqued onto the surface, which is a single batik. Everything else you see is thread–the snake, the tree, everything.  Can you tell she loves thread as much as I do?  Not surprisingly, he took a well-earned blue ribbon!  The quilt is fairly small, maybe 14 inches tall?

Rana’s tiger

Here are several quilts (and sorry, I’m too lazy and rushed to run upstairs and find the show brochure to add who made them… if you know tell me and I’ll update the post, which I’ll try to do later anyway) that I really liked…. first this awesome green NY Beauty:

Green NY Beauty

And this very Maine-ish quilt, complete with loose-flapping flags:

Maine quilt

No blog about the show would be complete without one of Jeanne-Marie Robinson’s quilts (she’s also in Coastal Quilters…grin!).  Almost always her quilts feature animals, and most often are brightly colored.  This one is softer, yet is one of my favorites….the handwork (all hand applique and quilting, and lots of embroidery) is stunning:

Jeanne Marie’s porcupine

This charming little quilt was made of one of those fabrics you’d think would turn out, well, a bit tacky, but it SO works, and the beading is just perfect.  I want to track down the maker (I have the info in my notes somewhere) and ask her if I may use it in my lecture on beading on quilts:

Beaded winter quilt

Last but not least, here I am doing another “Vanna” showing off my Judges’ choice ribbon for Naiads:

Me with Naiads

Maine Quilts 2008

Saturday, August 9th, 2008

It was a good year!   I actually got to see the show this year, Joshua is well, Paul is well, and Eli is well!  After helping hang the show on Wednesday (see the post from a couple of days ago), I returned Friday morning for a class on “Woodcut Quilts with Laura Wasilowski.”  Jan and I had signed up eons ago, as soon as we could, with the idea of a “moms escape to play.” To see Laura’s work and / or buy her fabric and thread, go here.

Laura teaching

To get an idea of the type of pieces, take a look at Laura’s small quilts on the demo-board.  There were no patterns, just your imagination to run wild.  The class kit fee included two lengths of Laura’s hand-dyed fabric (it is a rainbow run of color from one selvage to the other) in bright and a narrower strip in pastel, plus some dyed-to-match perle cotton.

Jan’s piece

For some reason, I don’t have a picture of my piece (in progress and untouched since class…sigh…), so you’ll get to enjoy Jan’s piece, above.  I really like the bricks…not a whole raft of them, just some to suggest the wall around the door.   As usual, I was disobedient, and brought Misty Fuse instead of Wonder Under (and did just fine thankyewveddymuch), and also brought along my stash of pre-fused batiks (see the flowerpot to the left of Jan’s door!).

There were some awesome pieces…one lady made a giraffe for a granddaughter (sorry I don’t recall her name)….and please remember, these are all “in progress” pieces:

Giraffe

You can see the shading on the pastel hand-dyed in the sky on this piece.

Virginia Morrell of Art Quilts Maine made this awesome and vibrant flower doing very careful fussy cutting…can’t wait to see where it goes:

Virginia’s

And Beth Guisely from Coastal Quilters is well on her way to achieving a rooster here:

Beth’s bird/chicken

I’ll be back in a couple of days with one more post about MQ2008!