The machines were waiting for us, to be shared -
A handout showed work by Ines Seidel, Gwen Hedley, Sian Martin, Kazuhito Takauoi, Naomi Kobayashi, Alice Fox, Mia Pearlman, Chiharu Shiota, Maurizo Anzeri, and our tutor, Ruth Brison. She said of the module, Drawing with manipulated paper and stitch: "This is a fine art drawing project that has links with sculpture and textiles. Paper and stitch is an area I've explored before as a tutor and picks up on the idea of using paper, linking and stitch to draw, divine, mould, trace or forge a commentary or idea about something."
In the first session we explored the process of paper manipulation and linking, in the second we developed a theme from a focus.
Inspiration |
Direction |
Experiments in perforating, punching, piercing, cutting |
Experiments in colouring, cutting, folding |
Fronts and backs |
Action stations |
Review at the end of the first session |
During the week I spent a happy afternoon working on this, picking up one of my samples and developing it by cutting and pricking a scrap of paper.
Those marks led to thoughts of "Hexenstich" - witches stitch! - also known as herringbone. My mother used it for hemming, and unlike the lazier stitch I use (slip stitch) it's difficult to pull out.
Those marks led to thoughts of "Hexenstich" - witches stitch! - also known as herringbone. My mother used it for hemming, and unlike the lazier stitch I use (slip stitch) it's difficult to pull out.
I wrote a bit about it in my notebook, then made some samples on paper, with a single thread and then with a double thread - which kept tangling. The third, "gone wrong", sample used this tangling process as part of the work, leaving the wonky threads. By then the afternoon sky had darkened and the desk light was on, and the threads cast wonderful shadows. I drew it all as best I could with my soft pencil on the rough paper in the notebook.
That led to the realisation that I needed practice in drawing parallel lines close together, so I took a larger sheet of paper, which had been folded into small squares and some lines stitched - an experiment abandoned in class. Into each square went a practice drawing, done with the various pens on hand, till the sheet was almost full.
Still practising, I quickly stitched some random stitches in the nice stiff, springy, sometimes intransigent thread, based on Alice Fox's work in the handout - and drew that, with stitches in pen and shadows in pencil, not a particularly successful combination.
Another example in the handout, wrapped work by Ines Seidel, led to wrapping some of the nice thread round folded paper, and drawing that -
And so to class, with all my samples in a folder. We'd been asked to bring in materials to work with, and I'd forgotten, so worked from what I had.
First the folded paper with practice drawings. I continued stitching along the folds, and was pleased to figure out a way of stitching the vertical rows that allowed the tucks (formed in the horizontal rows) to be manipulated -
The brief for the session was to make two items ... what now? I folded and tore some stiff paper into pieces, and wrapped pairs together with some black thread. Thinking "another lampshade" I sewed them into strips on the machine -
and then round and round until stopped by the limitations of the arm of the machine -The unfinished nature of the tube allows some flexibility of form -
Possibilities for "inside/outside" |
A flurry of activity in the room |
The importance of photography |
Display and discussion |
Looking forward to resumption of classes in January, meanwhile there's time for "research" (aka browsing the internet) on the term's themes and projects.
Ah! I see a link between these 'lamp shades' and your ceramic vessels!
ReplyDeleteLove the drawings of the stitchings.
Sandy
What a wonderful time you've been having! I envy you the opportunity. What course have you been doing?
ReplyDelete