Love these little paper houses, seen on pinterest - but when the link is just "from etsy.com", how can you trace them back (to credit the maker) - or to buy? Frustrating!
Another frustration comes via the inbox - an e-newsletter from a gallery showing work in the current show, but it gives no clues about whose work the little houses are. I've looked up every artist mentioned (check out Viv Richards' collages and Anne Davies' paintings, even though neither is shown in the pic below) ...
The gallery has responded quickly to an email and says they are by Rowena Brown. Here's more of her work -
Have a look at her website for more info; the houses are available to buy, and their size ranges from 3cm to 7cm (just over 1" to just under 3").
25 January 2014
24 January 2014
Taking a different tack
Preparation for Sunday's "textiles into ceramics" class - on the right, a stamp for printing, just string wrapped around a block, but I like the "eye" design and the possibilities of the lines meeting up when it's printed in a grid. The shape is one that forms easily when winding yarn into a ball.
On the left, rubbings of the stitch samples to give an idea of what might happen if clay is rolled over them. If the string isn't removed from the back, it will show up - which I don't really want, or didn't think I did until I saw the possibility of loose flowing loopy marks instead of rigid straight lines. At the bottom of the strip, the string has been cut for each stitch and the ends criss-cross underneath; with a bit more thought this could be effective. At centre left, the rubbing shows the hand-couched X's with string cut away at the back. It's quicker to couch by machine, and feels more secure. I'll try them out and if they hold promise, might stitch a larger piece ... and see what happens then ...
The inspiration for the couched string is to find a way to make "written marks" - like these in the work of Elisabeth (Brillet) Raphael -
I'm also very attracted to the tablet covered ... in ceramic presumably, though it looks like it might be wrapped in lead -
This evokes something I heard at a talk many years ago in the British Museum given by Irving Finkel, who is probably the world authority on cuneiform. He said that a law would be written on a clay tablet - and then encased in more clay and the law written again on the outside. Then if the authenticity of the law was questioned, the tablet could be broken open and the inner one examined - it would hold the true law.
On the left, rubbings of the stitch samples to give an idea of what might happen if clay is rolled over them. If the string isn't removed from the back, it will show up - which I don't really want, or didn't think I did until I saw the possibility of loose flowing loopy marks instead of rigid straight lines. At the bottom of the strip, the string has been cut for each stitch and the ends criss-cross underneath; with a bit more thought this could be effective. At centre left, the rubbing shows the hand-couched X's with string cut away at the back. It's quicker to couch by machine, and feels more secure. I'll try them out and if they hold promise, might stitch a larger piece ... and see what happens then ...
The inspiration for the couched string is to find a way to make "written marks" - like these in the work of Elisabeth (Brillet) Raphael -
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| "Psaume" consists of porcelain tiles with embossed text |
This evokes something I heard at a talk many years ago in the British Museum given by Irving Finkel, who is probably the world authority on cuneiform. He said that a law would be written on a clay tablet - and then encased in more clay and the law written again on the outside. Then if the authenticity of the law was questioned, the tablet could be broken open and the inner one examined - it would hold the true law.
Balls of string ... and related things
While musing on the "memory balls" I made all those years ago, and wondering if they could morph into some sort of museum project (given the increasingly urgent need to do the homework for the course), I turned to an image-search to see if anything would catch my interest and lead down surprising byways, as so often happens...
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| 29 years of winding string... (via) |
Different types of string balls - largest, most expensive, etc ("All sting balls possess a certain history") - including one wound by pupils of an elementary school in Australia " as a symbol of how their education and lives would always be connected. Each string represented a student and each knot connected one to the other. They tied in mementos as they built their ball of dyed twine. What they ended up with was part art, part history, and part love story. "
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| Made by pupils of Penguin Primary School (via) |
Newspaper recycling by Ivano Vitale - no dyes or glue are used in the yarn ball -
Lin Tianmiao uses thread wrapping and balls of thread in her artworks -
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| The Proliferation of Thread Winding (1995) also contains 20,000 needles (via) |
Janet's 2012 exhibit, Shift in Time, marked 15 years of work about time ... the link includes a time-lapse video - 5 hours a day, 5 days a week, 5 weeks of winding yarn -
Temari are also balls of yarn - but definitely in a league of their own (there's an edible version!) -
On another tangent... a thread wrapping machine (designed by Anton Alvarez) was used to make this -
and these-
And while we're at it, remind me ... why might we need one of these?
