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The Journey Begins

Thanks for joining me!

Good company in a journey makes the way seem shorter. — Izaak Walton

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A little bit about me ……

I retired in July 2017 and together with my husband, we packed up our rucksacks, let our house and travelled around the world for 12 months.  We travelled independently and spent time in Nepal, India, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, Australia, New Zealand, Chile, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador and Canada.  In each country I sought out every opportunity to experience the arts – street art, music, textiles, architecture and sculpture.  I was lucky enough to do block printing in India using handmade blocks and natural dyes on khadi fabric; I watched women in the mountains of Nepal using drop spindles whilst going about their daily lives; I did an eri silk weaving course in Thailand; I visited wool enterprises in Australia and New Zealand, as well as enterprises involved in the production of fibre from llamas, alpacas and vicunas in South America.  I also learned a lot about some individual, very talented, artists – particularly in South America.

I have had a lifelong interest in textiles, in particular wool and other animal fibre.  I handspin, knit, crochet and sew my own clothes – I particularly enjoy upcycling clothing. I have wanted to pursue study in textiles for a very long while, and now is the perfect time!

I am very much looking forward to where this learning will take me …….

Assignment 5 – Textile Solutions

So here I am, starting on my final assignment. I’ve gone over and over the ideas that I have for this next exercise, and I’ve settled on one to run with. I was very inspired by my last assignment on sketchbooks and wanted to develop the myriad of ideas that arose from that exercise.

During the past 12 months, we’ve all being living in a very different way due to the Covid-19 pandemic. It’s caused me to re-evaluate my place in the world, forced me to focus on my own locality and to spend many hours reflecting on what’s important to me. I also want to say here that I have been extremely fortunate for this crisis to have come at the stage of my life it has done. I have retired from work (well almost!), I have no mortgage or rent to worry about, I don’t worry about how I can afford to put food on my table or heat my home and I don’t have school age children who need home schooling. I am very grateful that I don’t have those things to worry about.

Throughout the last year I have explored my local area like never before. I always knew my local area very well, but my usual default was to go much further afield and explore distant places – both here in the UK and beyond. The pandemic has forced us into lockdowns and suddenly my local area, particularly my local countryside, has become so important and a vital source of comfort and support. My daily walks have taken me to places I knew so well, or so I thought, but I have always learnt more, both about my surroundings and about myself. In my last assignment I tried to create a ‘map’ of sorts which told a story about some of my experiences, starting with the actual earth in my own back garden. This idea grew to include textiles and materials I have collected both locally and from our trip around the world. Whilst I was working on that project, completely by chance I read a review about a book by textile artist, Anne Kelley, called “Textile Travels”.  This appealed to me immensely and I immediately ordered it, but it didn’t arrive until after I had submitted the assignment.

I now have the book! It has now become my inspiration for this next project and has helped me to build my own ideas in relation to the “maps” concept I wanted to use for this next piece. Dorothy Caldwell inspired me so much with my last assignment, and I feel that Anne Kelly will help me to develop my ideas.

In her book, Anne Kelly shows her map project (pictured above) which she developed whilst on a teaching trip in the South West of England. As soon as I saw this idea, I knew that this is where I wanted to focus my piece. I love the idea of marking the map with memories to capture the essence of the place, as she experienced it, on her trip there.

So my idea is to take a map of my local area, and embellish it with things that ‘speak’ to me about my place in the world. I also have an old Bartholomew map of Warwickshire (the county in which I live) which was my father’s (he loved maps!) which depicted the area before the motorways, and I really wanted to use that, but as of this moment, I cannot bring myself to ‘do’ anything to it. I need to practise first …..

My plan is to use collage, both paper and fabric, stitching, gluing and stamping (block printing) onto fabric and paper and then applying it to the map. I want to depict images, using these techniques, which mean something to me about the area. I want to try and capture what the places mean to me.  I have lots of ideas and pictures in my mind about what I want to achieve, but where to start when I don’t want to ‘attack’ the map just yet?

So to warm me up a bit, I got my printing blocks out which I had bought on my trip to India in March 2020 (we literally flew home on one of the last planes to leave before lockdown!), and had never used. Although that’s not quite true as I used one in my last assignment – the simple swirl, which I used with gouache paint. But I have lots of different ones, so I first started by using my new watercolour pencils (new to me anyway – a gift from a neighbour who was clearing out her art materials – another link to my immediate locality) and as if doing a brass rubbing, I went over my block of a tree with the pencil. I then wetted the block with a paintbrush and stamped it onto a piece of cartridge paper. What resulted was a lovely, very muted “ghostlike” image of a tree. I loved it! Then I painted with watercolour paint directly onto the block and stamped it on the paper, which gave a distinctly different image of the same block, and then carried on stamping a second and third time where the image became increasingly fainter, but still not like the first image with the pencil. I did the same two techniques (pencil and paint) with a small flower block. I then took two different blocks and painted different colours, using the watercolour paints, onto different areas of the block.  This took a bit of time and when I had finished the last colour, the first colour was completely dry on the block, so I wetted the whole block with water and then stamped it on the page. I really liked the effect that this gave with the subtle colours coming through and less “harsh”. My intention is to print with the blocks onto fabric and then maybe stitch around the images in some form.

I then printed out some maps of my local area directly onto a special type of paper that I then transferred onto some robust canvas fabric using an iron.  The first thing which became apparent was that the image was reversed and the maps were back to front! I cannot think how to change this at the moment – perhaps I need to change the settings on the printer? But then I thought …. actually, it’s fine the way it is; it sort of sums up everything this last year has been, we’ve literally been stuck looking inwards, as is the map.

I drew on my earlier collage exercises and pieces and decided to use the first map – which was of the footpaths I use almost daily, and also shows my street.  As I said earlier, my head was bursting with ideas – now to get them down on the canvas. I wanted to start with the very fundamentals of what my life has become over the past 10 months. So I sketched out a walking boot, using charcoal on cartridge paper, and then coloured it in with my watercolour pencils, cut it out and stuck it down with PVA glue right in the middle of the map. There is a red line which surrounds the boot on the map and this depicts a footpath which I use almost daily to walk my dog. I then used a scrap piece of fabric to run along the bottom of the canvas – to depict the flora of the countryside which I am walking in.

I then cut out images from pieces of fabric which I have in my fabric collection – of a sheep, a bee, a butterfly and a brightly coloured campervan, from which I had made facemasks from for my friend. The campervan I placed on the road part of the map. This was to depict my own campervan, which we have barely used over the last few months, but which forms a large part of my imagination! The sheep are ever present on my walks, and I regularly use fleece from their backs (kindly given to me by the farmer) to spin and knit with. The butterfly and the bee – they also feature frequently on my walks (although perhaps not so much at this time of year, February/March).  I had the idea, building on my last assignment, of creating images which all meant something to me, and depict pertinent objects, such as the boot, the sheep etc.. But as I look at this first piece, I’m not sure it works as well as I had imagined. But I will persevere with it; as I write this, the glue is still wet on the canvas, but I want to stitch a border around the edge and also the stitch across the whole piece, as I have seen in Anne Kelly’s work.

In total I have three maps of my local area which I have printed onto transfer paper and then ironed onto canvas.

The second map actually depicted the road where I live on the left-hand side of the image (it should be the right side but hey ho) and to the right is the one of the walks I do regularly, in fact I have to walk along at least part of this footpath to access any further afield walks. I decided to use some different techniques on this one; I used a shoelace and stitched it down all around the edge of the map, with the two ends of the lace meeting where my house is.  I wanted to get the lace down quickly as once it was down I could do more things to the map, but once I started I found the process of stitching the brown shoelace to the fabric very soothing and calming. It was like I was walking a route, even though the lace doesn’t depict any particular route, just a generalisation, it is symbolic with boots and walking.

Then I returned to my tree block as I wanted to incorporate this in some way in this piece. I initially thought of using watercolour paints and stamping it directly onto the map, but because of the texture of it, it’s a flexible plasticky type texture, I didn’t think it would work very well, and I didn’t try it as I didn’t want to ‘ruin’ it. So I used green paint and stamped it onto a piece of cartridge paper. This worked OK, but then I had the idea to stamp it directly onto some old curtain lining fabric I had and this worked much better.

The tree image is very powerful to me; many years ago (around 1981) my father planted an acorn in a tub in the garden, and it grew very well. 10 years later, in 1991 the year my first son was born, he planted it in a row of trees in the park close to his home (there was a gap alongside the fence where a tree had died) and over the years we, as a family, have watched it grow into the beautiful English Oak tree it now is. It’s poignancy to me is even greater now as when my mother died in 1999, we buried her ashes beneath it and when my father died in 2001, we did the same for him. I now live in my old family home – where the tree started its life –  and I pass it daily on my walks. Over the past year, I have spent a lot of time reflecting (haven’t we all!) and things like this, the connection of people and places, have become increasingly more important to me.

I digress ….. I decided to stitch the tree down onto a piece of knitting I had done (a sample swatch for some project or other) as it was sort of a shape of a leaf, and then stitched it down where the lace met, which covers the street where I live. This image is quite raised from the canvas, and I’m not sure how I will stitch over it, as is my plan. Then using small scraps of fabric I cut out rough ‘leaves’ and arranged them around the lace , sticking them down with a glue stick – keeping with the tree theme. I had thought of just putting the leaves down randomly, ie mixing different fabric leaves together, but I felt that they looked better in fabric ‘pairs’. I then decided to sketch an acorn, as I had done with the boot in the first piece, using the same techniques – the outline in charcoal and then coloured in using the watercolour pencils. The acorn symbolising where everything begins, literally taking us back to the beginning, starting again.

I thought about using very lightweight fusible interfacing over the entire piece before stitching it down but decided against this as it might have melted the transfer. I want to stitch the piece all over, using my sewing machine. Just not sure exactly how I’m going to achieve that at the moment.

I tried laminating using the technique which Anne Kelly describes in her book, of a mixture of 50/50 PVA glue and water on tissue paper.  I initially tried to soak the tissue paper (reclaimed from the packing in the box of a pair of walking boots my husband ordered!) in the solution and placed it on a test piece, but the tissue kept tearing and the images underneath became somewhat lost.  Once it was dry, I stitched over the top, using a similar stitch to the one Anne Kelly uses, and I liked the effect this gave, but felt that it lost the definition of the underlying image. I’m not sure about this laminating technique for this project …..

For the final piece in this work, I decided to use a map of my town on a slightly smaller scale, and then put images of all the things that have become important to me, or that I have been involved with during the last year.  I found some beautiful illustrations of vegetables and flowers which were on an envelope from a seed company and cut them out with a border of the white envelope around each one. Again, I used my new watercolour pencils (which I love!) and shaded the white in with a shade of green and stuck them on the part of the map where my house is.

Last Spring, during the first lockdown, we planted many different vegetables amongst the flowers in our back garden and the pea pod in particular, linked in with my last assignment. Along the top of the map, I’ve strung a row of bunting, which I found on some fabric I had used for a bag project some years ago. The bunting depicts the way my street has come together over the last year and has become a great socially connected community, which is something which was not there before we were all forced to stay home. We set up a WhatsApp group and since the first lockdown, we have held street parties (when we have been allowed of course – and all socially distanced), competitions for the children and supported the more vulnerable residents of the street. In fact one of the new residents who moved into the street during the second lockdown, was advised by the estate agent that it was a very community minded street and that cinched their decision to buy! The bunting depicts this for me.

I had some beautiful wrapping paper in which someone had kindly sent me a gift, which had abstract images of birds on. This reminded me of the walks we have had where we have gone much further afield (mainly last summer before the mud set in) but all on foot from our house. I stuck this down on the map in the top right-hand corner and in the bottom right-hand corner I put some images of water plants on a piece of scrap fabric I had in my stash; taken together on the right-hand side of this piece hints at the places we went to beyond the confines of this map.

Just in from the right, I placed another image of a sheep (I have quite a few images of sheep on fabric in my collection!) and using some of my hand spun wool, I placed a strand of it on top of the sheep leading down to a piece of Harris Tweed on which I had sewn two images of cotton reels and a tape measure. These images depict the many hours of sewing I did – both in the early days of the pandemic, where I stitched many, many scrub bags and face masks, but also, I did quite a lot of sewing for myself too; mending, adapting and re-purposing fabric. Instead of hand sewing the cotton reel images onto the tweed, I used the applique setting on my sewing machine.

In the middle of the piece is an image of a bicycle, which has been another feature of this year for me. We have hardly used our car and my bike has been my main source of transport. Just below the bike is an image of a dog, although the image blends into the background and doesn’t stand out quite as much as the other images. This was actually deliberate. I wanted to depict that, always there, in her quiet way, someone who influences everything we do, our beautiful rescue border collie, Lucy – although she looks nothing like the dog in the image!  And finally, tucked away in the bottom left-hand corner, is a tiny sketch of a face mask with a splash of pink, which needs no explanation!

And while I still love the idea of laminating the work, as per my inspiration from Anne Kelly, I haven’t got it quite right with my sample test pieces, and don’t feel confident to use it on this final piece. I think it will obliterate or obscure the images on the pieces and it will lose definition.  So I decided to stitch round each image on each piece in Kantha stitch, using threads and wool. I inherited my mother’s sewing box and in it I found various mending threads (a mixture of wool and nylon) which were goodness knows how old! I also found some very old, but very strong black thread in the box and used that as well to stitch round the hand sketched, and painted images. Again, this was very much linking the past with the present, anchoring myself to the place where I live using materials which came from my mother who is no longer with me.

But I still felt that the pieces need ‘finishing’.

I needed to think how to do this ….. maybe to put a backing on each piece and to secure the raw edges with the overlocker? If so what colour? Would that be too dominating?

In the end, I decided to ‘back’ each piece individually with offcuts of an old sheet, and then finished the edges by sewing down more pieces of the wool (I had used a different piece of wool around three sides of each piece already) to effectively frame each panel. I then decided to link them all together with pieces of tape, so that they could be hung up on a wall but also folded together like a sketch book and stored away.

As I’m not sure how well the paper images will hold up; I’ve given each of those a coating of diluted PVA glue to help prevent the edges drying out and curling away from the map.

And I am very pleased with the finished result! I think it perfectly sums up the last year for me; my own personal creative development and the importance of my home and my place in the world.  

None of this work would have happened if we had not have had a pandemic, and that includes me actually completing this course. By the beginning of the first lockdown, I had been disillusioned with the course. Someone had said to me after I had felt brave enough to say that I was undertaking a course in textiles, “Oh, you don’t want to do that, just do your own thing” or words to that effect. This person held a degree in fine art, and clearly creativity came more easily to them than it did to me, and it had a profoundly negative effect on me. What did I think I was doing? Leave that sort of thing to people who know what they’re doing etc., etc.. As ever the little nagging voice in my head was at work.

Just before lockdown, I’d met a wonderfully inspiring 90-year-old lady, with whom I have walked with regularly over the last year (she is incredible!) and during one of our many conversations, she happened to tell me that when she was in her 50’s she embarked on a degree. This inspired me to return to this course, and I am so glad I had that conversation with her. I have learned much from it; I genuinely feel that my creativity has been ‘awakened’ and I have a myriad of ideas leaping out of my head daily. I am not afraid to give things a go and experiment with new tools and ideas. Leading directly from this last assignment, I have plans in place to complete a much larger ‘map’ project to depict our last holiday where we spent a month travelling all around Scotland in our motorhome. I have the map …….. !

I’ve also still got the map of Warwickshire which belonged to my father, and I will do something with this. After completing this assignment, I feel that rather than ‘spoiling’ it, whatever I do will enhance it’s meaning to me and it will become more than ‘just a map’.

So, I feel it is fitting that this last assignment should be paying some kind of homage to the pandemic; it has been a terrible time in so many ways for so many people, but it has also been a good time; a time where people have come together, especially through art. All around my hometown, people have either been leaving inspiring and comforting words depicted in art, or people have turned to art because they have had the time and space to do so. Many things have been said about the pandemic, but for me personally, it has given me the time, space and motivation to explore my creativity and to allow myself to do so. Had it not been for my friend, I may not have completed it and my creative life would be much the worst for it.

For me I feel I have now begun a creative journey that will be much like travel; I will see, experience and be inspired by so many different things and I look forward to incorporating them all into my new creative life!

Exercise Four – Sketchbooks

Stage 1 – Preparation

I prepared my concertina ‘sketchbooks’ as per the instructions, but I found that the resulting product was too small, so I opened them out, which looking at the image on page 59 is correct. This gave me an A5 height page to sketch on.

Stage 2 – Drawing from Memory

I decided to focus on my recent road trip holiday in our motorhome, where we spent 4 weeks touring round the whole of Scotland.  I decided to use my graphite stick to start with as I like the chunkiness of it in my hand.  I have three graphite sticks – 2B, 4B and 6B, and I used each one to sketch out the ‘bones’ of the images I was trying to put down on the paper.

I started out by sketching a straight line across the whole of the page in an attempt to depict the road – as it was a road trip I was visually describing. I then sketched out a motorhome at the far left hand side on the road, to depict the journey we took.

It was at this point that I realised that my drawing skills are not the best by any means but reflecting on what I have learned from doing this course, drawing ability does not matter, it is about letting go and seeing what happens. So I did!

I recalled the start of our journey and sketched out images – from memory – of the memorable places and things along the way.  I didn’t spend too much time on this, it was done very quickly and without worrying to much about what the images looked like (although I think they will need interpretation by anyone viewing them)!

I enjoyed this process, of using the different graphite sticks in a freeflowing way, whilst bringing to mind the details of the things and places I experienced during our trip.  It was nice to work in this way, without judgement about what I was drawing and how it looked. It was my recollection of the trip and visually interpreted in a way that was very natural.

Stage 3 – Drawing from Life

For my next concertinaed sketchbook, I sat in my studio shed in my garden pondering what to draw and I looked out of the window to my right.  It had been a grey day and the light was fading on a grey sky. Silhouetted against the sky was a perfectly framed picture of three trees, in their winter clothes, with my view of them being cut off as they dipped behind the garden shed, thus making a clean line.  I couldn’t see the shed in any detail, but the trees were clearly outlined. So I picked up my charcoal pencils and sketched them.  Then I turned my gaze further to my right looking out of the big floor to ceiling French window and I could see the backs of the houses of my neighbours, again silhouetted against the grey sky. So this time I used 4B pencil and sketched what I could see.  I had to work quickly as the light was fading, and I didn’t get the scaling right, but it felt quite nice to just grab a tool and sketch what was in front of me. Throughout this course I have tended to overthink things and just when I start to feel overwhelmed, I convince myself to just do it, and I’m invariably pleased with the results. Not necessarily with the artistic results, but the way it makes me feel, more free and less constrained. So bit by bit, I think the creativity is starting to creep out of me!

Exercise 4.2 – Customising a sketchbook

I found a book in a charity shop, well I found three actually.  The first one I decided to work on was a novel. The first major obstacle for me was to ‘de-face’ it! It is a very deep, ingrained unwritten “law” that you don’t disfigure or write in books, apart from putting your name on the inside front cover. Even when I was studying literature, many years ago, that was a huge issue for me, and one I only overcame by using pencil – you could always rub it out and leave the book in it’s almost original condition!

So the first thing I did was to fold a page (and I started at the beginning of the book!) into symmetrical shapes and to create a shape which I felt looked like an arrow – pointing towards the next page in the book.  So far so good. Then I took my pencil, yes, my pencil – and sketched a simple outline, a Christmas tree the type a child would draw. This was just to loosen me up and make the first marks. It felt so wrong to be marking the book in such a way, but after the first couple of strokes I felt better about it.

I then turned over the page and the word “bomb” jumped out at me; I circled the word four times on the page and then drew a starburst shape and wrote the word “BOMB’ inside it. Then I linked the four bomb words typed on the page to the bubble written BOMB in the centre of the page.  This was ironic, the fact that I completely subconsciously chose the word ‘bomb’ to highlight. I enjoyed doing this and felt that I had “blown away” my reticence of writing and drawing in a book! But I was still using pencil, the next step was to add colour.

But still pencil! I decided to just doodle and see what happened. I used all the colours in my pencil case and just did whatever I felt like doing, shapes rounded and angular. Again this was a very freeing process and I found it stimulating and enjoyable.  As with the “bomb” page, I found myself being drawn to words as they jumped out of the page at me. The depth of colour the pencils produced was not very satisfying, and the colours were very wishy washy. The words on the text jumped out “it is a weak light that comes through”, which fitted the way I felt about the colours. The words “whir” and “whizzing” inspired me to draw spirals.  I filled half the page with the doodles, but I was dissatisfied with the colours; they were just not strong enough against the blackness of the text on the page. So I’m now going to use my coloured sharpies. All this is just warming me up to this new way of working. I’m thinking that I will use yarn, collage, cutting the pages (eek!) and other techniques going forward.