Yet another tangent - string art (there seems to be a lot of it about) - this is by Kristin Rauch -
Then, when it all unravels ...
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| Detail from "Gathering my thoughts" by Susan Lenz |
So, after gathering all that together ... could this be the required project for the draft brief for the developing practice course? The next bit is mere thinking aloud; though the writing felt like pulling teeth, it's only here for the record, for my documentation in the style of reflective journaling - feel free to ignore it, and thanks for reading this far!
(1) At the moment one possibility is doing "something" with the travel lines, perhaps taking them to the Transport Museum and proposing some sort of workshop with staff, along the lines of "look at what I did, now go out and do the same" which, baldly put, doesn't thrill me. Unpacking that, though - "my journey": why did I do what I did? how did it develop? what does it show? how did my understanding of what it showed change? how did it move beyond the page it was written on? - that would be an introduction and would include pix of the various configurations I tried and different journey lengths, and the sketchbook containing my journeys on all the tube lines, alphabetically ... and other things that would hopefully get people thinking this is a fun thing to do and not as barmy as it looks. If you're doing this in the context of an art course, if you're thinking in that art-school sort of way ("this is about time and chance"), it's not particularly barmy ... but to Jo(e) Public it can look daft - hey, a 4-yr-old could do that!
First thing that's needed is a "hook" to interest people in coming along to the workshop. What would they get out of it? All too often people want a visible outcome, something to take home. But this is about encouraging them to go into the world with a little book and a pen and doing it outside in the hostile world, not in the room where everyone knows what's going on. So that's a big hurdle.
Perhaps if I went along to the museum this line of thinking would become clearer. One thing that intimidates me is the thought (whether it happens or not!) of doing a workshop with strangers in a strange place. Another thing that holds me back is my ulterior motive - to get my Travel Line stuff into the Transport Museum shop ... yet it's this part of the project that any workshop might be linked to. Hmm, it also offers an idea for the "visible outcome" - to find a way to turn participants' "lines" into something usable, eg a travelcard holder. A matter of transferring to cloth, then sewing or gluing together. Needs thought. It would have to be two sessions...
(2) Another project possibility, and the reason for revisiting the memory balls and similar projects with thread and wrapping and time and memory (and memory loss, and thereby identity), is a handling display of various "memory balls" and a "winding session" where people can come and sit and wind and chat. I've done this at a book fair and was fascinated to hear people's stories of winding wool for Auntie, and seeing young people learn this new skill - it does take a bit of physical coordination. Having something to do with the hands seems to get the mouth going and the talk flowing. Except, through being involved in the moment, I can't later remember much of what's been said! That's not a problem because the project would be about what the participants got out of it, though a visible outcome would be the size of balls produced. Each would have the contributions of several people, so it would be a social thing - perhaps the names of each winder would be on a slip of paper inside, or if they could spend longer, it could contain more writing or drawing, say of events in their lives or objects in their childhood home, all wrapped up and kept safe among the continuous thread, perhaps glimpsed as an outer layer or perhaps completely hidden. (It's possible to roll out the ball, rewind the thread, and release all the memories. Then roll them back up again. Ad infinitum.)
I like the "winding thread" idea because it's more "normal", less off-putting, than writing lines. Also it hardly needs an explanation, and it's about the other person - what the activity gives them is a chance to do something different and new, or familiar and evocative. The interaction could be augmented with some stories involving thread/yarn - the minotaur and the labyrinth; penelope and her un-weaving; some of the spinning folktales like Rumplestiltskin; the chinese story about the red thread of connection. I'd find it interesting to see if and how stories could be woven into conversations.
Where could this Thread Story thing happen? Is there something specific in a museum it could be linked to? Could it be a collaboration with an experienced storyteller, eg for kids? How would that work - getting the kids drawing things or choosing words or objects, then wrapping them round with thread, and doing that while they listen to the stories maybe. (Except I'm scared of working with kids - no, let me rephrase that: working with (lively, excited, rambunctious!) kids would definitely be a challenge. Would be an "interesting" challenge...)