I also looked on Pinterest, my go to resource for inspiration and ideas, and got some useful food for thought ….

I used my sharpies on the next page, and again just doodled like I had done with the coloured pencils. The sharpies “bled” through the paper and the images it made on the reverse were interesting, a faded copy of the original page.

Then I folded a page from the bottom right corner to the middle of the page, creating a diagonal pocket, and to keep it in place, I secured it in place by sewing a simple running stitch along the edge with yarn.

Stage 1 – Research and preparation

I researched the four artists as per the course material; Elizabeth Blackadder, Patrick Heron, Cy Twombly and Ben Nicolson, and Elizabeth Blackadder appealed to me immediately. I love the way she uses colour and strokes to bring her painting to life. As soon as I saw her painting, Staithes, I immediately recognised the location and felt she had really captured the essence of the place. The strokes she uses to depict the cliffs and the sea, as well as the sky, reminded me of how I sketched what I could see out of my studio shed window. The colours she has used are also simple, but very expressive and draw out the nature of the elements, such as sky, sea and cliffs. Very earthy colours and very bold, heavy strokes. I can see that she has caught the brightness in the sky, which was something I didn’t feel able to do with my sketches, but she has achieved it in a simple, but very effective way. I’m going to focus on the style she using in this picture, but on looking at her other work, I can see that she also produces very delicate, intricate work particularly of flowers, using pastel colours and light, airy strokes. In my opinion, the antithesis of the Staithes painting.

The old book I have chosen to use for this section is called the “Victorian Kitchen and Garden”, which I feel will complement the work of Elizabeth Blackadder; very earthy and linked to nature which much of her work is. It also had an illustrated sleeve which I thought I might use as material for collages.

Step one ….

Firstly I squeezed out a small blob of gouache paint onto a plate. I have never, ever used gouache paint before, or indeed any kind of paint, apart from decorating the walls in my house!

I decided to just jump straight in and try to obtain the earthy colours that Blackadder used in Staithes.  I tested them out by using a paintbrush and blobbing each blend of colours on the page. I liked the effect, and although the colours weren’t exactly like the colours on Staithes, they were still earthy, which is what I wanted to achieve.

I had to wait a bit for the paint to dry before turning over the page; and then I got impatient, so I just turned over anyway ….. I pressed down on the page to help the drying process and noticed how the back of the page was slightly depressed where the paint had been on the rear of the paper, adding texture to it.  When I opened the page again, I liked the way that marks had been made on the opposite page, shadowing the marks that I had originally made.  This gave me an idea to paint on the page in a landscape position (turning the book on its side), and the turning the page to create a shadow image on the top page

I also decided to revisit the collage exercise, which I really enjoyed, and try to depict them in the style of Elizabeth Blackadder, in her Staithes painting.

I first depicted the teapot I had used in the collage exercise.  Whereas in the collage exercise I was trying to get an accurate image of the teapot, especially when I was using the silhouette technique, this time I wanted to replicate an image that although could be recognised as a teapot, was much more ‘rough’, as if it had just landed on the page as if by being dropped by a flying bird(!). I used quick movements to put the paint onto the page, and it only took a few seconds to complete! The result was that the image was a lot more ‘rounded’ than I wanted, but as before, I turned the page over and pressed the painted image onto the opposite page. What I immediately noticed was the marks that the paint had made on the opposite page were absolutely beautiful! It was like the textured patterns in nature such as frost, or leaf veins – or even knitting! I could not have even attempted to create a pattern like this if I’d tried, but here it was on the page. the next few photos it is quite difficult to see this pattern, but hopefully you can see it clearly as you scroll through.

You can see the intricate design the paints made clearly here

For my next one I decided to use one colour over the entire page and then turning the page to ‘blot’ it.  The result of this got me so excited! I realised that the marks made on the opposite page could form the basis of the look I wanted to achieve …. Although I was going off-piste here …. I then tried to copy (from memory) the Blackadder’s Staithes picture on the opposite page, using the imprint as the base from which to work. It was very, very crude, but when I looked back at the Staithes picture, it did capture the essence of it I think. I tried to fold the page back to the original page and ‘blotted’ the new image onto it, but this didn’t work as it didn’t recreate the picture in any way. But ….. it could potentially form the start of another picture, which is what I did. I just painted a tree trunk and then by highlighting the red mark, I turned it into a toadstool, which, as Blackadder had used with the red roof on the Staithes painting, pops out of the painting. But again, if I had have just tried to create this without the ‘blotting’ I could never had achieved the texture of the paint which totally, to me anyway, recreates the natural element of the grass, trees, sea etc.. And by folding and blotting it AGAIN created a further depth to the Staithe recreation! I could just keep going for ever with this technique.

The possibilities are endless with this new technique I have discovered!!! Ha ha!

But I need to go back to the teapot.

I copied a different teapot collage this time, and using the same heavy strokes Blackadder had used, although this time I found myself taking a bit more time as I wanted to get the reproduction “right”, to create it. Again I just couldn’t resist folding the page and blotting. What resulted looked like a sweater, so I quickly just sketched a very image of a figure with long hair and a skirt!

I have really enjoyed this exercise; it felt exciting and freeing – both the initial strokes I put down on the paper and then the surprise as to what the “reflection” produced. Extremely satisfying!

Exercise 4.3 – Collating a Sketchbook

I started this exercise by researching the textile artists, as per he course material, and as soon as I landed on Dorothy Caldwell, I knew I had found the artist I wanted to focus on.  I have recently ordered a book (although at the time of writing I have not received it!) by Anne Kelly called “Textile Travels” which appealed to me because in 2017 I spent a year travelling the world with my husband, and I would seek out textiles wherever I went. There is such a lot to be learnt about a culture and a people through their textiles. I had been looking for inspiration as to how to record and preserve all the things I had collected throughout that year on the road, and I think Anne Kelly’s book might give me some inspiration.

And then along came Dorothy Caldwell! Reading about her on her website (http://dorothycaldwell.com) filled me with inspiration and excitement as here was an artist that was speaking to me. Here is what she writes about herself:

My work is a map of land and memory. I am interested in the landmarks that give a sense of place and how humans mark and visualize the land.

The early surveyors, of Canada, measured and structured the land mathematically, but in the squares of the grid, they made notations on certain rare plant growth, unusual geological formations, and other points that they were personally drawn to.

Identifying my own personal landmarks, through gathering, touching, and recording is how I create a sense of place. The vocabulary for my work is drawn from studying textile traditions and ordinary stitching practices such as darning, mending and patching. I am drawn to cloth that has been repaired, and reconstructed and in that ongoing process encodes time and the richness of lives lived.

I can honestly say that I am interested in everything she does with textiles! I love collecting fabrics, especially old fabrics and those that have been mended. I love the fact that the same piece of fabric can be used for many different things. I love to make things, especially clothes, from fabric that has been used for other things.  I love the ‘fabric’ of nature and the infinite beauty of things that surround us. Especially during this year of lockdown, despite knowing the place where I live very well, I have explored my own local area as never before and seeing things with fresh eyes.  As Dorothy Caldwell says, she is interested in landmarks and places, she is also interested in the stories of textiles and the people that have used them before.  Even the old book I had been using as a sketchbook in the earlier exercises, The Victorian Kitchen Garden, had been used for a purpose very different to the one I was using it for.

Stage 2 – Textiles-inspired Translation

My vision for this final exercise was to create a ‘grid’ of 8 individual blocks on a pice of hessian and fill each one with a different material and/or technique. I used my favourite material to create the grid – yarn. The yarn I used was some of my own handspun yarn, a handspun yarn I had bought in Chile, and a commercial yarn I had bought in New Zealand. I laid the yarn in a grid out over a piece of hessian, and stitched it down by hand. I was inspired by Dorothy Caldwell’s use of grids to identify her own personal landmarks, and to honour the early surveyors of Canada – those who have gone before. I wanted to start with my home, not just the area where I live, but literally my own back garden, where I have my shed studio. Unfortunately, I forgot to take any photographs of the grid before I added the individual pieces, but hopefully you’ll be able to see it properly on the photographs of the finished sketchbook at the end. My intention was originally that the grid could be folded up, like a map, and opened out to reveal the individual panels, but with the delicateness of some of the panels, it just became one big “sketchbook”. But I deliberately didn’t make the grids to be of equal size.

I wanted to honour the space which nurtures and supports me but also to link it to the wider world experiences I have had, and to show that nothing exists in isolation. I also wanted to honour the origins of the things I have used in this sketchbook, but also to provide evidence that there are always new possibilities and each item can be used in different ways. This year of pandemic has, for me, highlighted the need to re-evaluate how I live and to find greater depth and meaning to what it means to feel safe and to live a more a meaningful life. 

So the first thing I did was to collect some of the soil from my garden where I have spent a great deal of time over the past year! For the first time ever I was glad it was clay, as this would make it more malleable! I then ‘spread’ it onto a piece of cartridge paper with a flat knife and made a random shape in the middle of the paper.  I then loosely span a small amount of wool, from a fleece which was given to me this summer by a local farmer from a farm very close to my home. I have walked across his land for years, but this year it has become so much more important to me, and I have taken the time to get to know the farmer better and also to engage more in the activity on the farm, including the shearing – hence the gift of a fleece once he found out that I spin!  Also on the farm is a lovely old fallen tree trunk which has always captured my imagination with its texture and swirls. So I used the piece of wool I had spun, and pressed it into the damp clay in an attempt to depict the tree.  Sadly, as I write this, I realise that I have never taken a photograph of this fallen tree – I have the vision of it in my mind, but that doesn’t help you as the reader! As the clay is drying, it is falling off the page, so I think I will keep coming back to this as it will change and maybe become something completely different!

For the second panel I stuck down small locks of fleece and fibre which I had collected over the years. I choose these particular pieces, alpaca in two colours, and a Blue Faced Leicester sheep, as these animals are also on other areas of land very close to my home and have featured highly in my life this year as part of my daily walks. I encompassed the locks within a loop of the handspun fleece.  I also added some of the fleece whirls I made in the Materials section of this course, as they seemed to fit in very well, picking up on the natural colours and the texture of what can be achieved through manipulation of a beautiful natural resource.

The next panel was inspired by a skeletonised leaf which my dog brought into the house on her coat. It was beautiful. I had also been saving some pea pods from the peas we had grown in our garden over the summer.  Sadly I forgot to take “before” pictures, but I decided to paint them green with the gouache paint I had used earlier to depict the colour they had both once been and to recreate their former glory, but also to show that although there is a lot of, I will go as far as to say, misery, in the world at the moment, there is also the knowledge that nothing stays the same. Wow, that’s a bit deep, but as I sit here writing this, it is New Year’s Eve and a time for me, and I have no doubt many others, of reflection and anticipation. In normal times I would also say excitement, but the atmosphere is very different this year.

As I painted the once, perfectly formed pea pod, it started to curl and change shape, and became less and less like a pea pod! I then used a wooden block of a swirl which I had acquired from my travels in India and stamped a swirl pattern on the page, again inspired by the ‘circles’ of life, and using the same colour as the leaf and pea pod. I love the colour green; my studio shed is painted green on the inside and I look out onto my garden which at this time of year is predominantly green.  Green is the colour which is a constant in our landscape even though other colours pop up through the seasons.

For the next panel I tore a page out of my Victorian Garden sketchbook and decided to try the paint and fold technique I had used earlier – just to see what happened! My first instinct was to use the green colour again, but I decided to go for yellow instead ….. this didn’t work, or at least the beautiful designs it did make were just not visible, so I put some green over the top, and this time it worked. I wonder if I only see the patterns, which to me are like mountains and valleys and trails through the countryside, because I expect those things to be green?

So I decided to do another one and use blue instead. Because I was lazy I didn’t clean the brush …. I thought that the strong blue would ‘override the paler green, but as I was putting the blue onto the page, the green started to come through faintly. This time it worked and I loved the result! It looked like the sea with coral beds and swirling seaweed. Over Christmas I had been given a packet of seaweed ‘crisps’ and I loved the packet they were in, so I kept it long after the crisps had all gone. I decided to cut out the diving figure on the front of the packet – and again I forgot to take a photo before I started cutting (too eager to get started!) – and stuck it onto the blue seascape.  Again, this is linking me to my own story of travel and diving, as during our year of travel I was very fortunate to have the opportunity to scuba dive in some fabulous places. Also, the packaging was 100% recycled and recyclable and it was interesting to think what it had been in a former reincarnation.

I then turned to the fabrics I had decided to include. These were pieces of indigo dyed hand block printed fabrics that I had collected in India and also some pieces that I had created myself at a indigo dying shibori workshop I had attended; a beautiful green and purple cotton fabric handwoven by women in a women’s co-operative in Sri Lanka; a remnant of some curtain fabric which my friend had given me and from which I made a dress and finally, some scraps of Harris Tweed fabric I had begged from an art studio whilst I was on my most recent trip to Scotland in September.

For the indigo grid, I randomly cut the fabric into shapes to fit inside the grid. My intention was to stitch them together using Kantha stitching. However, I couldn’t work out how to keep them all together whilst I did that, so I glued them down to a piece of cartridge paper to keep them in place and then I used a single strand of the same handspun yarn I had used earlier and stitched them down.  I love the effect of Kantha stitching and I was very pleased with the result. I wanted to depict India as being chaotic (hence the randomly cut pieces of fabric) but being held together by custom, tradition and the skill of the artisan. Kantha is a very traditional craft in India, originally used by people from the poorer classes in Bangladesh as a way of using old fabrics – sari’s and dhoti’s in particular – layering them up to make blankets to keep warm. They would cut the sari’s and dhoti’s to size and then take the thread from the cut sides and sew the layers of fabric together using what is effectively a large running stitch over the layers. The stitches are worked in parallel lines to fasten all the layers together.  Because the fabrics they were using were old and had been washed many times, they were soft and the resulting blankets proved to be quite strong. In Sanskrit Kantha means rags, and pieces of cloth stitched together depicts family unity. It was also a collective occupation and women would tell each other stories as they worked together. Traditional Kantha embroidery is now not just in the remit of the poor. Each piece of work is a creation of self-expression and no two pieces are ever the same (how could they be!) and each piece is a labour of love. What started as a necessity to re-use old fabrics has evolved into an art form, much sought after all over the world.  I love this, and it fitted very clearly into my sketchbook vision.

For the green cotton fabric which I had bought in Sri Lanka from a Women’s Co-operative Organisation called Selyn, I decided to honour the women who had hand woven it. I took a piece of this beautiful fabric which is woven with different colour warp and weft threads giving an iridescent hue to the cloth, and laid it flat. I then randomly cut strips of the same fabric and loosely wove it together on top of the flat piece and then stitched down the edges with my sewing machine. Again, drawing from the (endless) inspiration of Dorothy Caldwell, I feel that this is honouring the women who made it and creating a really beautiful piece of cloth.

The next exercise, I cut a hole out of the middle of the grid square in the hessian and put a piece of the curtain fabric underneath and used a simple stitch to fix it to cover the hole.  I used another piece of my handspun wool, this time a dyed merino in autumn colours, which I had plyed with a natural white merino, to stitch it in place.  For this section I wanted to show visible mending using a fabric which has been used for another purpose – in this case curtains.  I drew in part on the work I had done in Section 3 Materials, when I stacked fabric and cut holes in to show the fabric underneath. Not quite the same result, but when I turned the fabric over to tie off the ends, the picture which jumped out at me was the European Union star logo. Again, I felt this was very poignant with Britain leaving the EU, and something that I had been thinking about a lot and connected my thinking with the ‘artwork’ I was creating, albeit completely unconsciously. I had thought about doing lots of different holes and using different stitches to secure the patching, but after considering it, I decided to leave it as it was, a single repaired hole.

My final piece was using the Harris Tweed fabric and I decided to attempt to depict a Scottish scene of sky, hills, lakes and heather. I laid the fabric pieces on top of each other in an attempt to obtain depth to the view and frayed the ends to depict a natural landscape collage. I stitched the pieces down in the most invisible way I could as I didn’t want the stitching to show in any way. This last panel I hoped linked the fabric produced by the inhabitants of the Scottish island, Harris, to the landscape of the Scottish Highlands which I have only recently visited.

The finished sketchbook – hopefully you can see the grid lines clearly

Summary

Throughout this course, I have often felt constrained and restricted in my work – even though I know that this perceived restriction only comes from myself, and usually, once I’ve actually got started on an exercise, I have almost always achieved beyond my expectations. I’ve reflected on the grid design of this last sketchbook; was I subconsciously trying to constrain myself again by ‘compartmentalising’ the subjects? But even though I have produced what could be construed as “boxes”, I feel that each one has a link and the thread (yarn) which surrounds each grid, also brings the ideas together. And also, the idea of a sketchbook is to test out ideas and techniques which I have tried to do here. Any one of these grid pictures could be developed into a bigger piece. My initial thought in designing this grid system, was to fold the piece up so it could be opened like a book, but with the clay and leaf sections, if I did this, they would be destroyed, so it ended up as being left as a whole piece.

I have absolutely loved this part of the course and especially this final sketchbook exercise. I have been totally inspired by Dorothy Caldwell but what I’ve actually achieved in this exercise is only a fraction of what Dorothy Caldwell and this section of the course has inspired in me. I feel as if I’m buzzing with ideas as to what I can do with this – in fact over a few nights I’ve had difficulty getting off to sleep, not because I was worried about anything, but the sheer number of ideas which are buzzing round my head! I really feel now that this course is achieving what I wanted it to do, and that was to unleash my creativity. I always knew it was there, but it always felt just out of my reach.

My learning log is called my Textile Journey, and I’m reflecting how particularly poignant that title is, and that this journey will continue……

Exercise 3 – Materials

Exercise 3 – Materials

I am really looking forward to getting started on this section! 

In preparation for doing the exercise, I collected the following types of materials:

  • Wallpaper (plain)
  • Unwashed calico
  • Washed calico
  • Offcuts from some old denim style curtains
  • Netting
  • Fusible interfacing
  • Bias strips of furnishing fabric
  • Strips of wadding
  • Carded wool sliver
  • Lots of scraps of fabrics – all sorts

The themes I have chosen to follow (at this stage) are:

  • Embossed and padded
  • Fibrous and hairy

After a break of over 6 weeks, it has been challenging to get started again on my studies in a practical way.  Although I have found myself thinking a lot more about material and textures, especially when in the natural environment, such as beaches and woodland.

I started by researching some of the artists who use material manipulation in their work, although it could be argued that all textile artists use material manipulation, as there is always some form of ‘change’ which any material undergoes in order to become something else.  There are a myriad of artists and techniques ‘out there’ and after spending a few days looking at lots and lots of different artists work, I started to experience my usual overwhelming feelings of not being good enough and what on earth was I thinking by enrolling on this course.  So I stopped looking at other people’s work and returned my attention to focus on what I know and love …..

I have always loved the natural world, natural colours and natural fabrics.  I particularly love wool and am fascinated with the myriad of things that it can be used for and what can be done to it to create fabrics and material.  It was only when I began to think in more detail about materials and what we can do to them to create different things, that I came to realise how truly remarkable wool is.  Take felting and needle-felting for example; this technique can be used to create wearable garments as well as wearable art, but it can also be used sculpturally to create stand-alone pieces of art. So versatile. Felted wool is used as insulation in houses, packaging for delicate items and those which need to be kept either cool or hot, due to its insulating properties.  And one use which is probably not at the forefront of our minds when thinking about felted wool, is it’s use as a coffin for burials because it is totally biodegradable.  What a wonderful material it is!  And it is totally renewable – the sheep who provide this material, need to be shorn each year.  It is a crying shame that we, as a society, don’t do more with it and it is often seen as a waste product by farmers due to its lack of monetary value.  As someone who eats a plant based diet, I do struggle with the animal exploitation element of wool production, but, as with all elements of farming which involve animals, it can be done well with the welfare of the animal at the centre.  Maybe one day ……. 

But I digress, the task in hand is to examine materials and how they can be manipulated, so here goes.