(1&2) To end on a positive note - those ruminations give me material for not one but two draft briefs. OK they're preliminary thoughts only, but my understanding is that what's required is preliminary. A bit more thought about possible venues for the thread thing, and a visit to the museum for the travel lines thing, could clarify that. Maybe some headings when writing it up - what, who, where, when, why, how, that sort of thing. Nicely formatted to add credibility.
23 January 2014
Poetry Thursday - String by Spike Milligan
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| (via) |
String is a
Very important thing
Rope is thicker
But string is quicker.
That enigmatic little poem isn't on Spike Milligan's website, but you can find lots of others there - http://www.spikemilligan.co.uk/spike-milligan-poems.php - including "A Silly Poem", which may well make you smile.
Spike (Terence Alan) Milligan died in 2002 and is much missed. He performed as a jazz musician, served in the Royal Artillery in WW2 (he was born in 1918) and from 1951 to 1972 was part of the Goon Show - some very British humour there, indeed you could say it shaped the landscape of British comedy. He also appeared on tv and wrote books.
A statue of him sitting on a bench, cast in bronze, is to be erected in Finchley in the grounds of Avenue House in East End Road; it is expected to be in place by 16 April 2014, Spike's 96th birthday.
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| Model of the memorial statue (via) |
22 January 2014
A morning in the studio
They started as a coincidence - with the Ludicrously Small Art Gallery (and its possible sculpture garden) in mind, and thinking about obelisks -- and a rearrangment of the studio, or rather a corner of it, in progress -- I found some fused plastic made in a workshop with Jo Budd years ago and set out to make a model in paper. Which turned out to have three sides, and harked back to Barbara Lee Smith's "pilings" seen years ago at an embroidery exhibition at the Curve (Barbican) -
The first was plain, the second hairier, and the third is read to cut out (sellotaped to the plastic) and put under the machine -All three, the tallest about 7" -
Strange how they have "body language" ... attitude ... interaction ...
Next day update --
A good reason for putting things away at the end of a working session is ... next day, you won't get tempted to use ever-smaller bits of leftovers!
In addition to making the two small "volcanoes" out of fused-plastic scraps, I took apart the plain tower and added more threads to it - thick threads in the bobbin.
My critical evaluation is that the patterning in the plastic isn't carried through, or even complemented, by the threads - the two elements seem to be rather competing with each other.
On a practical note, they were more stable when some screwed-up tissue paper was added into the bottoms of the towers.
This post is linked to Off the Wall Fridays.
The portraiture course - week 2
The sessions at Blackheath aren't the beginners' class - instead of instructive exercises, we've just done the first week of a three-week pose. I found an entire session of the same post quite hard going, but managed to persevere... It's been interesting processing the photos (not in the order they were taken): it doesn't quite give you a "fresh" look, but you're reading the sequence in a different way, having to look closer to see what you did and try to remember why.
Get out the charcoal and plung into a short pose to get familiar with the model -
After that, start a new sheet and think about what else might be included - or left out -
The other model was sitting with her back to the wall; this is a demo of how the pose could be cropped to focus on the area of interest, perhaps to include the strong shadow to one side -
Then it was look, draw, look, rub, look, draw, look, rub....
Frequent breaks (for the models) give a chance to look at others' work and to chat. I was told the pic above looked like "a Sioux indian" - a comment I found really helpful, because I was tentatively casting around for the kinds of marks that could be made with charcoal, and boldly created some feathers for (or in) her hair. This was possibly my point of maximum frustration and incompetence, so with nothing to lose I added darkdark charcoal - not pretty, but it's not going to stay like that -
After the coffee break, quite a lot of rubbing with an eraser, and rubbing/blending with "tissue" (not fingers) -
For those who might want to paint, there were explanations and demos of acrylic paints (not shown) and oil paints; the big box holds the ones supplied by the college -
The basic palette for oils is the same as for acrylics - two yellows, reds, blues (a warm and a cool), and some white (but not a lot); no black, you can mix that. In addition, a bit of viridian green to mix in with other greens, and two further colours (from the small box - tutor's own) that are transparent, indian yellow and manganese violet. For oil painting you need solvent/thinner (odorless) and the medium, which can be Liquin or linseed oil. Will I try this, oils and all that clobber? It would be a good chance to use new materials, but would distract from my objective of "learning to see faces".