Stage 1 – Material Tests

I began by looking at the individual pieces of material I had collected and putting them through various tests:

Technique – Tearing & slashing

FabricOutcome
WaddingTearing along the edge and in the middle of the sample
Fusible interfacingTearing as above
NettingTearing as above
Unwashed calicoFolding (concertina) then slashing. This fabric would not tear without a small cut made first (see below)
WallpaperTearing along the edge and in the middle
Carded wool sliverTearing lengthways along the fibre. The sample would not tear widthways across the fibre
Furnishing fabricWould not tear, in any direction, without a small cut first. (I know from experience that fabric will tear along the weft if a small cut is made). So I scrunched the fabric into a ball and then slashed it with scissors.
Wadding – torn
Fusible interfacing – torn

Images from left to right: wool sliver – torn; furnishing fabric, scrunched and slashed; wallpaper – torn and pulled; washed calico – torn

Technique – Knotting & Plaiting

FabricOutcome
WaddingPlaited well, became pliable and sculptural. Knotting just disintegrated it!
Fusible interfacingThe heavier weight sample behaved in a similar way to the wallpaper when plaited; knotting I had to twist it first in order to do so. The lighter weight one behaved in a similar way to the calico.
NettingPlaiting was not discernible, and visually you couldn’t see the difference with knotting and plaiting
Unwashed CalicoPlaiting had to be loose to see the technique, otherwise it just looked like knotting, but reminded me of ‘rags’ to knot into little girls hair to curl it!
WallpaperBecame very sculptural with plaiting – knotting didn’t work at all!
Carded Wool SliverVery satisfying to both plait and knot. Became very sculptural with knotting.
Furnishing fabricAs per the unwashed calico
Wool sliver – plaited
Waddng – plaited
Wool sliver – knotted
Wallpaper – plaited (held together with paper clips)
Fusible interfacing – plaited
Fusible interfacting – knotted
Furnishing fabric – plaited

………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..

Part 2 – Sample Development

I must admit that I’m finding this hard now.  I’m finding it difficult to come up with new ideas as to what to do with the material I have chosen to see what ‘new’ fabric/material I can produce.  I feel it has all been done before and what I’m doing is very predictable as to the outcome, and I’m just regurgitating old and established ideas.  I am very interested in Shibori techniques for example, and smocking, but again, this is all very old stuff, and although it’s enjoyable working with the material, coming up with new ideas is difficult.  

Then an idea came to me ….. I found a spool of macrame ‘twine’ and had the idea to plait it with two strips of the wool sliver and then to try to felt it to see how it would behave …… maybe I am loosening up a bit in my approach after all!

Wool sliver and macrame twine
Plaited together (before felting)
After felting

The result was less than inspiring! Maybe I didn’t felt it enough, but the end result was not much different from the original, a little more compact due to the felting, but not that much different really.  So I’m now going to coil it up and see if I can sew it on my sewing machine, going from something very soft and pliable, to a more compact firm structure.

….. And I was very pleased with the results – I sewed straight across the middle of the sample, in segments like a pizza, and the end result was certainly more firm, but not too firm. I think the combination of the felted wool, with the ‘core’ of the much stronger cotton macrame twine, has created a soft but stable structure. 

After coiling, but before sewing
After sewing

I then had a go at just coiling up the sliver of wool on it’s own and sewing it as I had done with the macrame.  The result was very pleasing with a lovely soft, but securely constructed and firm.  It felt just as sturdy as the macrame twine plaited sample. 

Coiled sliver

The next one I did was to take the sliver of wool and twist it before coiling and sewing it as before.  Again, a very pleasing result.

Twisted before coiling

So I continued on this theme; I then knotted the sliver and coiled and sewed it. I liked the result of this, but not as much as the others as it was not as easy to create the ‘round’ result. So looking at them all together:

Clockwise from top left : sliver and macrame felted ‘rope’, coiled sliver, twisted coiled sliver and knotted coiled sliver

Sample Development (continued) …..

I then decided to return to the slashing and tearing techniques I used before.  I had an old sheet which I had earmarked for my sewing projects, specifically to use as toile material, and I decided to use some of this for this part of the project.

I used a large piece of fabric and enclosed all the scraps of fabric that I had used earlier – plus a few more and the wool sliver.  My idea was to layer up the fabric inside the larger piece of fabric and to sew shapes (in this case I went with the brief of stripes and spots) and then cut through the fabric layers to reveal glimpses of all the different fabrics within the ‘sandwich’.  This idea came to me to do this whilst I was making an advent calendar for my granddaughter! The idea of creating little pockets of ‘surprise’ appealed to me, as I had absolutely no idea how this slashing and sewing project would turn out. 

Layering the scraps of fabric inside the ‘sandwich’

I delved into my scrap bag (I never throw away any scraps from my dressmaking) and decided to put more layers of different types of fabrics, including pure cottons, jersey, stretch fabric, lining material, cord, plastic string bags from onions, garlic etc., and just kept layering them up.  I then folded the top fabric over the stock of scraps and, using my sewing machine, I sewed up the edges. I then sewed two rows of stiches straight up the middle and cut the piece in half to create two separate pieces. 

Sewing up the sandwic

I then sewed channels in one of the pieces, to create a stripe effect and random circle (or at least oval) shapes on the other, following the brief of spots and stripes. I then cut through all the layers of fabric, but not the backing, along the channels to reveal the scraps. 

Sewing the channels

………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..

The results:

I was pleased with the fabric ‘wad’ before I made the cuts. It felt really solid, but flexible and the ridges were well pronounced.  I was also pleased with the result after I had made the cuts/slashes and ‘fanned’ the scraps out. I also, unintentionally, cut right through the fabric on one of the ridges and I was pleased with the result of that too.  In fact I felt I could have added more layers and used a more diverse range of materials. Also, as the top layer was a polyester base, I felt it I had used a more loosely woven fabric as the casing, that might have frayed more too and added to the effect of distress. I tried to tease the scraps out a bit from their restriction so that I could see more of the enclosed fabric. I screwed up each sample and this helped a little with the distressing process. Maybe I need to make my channels a bit wider and scrunch the fabric up to help the exposure process?

The circles though were less impressive. I found I had to cut the fabric on the circles in a cross and then remove the outer layer to expose the scraps within.  The effect was nowhere near as good as the lines, but again, they may have been more effective with a larger quantity of scraps inside and a different fabric as the casing.

I always try to imagine a ‘use’ for anything I make – maybe this technique could be used for rag rugs or matting? Or maybe things don’t have to have a ‘use’ they can just be what they are?

Summary

Although I have enjoyed this Materials exercise, I really don’t think I’ve achieved as much as I would have hoped to have done following on from the collage exercise. I really suprised myself with how much I enjoyed Collage, and was really looking forward to experimenting with materials. However, I feel I have just drawn myself back into techniques and materials I know well, such as wool and fabric, albeit trying to manipulate them in ways I have not done before, such as the plaiting/coiling and layering/slashing techniques. I looked at lots of different images of material manipulation on Pinterest and Instagram, and became completely overwhelmed, as I often do. During my research I came across a very interesting article, written by Joe Pitcher of TextileArtist.org, which highlights that too many techniques can be overwhelming and stifling to creativity. The full article is here: https://www.textileartist.org/textile-technique-addict (retrieved 19.10.20).

Of course, I appreciate that this course is designed to unlock your creativity by challenging you to explore new techniques and introducing new ideas to try things out, but the above article really resonated with me and I actually felt relieved that to feel overwhelmed is quite a common emotion amongst textile artists! I think that I would benefit from being in closer contact with other creatives, rather than just on-line, but of course this is not possible at this moment in these Covid times. But I do feel very isolated and although I know I can reach out to my fellow course members, this too is an overwhelming thought as I seem to spend a lot of time on-line in all areas of my life, and the thought of increasing that time in forging new connections is not something I relish.

I will now turn my attention to the next part of the course …… sketchbooks. I think this is something I’m going to really enjoy. At the beginning of this course I bought a number of ready made sketchbooks, and they are all still in pristine, blank condition ….. !

Exercise 2 – Collage

Exercise 2.1

I started off by deciding that I was going to replicate a rather lovely teapot and milk jug I have in my house.

I began by sketching it on a plain piece of paper, so I could get the perspective of what to cut out. I didn’t trust myself to ‘draw’ with my scissors at first.

After I sketched it out, I then decided on a two colour theme for the pot using black paper and an envelope which had contained a greeting card which was white with black spots. I then attempted to cut out the paper to correlate with the sketch.  I soon found out that this did not work, and it was much easier to cut the paper by eye and feel, rather than follow a pattern.  I was very pleased with the result of the teapot as I wanted it to be a bit quirky, rather than a replica of the original item.

The jug was inspired by a plain white jug I have. So I cut it out of piece of plain green paper which was originally a paper bag.  I cut it out freehand in one piece and added bits of white paper to define the rim and the handle.  I found a picture of a plain white jug in a magazine, so I added that to the middle of the green jug, and then cut out two photos of some white daffodils and placed them in the jug on ‘stalks’ of old wrapping paper.

The cup and saucer were made in a similar way to the teapot, using old wrapping paper, with contrasting paper to define the inside of the cup and the saucer.  I wanted to create the feeling of flowing liquid from the teapot to the cup and used another old envelope which had a pattern on the inside to recreate that image.

I made each piece on a separate piece of paper before cutting them out and mounting them in their final position.  I felt that the scale of the jug was too large in relation to the cup and saucer and the teapot, so I placed it at the front to try to get the perspective of scale. 

Looking at it all together, I don’t think that the teapot fits the theme, which although I didn’t have a theme when I started, it does seem that the image conjured with the jug, flowers and teacup is one of summer. The teapot is more geometric and stands out starkly whereas the other two objects are more easy on the eye.  Although the jug is also quite stark, the presence of the flowers softens it somewhat.  However, maybe it should contain milk and not flowers! The addition of the butterfly, sourced from another piece of old wrapping paper was a last minute thought. Also looking at the paper I had used to mount the images, I realise there’s a reason for using cartridge paper and not the A4 sheets of paper I had stuck together, and the crumpled texture detracts from the finished piece. Although something I’ve come to realise about the beauty of collage, is that you can easily cut images out and restick them down.

However, I became absorbed with the process of cutting out and sticking and enjoyed the challenge of recreating a solid object with this technique. 

Exercise 2.2

I didn’t want to make collages to scale as I wouldn’t be able to fit many on the paper. I didn’t have big enough pieces of paper, and I wanted to cut continuously, as per the continuous line drawing I did in the first assignment.  I first used a sheet out of a pad of paper I have.  The paper itself is quite thick and I found the process to be much more difficult than I expected. I tried to keep my eyes on the teapot and not on my cutting, and it took quite a while – and total concentration – to complete.  When I examined the end result, I could see that it wasn’t quite symmetric, but it was actually quite a fair representation of a teapot and I was pleased with the end result.  For the next attempt, I used a page from a magazine, so the texture of the paper was very different to the first one.  Again it produced it’s own challenges, and was very difficult to manipulate as it was flimsy and whereas with the thicker paper, you could keep your place with your scissors, this paper kept slipping and moving and I had to keep more of a firm hold on it.  The result of this one was not as good a the first so far as representation, in fact I think it looks a bit like a trumpeting elephant, but proportionately it looked better and also depicted the roundness of the lines of the teapot better than the first attempt.

The third one was cut out of a piece of used brown wrapping paper.  This one was the easiest and quickest one to do! I think I was on a bit of a roll and after using the first two very different textured papers.  The end result was the best representation of the teapot, and although not perfect, I feel it is a lovely, quirky image of a ‘proper’ teapot. The brown paper made me think of tea (probably the colour) in an old fashioned sense and I love the jaunty angle of the spout, which seems to make the whole teapot appear very confident and comforting, as if drinking tea from this pot will make everything OK! The contours are also very rounded and flowing and it ‘flowed’ very well from my scissors.

The final image I made was again using paper from a magazine, which I chose for the colourful image. Again, it was difficult to cut concisely, but I was very pleased with the end result as it is in proportion with the teapot subject.  I felt that each image I produced went better as I became more confident with the technique and the end result was pleasing.  I finished by making a little handle for the lid of each pot out of a piece of coloured card. I chose this to link all the very different images together.

I placed all the different images I made on top of each other to see how different they were before finally sticking them down onto the paper, and this highlighted how very different they all were and how the final two were much more rounded and pleasing to the eye (I regret I didn’t photograph this).

For the second exercise in 2.2, I used the same items as my study objects  – the teapot, two jugs, and a cup and saucer.  I do not have a huge range of papers to choose from and I decided that I didn’t want to spend money on buying more.  I always choose to recycle anything and everything, including the paper I have used in this exercise.  For the second exercise in silhouette collage I used a selection of magazine papers (different weights), paper bags, double thickness wrapping paper and tracing paper.  I found that I had gained a lot of confidence from the first two exercises and jumped right into this one. I used two different papers than I had used in the first exercise – tracing paper and double thickness packaging paper.  The tracing paper was pleasing to use, but the effect was, understandably a bit underwhelming! The packaging paper was the most difficult to manipulate, but I was still very pleased with the end result.  The second drawing, on coloured paper, made me think about the colour of the paper I was using to make the silhouette, and I wanted to complement the colours of each, so I choose a solid colour.  Again, I don’t have coloured A3 paper, so for this I used a size as near as possible to A4 (it was actually an old ring file divider).

Although I had enjoyed doing the first exercise with collage, I wasn’t particularly looking forward to doing this one, but I have been very pleasantly surprised how much I enjoyed it.  I really like the result of the bold, solid image on the paper, with a nodding acknowledgement of the original article. As with the continuous line drawing I did in the first exercise, I found the process totally absorbing and after the first couple, very satisfying to do.

Exercise 2.3

One thing I had observed from the items I had chosen to depict was that they all have soft, smooth, curved lines, there was no harshness to the items.  So for the next exercise, Line, I decided to change my subject matter of one of my drawings to a more angular one – my sewing machine.  As it is mainly white in colour, and I wanted to my drawing to be an accurate replication, I decided to use tracing paper as my base, and I could then use white paper which would enable the image to stand out.

I decided to cut the main structure of the sewing machine as a silhouette and then build up the detail by adding other pieces of paper.  Cutting out the main body of the machine was enjoyable, and I used the techniques I’d very recently used in the silhouette exercise.  The angular lines of the machines were fairly easy to negotiate and I enjoyed the process. I think the end result was at least recognisable as a sewing machine!

The next exercise I undertook was ‘drawing’ one of my earlier subjects, a milk jug with rounded edges.  I found this much more difficult to negotiate. I found that the curves were difficult to replicate and keep the dimension and the scale of the jug accurate.  It took me ages to complete it, and I still don’t feel that it is a true reflection of the jug.  Unlike all the other collages I have done, this one didn’t flow and I found it frustrating, even though the jug was a simple, smooth rounded shape that I had enjoyed replicating before when I depicted it as a silhouette.  I must admit that I chose the simple item as I thought it would be more enjoyable than the more angular sewing machine, but it turned out not to be the case!  I became absorbed in the process of the sewing machine, but mainly frustrated with the jug.

For the final two exercises in 2.3 Line, I decided to attempt to ‘draw’ the jug again, as I really had not enjoyed the process before and my philosophy is to face the things you find difficult.  I used coloured paper this time on a white A4 background.  I decided to cut pieces, like a jigsaw, along the curved lines of the jug as I was observing them, and then to finally stick them all down once I was happy with it.  As before, I found that as I was focussing on one part of the jug, I missed other features, like the inside curved line of the handle against the main body of the jug.  I only really noticed this once I had stuck everything down, and I found it quite jarring to the eye to see a very straight line amongst a very rounded object.  In fact, there are no straight lines on the jug at all, which I only discovered after studying it over and over again during this collage section. 

The final exercise in 2.3 I decided to look at something completely different – and very angular, a 4 pin plug socket extension lead.  I found the straight lines easier to cut out, but it was a challenge to get the perspective right so that it looked in proportion.  I decided to use a piece of paper which had two main colours and to stick with that.  I liked the finished result, with its clean lines and I especially liked the plug sockets as the pattern on the paper I felt depicted sparks, like electricity. Again, once I got going with this exercise I became absorbed and enjoyed the process.

The one thing that I haven’t done is to tear the paper to create the shapes I wanted, I have only used scissors. Maybe because the scope of the exercises veered towards using scissors, and maybe because I haven’t even thought about tearing the paper?! 

Exercise 2.4

For this exercise I decided to change tack completely from the objects I had been studying – and also because I had managed to acquire a quantity of magazines! In one of the magazines there was an article about Zandra Rhodes, which had a lovely photograph of her as the centrepiece.  This photograph inspired me to create a collage based on her, using mainly pinks, which is the colour synonymous with Zandra.  I used her photograph as the main centrepiece and cut out a block silhouette of my dressmakers mannequin and then surrounded it with images representing items relating to creating cloth textile fabrics and fashion.  I decided not to reproduce items to scale but to randomly add the images as if they had been scattered across the page.  I enjoyed sourcing the images from the magazines, and found myself looking for more items on the theme.  If I had have found more, I would have grouped them more closely together, even overlapping to create a montage of sewing paraphernalia. 

For the line drawing, again I found it very difficult to achieve a reasonable replica of the images I was trying to represent – this time furniture within the room I was working in.  Maybe because I don’t feel that I can draw very well, or I find it particularly hard to manipulate the angles of the image I am trying to copy with my scissors, I’m not sure.  I decided that I would try tearing it.  I found I enjoyed this much better than using my scissors and felt much more in control of the shape I was trying to achieve.  I also found myself more satisfied with the finished result I think because the lines weren’t straight, there was no way it would ever be a precise replica, and the quirky lines were actually very pleasing. I even went back and added another sewing item to the Zandra Rhodes collage and tore the paper to do it! Although at the moment, I haven’t tried to tear the paper other than in a straight line …… next I’ll try curves!

Final Exercise

For my final exercise, I decided to use two themes; the tea theme from my first exploration into collage, and a completely different abstract theme of stripes and spots.  My first effort was to do the teapot, again using the brown paper which I had felt really went well with the earlier study.  Although it was a block silouhette, I actually used my scissors to cut solid pieces of paper and fitted them together like a jigsaw.  To keep to the brief to use spots and stripes, I added spots and stripes to the image to complete it.  I was fairly pleased with the end result, at least you could tell it was a teapot!

I then wanted to recreate the teacup, again inspired from the very first efforts I had made with collage.  This time, I tore the paper instead of cutting it, but still used the block silhouette technique.  Even though this wasn’t to the brief of the exercise, I really wanted to try to use the tearing technique to create the curved edges of the teacup.  I was very pleased with both the process of tearing the paper, which I found satisfying, but also with the end result of the image on the paper.  The whole image had been created by tearing paper in different thicknesses and curved shape, apart from the flower motif I added at the end, which I had cut out. Even though I had strayed from the theme, I still managed to get some straight(ish) lines to depict the steam rising from the hot tea, and one spot!

I then went back to the original brief and decided on a completely abstract theme of stripes and spots. For the first one I used some paper (actually the inside of an envelope) which had black irregular shaped lines on a very pale pink background.  I cut out individual lines using my scissors and placed four across the centre of the paper, which I was using in the landscape orientation.  I then used some paper, again an envelope which had irregular black spots, and tore these out individually. And continuing on the monochrome theme, I had some mottled grey paper which again I tore into round shapes.  My intention was to show the spots as two individual entities at the bottom of the paper, then moving through the lines and intertwining with each other, and eventually mingling with each other at the top of the picture.  I was really pleased with the end result of this collage; it was simple, but visually effective. 

I decided to carry on with this same theme to create another similarly styled collage, but this time tearing instead of cutting the lines and cutting instead of tearing the spots.  I tore strips of brown paper to create the lines and the same grey paper I had used in the earlier one for half of the spots and some completely black paper for the other half.  Again I used the paper in landscape orientation and wanted to show the spots moving through the paper, but this time, starting with the black at the bottom moving into the grey at the top of the page.  For both of the collages I started with sticking the lines down first, almost like they were the basis of the pictures, the ground rules so to speak. The spots became more fluid and took on a life of their own and flowed around the page, before I settled on the final design and stuck them down.  I  really enjoyed doing both of these collages; I became totally absorbed in the process and felt the message that they gave to me was that everything is connected and nothing is fixed, nothing stays the same, all things are constantly moving and changing, merging into other things and becoming something different.

My final piece was another spots and stripe, this time using one colour of paper on a white background.  I tore strips for the lines and used a hole puncher to create the spots.  I also used the pieces from which I’d cut the holes from, as I thought they looked very effective and gave a slightly different variation on the theme.  This piece can be viewed from any angle and it reminds me of an underwater scene, where the lines could be either foliage or fish, and the spots bubbles of oxygen.  I really liked the effect of just using one colour on the white paper.

Summary

Prior to undertaking this exercise on collage, I must admit I had not thought a great deal about it and thought that it was for children in nursery school.  I have memories of my own children bringing home collage work with lentils and pasta! But I have thoroughly enjoyed many aspects of this exercise.  I enjoyed ghe research on the three artists I chose to study and found their work fascinating – particularly Matisse as I had never previously thought of him as a collage artist.

I really enjoyed getting ‘stuck’ in to the practical exercises and particularly enjoyed the block silhouette collages where I used my scissors in a continuous motion whilst closely observing an object.  I also enjoyed the quirky results I achieved with the teapots.  I found the line drawing much more difficult and frustrating, particularly with the curved objects (jug) which I didn’t enjoy as much as the more angular objects (sewing machine and extension lead).