At the end of the day, a poor likeness (the eyes, mouth, and goodness knows what else aren't quite right) - with a chance to start again and do better next week. Most people marked the position of their easel and will be continuing with the same piece.
Getting to Blackheath is a bit of a slog - two rush-hour tubes and a train - but there are compensations, apart from the big, light studio. At London Bridge station, some "portraiture" to analyse while waiting for the train -
and a view of The Shard with its head in the mist -
Get out the charcoal and plung into a short pose to get familiar with the model -
After that, start a new sheet and think about what else might be included - or left out -
The other model was sitting with her back to the wall; this is a demo of how the pose could be cropped to focus on the area of interest, perhaps to include the strong shadow to one side -
Then it was look, draw, look, rub, look, draw, look, rub....
Frequent breaks (for the models) give a chance to look at others' work and to chat. I was told the pic above looked like "a Sioux indian" - a comment I found really helpful, because I was tentatively casting around for the kinds of marks that could be made with charcoal, and boldly created some feathers for (or in) her hair. This was possibly my point of maximum frustration and incompetence, so with nothing to lose I added darkdark charcoal - not pretty, but it's not going to stay like that -
After the coffee break, quite a lot of rubbing with an eraser, and rubbing/blending with "tissue" (not fingers) -
For those who might want to paint, there were explanations and demos of acrylic paints (not shown) and oil paints; the big box holds the ones supplied by the college -
The basic palette for oils is the same as for acrylics - two yellows, reds, blues (a warm and a cool), and some white (but not a lot); no black, you can mix that. In addition, a bit of viridian green to mix in with other greens, and two further colours (from the small box - tutor's own) that are transparent, indian yellow and manganese violet. For oil painting you need solvent/thinner (odorless) and the medium, which can be Liquin or linseed oil. Will I try this, oils and all that clobber? It would be a good chance to use new materials, but would distract from my objective of "learning to see faces".
At the end of the day, a poor likeness (the eyes, mouth, and goodness knows what else aren't quite right) - with a chance to start again and do better next week. Most people marked the position of their easel and will be continuing with the same piece.
Getting to Blackheath is a bit of a slog - two rush-hour tubes and a train - but there are compensations, apart from the big, light studio. At London Bridge station, some "portraiture" to analyse while waiting for the train -
and a view of The Shard with its head in the mist -
21 January 2014
Textiles into ceramics: exploring surfaces, day 1
The course runs all day Sunday for four weeks at City Lit. It's good to be back in the pottery room - here are some still-lifes of tools -
Some pecial stamps, including patterned rollers -
I'd like to make some more of the clay books, and experiment with clay pages. These are made in paper clay and will be light, in contrast to the heaviness of clay -
The pages are patterned by rolling them between layers of fabric -
The paper clay output. My plan is to stitch wire into the holes at the sides of the pages once they've been fired -
In the afternoon I used porcelain to make the same objects -
At the end of the day I was definitely feeling tired - but it had passed in a flash. Looking forward to next week and trying not to think about it too much in between times.
20 January 2014
Monday miscellany
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| See more mid-20th-century cutaway diagrams by Frank Soltesz and others here |
Pascal Notation: a common practice in the computer world of using capitals to make multiple words strung together more readable
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| This made me smile (via) |
Just as you suspected ... hidden sugars in processed foods, such as the nine teaspoons in a standard 330ml can of Coke, the six teaspoons in a Muller Crunch Corner strawberry shortcake yoghurt, and the six in a 375g portion of Sharwood's sweet and sour chicken with rice. A serving of Kellogg's Frosties contains four teaspoons and Heinz classic tomato soup has four teaspoons in 300g. (via)
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| The cheery neon trio shines out from the windowsill in an otherwise turbulent studio |
Coming up soon in the kitchen - potato scones - as seen here. Their Scandinavian cousins are lefse (one method of making them is here). Basic ingredients are potatoes, butter, and flour - not exciting in itself - it's all about the time and care taken to make them. And the toppings - sweet, or savoury?
Not for the faint-hearted - David Cata gives new meaning to the term "hand stitching" -
What makes a good zipper?
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| Fire at Indian Hill (via theguardian.com) |
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