Looking at the pieces I have created, I believe I could have been more creative with the background colour of the paper. Although I have already said that I didn’t want to spend too much money and I wanted to utilise what I already had, it is only now, in retrospect, that I realise what I could have used.  For example, I could have painted the white paper – I do have a pristine box of watercolour paints which have never been used – as that would have given me much more of a contrast to just using white most of the time – I did use some coloured card I had for two small collages. But apart from that, I certainly felt I was becoming more willing to try different things as I progressed through the exercises.  I can see that I will use collages going forward, particularly to develop ideas for projects. I also really love that you can create something beautiful out of things that may be considered as rubbish. Again this reflects my ethos of reusing and recycling which pretty much forms the basis of so many areas of my life!

I spent a great deal of time looking at collage on Pinterest and Instagram and realise that there is huge scope to develop this area of my coursework.  However, and this is generally speaking, when looking at different artists and images on social media platforms, I tend to get completely overwhelmed and find it difficult to find a contemporary artist I particularly like – there are so many!  But what I do is I look at what others achieve and then tend to focus on my own (poor!) efforts in comparison and get ‘lost in the scroll’, which is very demoralising. I understand that sites such as Instagram and Pinterest can be very inspiring places, and we are actively encouraged to use them, but I have spent a lot of time over the years ‘looking’ and not actually ‘doing’, which was my main motivation for undertaking this course. I have decided therefore not to spend too much time looking at these platforms as I want to focus on the processes and learning the techniques in this course so that I can become more confident and develop my own style.

I have had a very long time away from my studies, due to difficult circumstances, and I feel that this exercise has been a bit like starting from scratch again.  As in the first exercise in this course – mark making – I still feel fairly constrained in my work, although I do feel as if I’m making progress! 

Research – Collage Artists

Kurt SCHWITTERS

b. 1887, d. 1948

SCHWITTERS work attracted me initially because of the imaginative way he utilised everyday objects to create collage pieces of art.  I enjoy the way he creates beautiful pieces of art from stuff that would usually be discarded such as bus and train tickets, sweet papers, clippings from magazines and newspapers – even scraps of reinforced envelopes such as the ones with loosely woven thread running through them and stuck onto paper for strength.  I felt he was rebelling against the consumer, capitalist society through his art.  His art resonated with me as I too continually try to re-use everyday items and create new things.

He named his work utilising this material, Merz Pictures – Merz being a word he made up derived from the second part of the word kommerz, which is German for commerce. He was attracted by the Dada movement of the arts which began in the early 20th Century in Europe as well as New York.  Dadaists worked with collage and photomontage which used found materials and objects and they rejected the violence of war and the moral and political order at the time. Their reason for being was to ‘kick against’ convention – including conventional art such as paintings and sculpture.  They used everyday, mass-produced items in their art creations which was intended as “anti-art”, and required no formal training.  It was ironic that connoisseurs of fine art at the time enthusiastically embraced it, somewhat defeating the object!

SCHWITTERS Dada work inspired him to use materials, which would otherwise be thought of as rubbish, in his creations, but Dada was not the only way he worked; he worked with many different media including, surrealism, constructivism, poetry, sound, painting, sculpture and graphic design, but he was most famous for his Merz Pictures.

Kurt Schwitters, Collage with playing card, 1940, Oil and collage on board, 27.2 x 21.6 cms (10 3/4 x 8 1/2 ins), KS13775 (retrieved 25.2.19 https://abstractcritical.com/note/kurt-schwitters-collages-and-assemblages-1920-1947/index.html

Kurt Schwitters, Untitled (Golf Tee), 1947, Oil, wood, paper, shells, stone and golf-tee assemblage on corrugated board, 26.7 x 20.3 cms (10 1/2 x 8 ins), KS13786 (retrieved 25.2.19 https://abstractcritical.com/note/kurt-schwitters-collages-and-assemblages-1920-1947/index.html)

SCHWITTERS was born in Germany but was forced to leave and went to live in Norway before coming to the UK in 1940, where he eventually settled in Cumbria.  When he came to the UK his work developed into using natural objects and turning them into sculptures and buildings.  Before he died, he was creating a Merz Barn close to his home in which he dramatically changed the interior by using found objects.  After he died the Merz Barn was neglected for many years until the artist Richard Hamilton arranged for the surviving artwork inside the barn to be removed for safe keeping to the University of Newcastle’s Hatton Gallery in 1965, where it is now on public view. The barn itself remains standing and can be visited.

He had created two other Merz buildings in his lifetime, one in Germany and one in Norway – both of which were destroyed by the establishments of those countries as being too anarchistic.

The end wall of the Merz Barn in the Hatton Gallery, University of Newcastle. Photo courtesy The Hatton Gallery. (retrieved 25.2.19 – https://merzbarnlangdale.wordpress.com/)

REFERENCES:  Wikipedia,

https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/kurt-schwitters-1912 (accessed 25.2.19)

https://abstractcritical.com/note/kurt-schwitters-collages-and-assemblages-1920-1947/index.html (accessed 25.2.19)

www.brittanica.com (accessed 25.2.19)

Richard HAMILTON

b. 1922, d. 2011

HAMILTON was an English painter and collage artist who is considered to be one of the founders of Pop Art.  Pop Art is an art movement that emerged in the 1950’s and became a hugely influential, particularly in the music scene, in the USA and Great Britain in the 1960’s. Hamilton defined “Pop Art” as ‘Popular (designed for a mass audience), Transient (short term solution), Expendable (easily forgotten), Low cost, Mass produced, Young (aimed at youth), Witty, Sexy, Gimmicky, Glamorous, Big business’.

He designed the front cover for the Beatles album, which simply became known as ‘The White Album’, because the front cover was completely white with just the name of “The Beatles” embossed on the front cover. Hamilton later said that his idea for the album reflected his habit to look for the opposite, because the front cover of the band’s previous album, Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” was highly illustrated. Paradoxically, Hamilton designed a poster to go inside the album which was a collage of photographs of private photos of the band.

The Beatles “White” album
https://www.thebeatles.com/album/beatles-0 (retrieved 22.7.20)

Hamilton used many different forms of imagery in his collage work, including newspapers, magazines, advertising and photographs.  He painted over photographs and made paintings from photographs, in line with his habit of reflecting the opposite. In his later years, he even made collages on computers and used computer painting programmes to produce inkjet prints. 

I particularly like Hamilton’s work in the Pop Art genre, as it reminds me very much of my early teenage years ……

REFERENCES: 

https://www.sothebys.com/en/articles/the-white-album-how-richard-hamilton-brought-conceptual-art-to-the-beatles (accessed 21.2.20)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Hamilton_(artist)#Art_market (accessed 21.7.20)

Henri MATISSE

b. 1869, d. 1954

Although most famous for his paintings, in his later years, Matisse started to use paper and scissors to create art, which he called ‘painting with scissors’. It was out of the adversity of an acrimonious divorce which led to ill health, that this style was born.

He used bright colours and simple shapes within his works which together created simple, joyous pieces of art.  Although very simple in appearance, the shapes he created are full of life and exude an energy which I find very compelling and drawn to.  To me, it shows that Matisse, despite being in ill health, and surrounded by the tribulations of the second world war (he was living in occupied France during this period) was still full of life and creativity.  This showed through the boldness of his pictures and the brightness of the colours he used.  Looking at Matisse’s collage work instantly makes me feel happy and optimistic!

He was very influenced in his later years by the vivid colours and bright sunlight of the South of France and later, Morocco. He incorporated this into his collage work, known as The Cut-Outs. Matisse’s ‘Cut-Outs’ utilised his love of bright colour with the intricacy of cutting out simple shapes from painted paper.  He used gouache to initially paint the paper from which he then cut out shapes to form his work.  One of his works, The Swimming Pool, utilises a room in which he has recreated a swimming pool scene around the walls to depict swimmers and divers.  The figures in the work reflect the fluid movement of the swimmers and divers bodies with the water splashing.  It is a very evocative visualisation of movement and shape.

The Swimming Pool in Matisse’s dining room at the Hôtel Régina, Nice, 1952. Photo: Lydia Delectorskaya. © 2014 Succession H. Matisse

https://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2014/matisse/the-swimming-pool.html (retrieved 20.7.20)


Source: Pinterest (retrieved 20.7.20)

The work was later removed from the Hôtel Régina and recreated at the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) utilising as far as possible, Matisse’s original work which was mounted on a wall papered with burlap. The original burlap was replaced as it had deteriorated too much over time. 

Matisse’s cut-out work is vibrant, innovative and fun. It is a simple technique which is highly effective and uses colour to starkly contrast the images.  The resulting effects are uncluttered and impactive on the emotions of the viewer, creating, to me anyway, a sense of joy and celebration of the simplicity of the images he was portraying.  I imagine how he must have carried out his work; I’ve read that he used large scissors, but the intricacy of some of the cutting would undoubtedly have had to have been made with finer tools. Maybe. But the fact that he used the space he had – his bedroom – to cut and pin to the wall the shapes he was cutting, enabled him to change his mind and move the images around as his work evolved, is a very freeing form of art. I doubt that this feeling of freedom could be achieved using paint on a flat surface as in his earlier work. 

I particularly love this work. To me this depicts a diver leaping into a vibrant water world, and is particularly joyous to me.  I wonder if Matisse saw his work in the way that we are seeing it today? He worked in his bedroom, where he also lived, and where he was suffering from cancer; there must have been so much material all around him, in addition to the day to day detritus of living. Whereas we now see each piece individually.  I wonder if he saw the individuality in each piece?


La Perruche et la Sirene
Source: http://www.henri-matisse.net/cut_outs.html (Retrieved 20.7.20)
 

References:

http://www.henri-matisse.net/cut_outs.html

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2014/apr/14/henri-matisse-cut-outs-tate-modern-review

https://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2014/matisse/the-cut-outs.html

Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery

7th December 2018

I visited the BMAG and whilst wandering around the Birmingham Through the Ages exhibition, I came across a display of textiles used during WW2. I saw this absolutely beautiful housecoat made from scraps of old textiles which had derived from worn out clothing. The patches of cloth had been joined together using immaculate embroidery stitches which looked stunning. This really resonated with me as I love to reuse clothing and make it into something else. Very inspiring!

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Anni Albers – 1899-1994

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Quite a while before I even decided to do this course, I had read a rave review by Adrian Searle in the Guardian about the Anni Albers exhibition at the Tate Modern and had decided that I would visit when I got the chance. Well the chance arose and off I went to London. I wasn’t disappointed. The exhibition was very well curated and I left understanding a lot more about Albers and her work.

It was a very interesting period which Albers lived through; she was born at the turn of the 20th Century in Berlin. She was good at art and was encouraged to study drawing and painting by her middle class family, and became a student at the Bauhaus school. The Bauhaus school was set up in 1919 and Albers became a student there in 1922. Although the school was innovative and progressive in linking fine arts and crafts, Albers was not encouraged to pursue further study in painting, but channeled into studying weaving, which was known as the ‘ Women’s Workshop’. She joined it reluctantly, but together with the other women on the course, began creating wall hangings which she referred to as ‘amazing objects’, and the workshop developed it’s own language and emphasising the haptic and tactile qualities of the work. Albers later went onto develop a huge interest in pre-Columbian South American textiles, particularly in Peru which incorporated a language in to their woven textiles as they didn’t, at that time, have any kind of written language.

Albers and her husband, Josef, also an artist, were forced to leave Germany in 1933 after the school was closed following pressure due to the rise of Nazism in the country. Although Albers said she never practised the religion, she was from a Jewish family. She and Josef emigrated to the USA and both became teachers at the experimental Black Mountain College in North Carolina. Whilst at the college Albers began to make what she called ‘pictorial weavings’, which were hand woven pieces made as art to be hung on a wall and not fabrics designed to be used in an everyday setting. She was innovative in her use of weaving in this way, and encouraged her students to use everyday materials and textures and incorporate them into their own work. She designed a sound-proof material which was commissioned to cover the walls of an auditorium. Albers was enthusiastic about the promotion of the use of textiles in architecture, even proposing a future whereby they became fundamental to the structural design of buildings. She suggested that a museum of textiles whereby the divisions between exhibits could be fabric and could have varying degrees of transparency or be light-reflecting. She went on to work on many architectural commissions, collaborating with architects and designers, and in 1944 she designed a drapery fabric with light-reflecting qualities for the Rockefeller Guest House in New York. Later on, in 1949 she designed and created the textiles for the rooms at the Harvard Graduate Center in Massachusetts, which had been built by Walter Gropius, the founder of the Bauhaus school in Germany.

By working in this way, by viewing a much wider use of textiles than traditionally understood, was looking at a new way of living, and she was very much a pioneer in this field.

Her ‘pictorial weavings’ became very well known and she was commissioned to produce a number of religious pieces (although she said she had never set foot inside a synagogue since the age of 8!). The piece known as Six Prayers, was commissioned by the Jewish Museum to create a memorial to the six million Jews killed in the Holocaust, and was hanging in the exhibition. This six panels of this piece were very striking; it was woven in metallic threads and when viewed from different angles reflected the light in many, many ways. Albers said that “I used the threads themselves as a sculptor or painter uses his medium to produce a scriptural effect which would bring to mind sacred texts”.

The exhibition included many of Albers’ designs for her weaving projects painted meticulously on paper. When viewed from a distant these paintings looked woven and stood out from their frames as if they consisted of a textural surface. It was only up close that I could see that they were actually paintings.

As well as being an artist and using her weaving to create works of art, Albers had studied her craft thoroughly and produced a book in 1965 entitled On Weaving. This publication explores the last 4,000 years of weaving around the world, as well as examining technical aspects of the craft and the development of the loom. She dedicated the book to her ‘great teachers, the weavers of ancient Peru’, and stressed throughout the text how ancient techniques could continue to revitalise contemporary practice.

This exhibition was exciting and inspiring. I was almost aching with desire to touch the exhibits as they appeared so tactile! But, luckily for me, there was a whole room dedicated to ‘tactile sensibility’ where I could satisfy my need to touch. Also in this room was Albers Structo Artcraft handloom on which she created many of her pictorial weavings. I loved being in this room as it brought a practical dimension and was a fitting end to the exhibition and I left feeling very inspired and eager to learn more about weaving and creating textiles of my own.

ASSIGNMENT 1

Final Drawing Selection …..

I decided to use/revisit the charcoals (pencils) as I didn’t enjoy using this medium before. I used. much lighter stroke this time and enjoyed the experience more. I decided to draw items that I had already used rather than introduce a new item, as I wanted to see if my drawing skills had improved. They hadn’t! I also used a graphite 2B block instead of a 2B pencil, and as before, I enjoyed the feeling of a more chunky implement, although again, my abilities had not improved!

I feel my observation skills have improved through undertaking these exercises, and my confidence to have a go at drawing has also improved. It’s helped me to see that there is never just one way of doing anything either. I also realise that I really prefer using conventional tools, and I have come to enjoy using the charcoal too. I’ve learnt that by holding the tool at different points creates very different effects. It’s almost like you don’t really need too many tools to get vastly different results, which suits my ethos of using what’s available and not collecting too much ‘stuff’.

Drawing and sketching are not activities I have ever done, and these exercises have given me more confidence to sketch. I now intend to carry a small sketchbook around with me and have a go at sketching other things when I’m out and about and see something which inspires me. Although I haven’t actually done this yet!

Final Exercise …..

Sketching with graphite blocks and charcoal pencils are my most favoured tools to use. I like the way they glide across the paper and the very different effects you can get by varying the pressure and stroke. I feel more confident now, although I still feel I can’t draw! But …. I’m pleased that I can at least recognise the items I have drawn. It’s interesting that I’ve completely changed my mind about charcoal!

This exercise has taught me two things: Firstly, persevere with something you don’t initially like and, secondly, to really look at the items to draw. I’ve found myself looking at other things more closely now – not just the items I’ve used in this exercise, but other everyday objects. If you get really ‘deep’ it shows that you need to look closely, without preconceived ideas, to really understand something – be that physically or mentally!

Part 1 – Line

At last I’ve found the time to actually begin the first proper exercise of the course. I used a graphite block to draw the kitchen utensils I had chosen. I did enjoy using the graphite block and found it easier to control as it was bigger in my hand than a pencil. This created a nice feeling! At first I found myself trying to constantly correct my drawing with an eraser, before I ‘allowed’ myself to relax into the exercise, and stopped using it. I used a combination of sweeping strokes and lines, as well as little short strokes using minimum pressure. The graphite went onto the paper easily and very satisfactorily.

When I moved onto the left hand exercise, I found I automatically wanted to work from left to right, as I would when writing, and at first couldn’t work out how to actually put the graphite on the paper! I found that I had to start from a different perspective and from a different point on the paper entirely – in effect work in reverse, which I suppose makes sense. I had to use even less pressure using my left hand as the tendency was to try to control the strokes even more than the right hand.

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I liked the way I relaxed into the exercise, although I was extremely apprehensive because I have never considered myself able to draw. At times I lost myself in concentration trying to ‘get it right’. However, once I relaxed I just accepted the drawings for what they were and didn’t judge them.

I then moved onto using a paintbrush and ink. This was much more challenging! I had to use different techniques, such as lighter pressure, smoother longer strokes and keeping the brush on the paper instead of lifting it. The tools I had chosen were not easy to reproduce either. But I liked the way the ink worked on the paper, and the smoothness of the mark it made. I found myself automatically holding the brush higher ip the handle that I did when using the graphite and using a lighter touch. I wasn’t happy using my left hand with the paintbrush tool. I found myself doing short strokes using jerky movements, which created a feathered effect on the paper and I felt less in control of the image I was trying to copy.

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Continuous Line Drawing …..

I found this extremely challenging – I had been putting this exercise off as I had found the previous sketching difficult. This was the same! This confronted my fear of ‘getting it wrong’ and “you’re no good at this”. I even found it scary! I know that this is how I feel a lot of the time in life – scared of making mistakes and looking like an idiot. But who’s going to judge me for this? Only myself. I totally get why these exercises are part of the course; it takes you out of your comfort zone. I even found myself flicking through the work book to find our when I actually get to work with fabric – my comfort zone!

But ….. I did it, and it wasn’t too bad. I can’t say I actually enjoyed it, but I did it. The main thing I found was that although I’m really scrutinising the object that I’m sketching, I still get the scale completely wrong and miss out crucial details of the object. The lesson for me here is to look more carefully and take my time. Because I wanted to be finished as quick as possible, I rushed it!

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Drawing Blind …..

This was also difficult for me – I had to really fight the urge to look down, but I was fairly pleased with the result. Again, I was keen to ‘get it over with’, but I did quite enjoy it, and after the five minutes was up, I felt as if I could have gone on for longer.

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Memory Drawing …..

I found this easier, as it made me draw on my own memory, and I felt less pressure to exactly recreate the image. Of all the exercises I have done today – this was my favourite. I also had a go at drawing from memory with my eyes closed. I didn’t like this feeling of not being in control!

 

Final warm-up exercise ….

For my final warm-up exercise, I used A2 size paper (by taping together 4 sheets of A4) and used each quarter to mark using different techniques.  I started on the top left sheet by using pencils – in different weights, 2B, 4B and 6B.  I really loved the way that I could create such different effects due to where on the pencil I held it, as well as the tiniest change in pressure.  Also on this quarter I revisited using the charcoal pencils, so understand why I didn’t like using them.  I found that the less pressure I had, the easier it was to use, and thought that they would possibly work better (for me!) on a smoother paper rather than the cartridge paper which has a rougher texture.  I tried to make the marks smoother and more fluid, which again helped with the unpleasant sensation of setting my teeth on edge!

On the bottom left hand quarter, I used the toothbrush with the masking fluid to make marks, allowing it to dry before going over it with a black wax crayon.  On the other two quarters, I used a cut potato on which I made marks before using it with the masking fluid again to make marks.  When I removed the masking fluid, there was a very subtle negative mark on the paper which I really liked. I then went over the top right hand quarter with an ink wash (blue again) and the bottom right quarter I used a charcoal block to go over the masking fluid.  Last time I ‘washed’ the paper with the ink or charcoal before using the masking fluid, but this time I did it the other way round.

This was NOT successful! I’m not sure whether the masking fluid reacted with the starch in the cut potato, or that I had let the fluid dry too much, but I couldn’t remove the masking fluid properly with the ink wash, although some of it did come off.  The marks made were quite defined and regular.  However, the masking fluid on the charcoal ‘wash’ just wouldn’t come off at all, and because of the nature of the charcoal, all I did was smudge the marks made by the potato.  So I ended up leaving some smudged and some not.