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These photos of my art quilt are what I would call a ‘sneak peek’ of portions of the piece that I made for our on-line exhibit ‘Empty Spaces.’
Liz Kettle here, posting today about my progress…or lack of…my Empty Spaces piece. I was immediately intrigued with the proposed title Empty Spaces and thought to myself…wow that sounds like an easy theme to work with! Boy was I wrong. I thought I had a bunch of ideas and I did but the problem was that I ended up completely stalled out because I found myself spinning in circles. I had too many ideas and none of them were any good. I once took a test that was supposed to tell you if you worked predominately from your left (analytical) or right (creative) brain. I scored really close to a balanced middle brain thinker. At the time I proudly thought this was a reflection of how well balanced I am and how well rounded my thinking skills are. HA! Well…You all know what happens to pride before the fall right? This balanced brain was my undoing in this art endeavor. First of all, I am a bit of a science geek. I home-schooled two of my kids through high school and we did a lot of science. I love learning about quarks, string theory, neutrinos and black holes. There is no such thing as empty space. There is no glass half full…they are all full. This fact kept pushing to the surface every time I started thinking about empty spaces. I tried to outsmart myself…thinking about psychological empty spaces in our hearts, lives and experiences but I kept coming back to the notion that even empty spaces in our hearts are filled in with love, longing or regret. Empty spaces in our lives are often filled up with physical stuff. That led me to a personal rant on how we have too much stuff and I considered doing a piece featuring the absurdity of the storage units phenomenon but that felt too confrontational and judgmental for my art. Still spinning in circles. Next I asked myself is empty space positive or negative, black or white, figure or ground? This intrigued me but I still kept going round in circles because I had no answers to these questions and at every turn I could only think that there is no empty space! At this point the deadline is looming and I really just have to start something. When I am totally flummoxed but still need to work my salvation is in cleaning the studio. Not cleaning cleaning…there is no dusting or vacuuming. I pull out piles and sort them. I move fabric around, pull it out, fold it, put it back. I find lost scissors and rulers and that little doo-dad that would have been perfect on my last project. I make a mess piling fabrics up, touching and folding trying not to think too much. On this day I was guided to my overflowing bin of hand dyed, mono-printed and painted fabrics. What a mess! I dumped it all out and folded and sorted. Towards the bottom of the pile I discovered this: Wow! It was black and white, figure and ground, positive and negative…this could turn into something. There is a pattern underlying the black and white reflective of the idea of empty space not being empty and best of all there are CIRCLES so I could stop my incessant mind spinning. This has potential! I am hand stitching the top. I love hand stitching and because my spring schedule has me away from my machine so much it will allow me to work while I am on the road. I have developed a compulsion to densely hand stitch in blending thread colors. It is a bit insane when I stop to think about it because the stitching can’t be seen unless you look closely. But then again, asking the viewer to slow down and look closely is what I am aiming for.
After a bit of a struggle to get started I’ve started making progress with a piece for the empty spaces theme. In my first post about working with this theme I mentioned that I had the problem of too many ideas. That problem snowballed into too many ideas and not being happy with any of them which in turn morphed into a complete lack of ideas. So I went back to my sketchbook… These are just a few of the pages from my sketchbook that I created as I brainstormed what do do with this theme. There are a lot more pages but I think you can see that I was a bit all over the place with my ideas. Part of the problem was that I had convinced myself that I should create a vessel or some other 3d structure. I latched onto that idea and because I wouldn’t let it go but at the same time was feeling that it wasn’t the piece I wanted to create I worked myself right into a creative block. So I put everything away for a while and worked on some other projects. I needed to stop trying to force the process and wanted to create some distance from it. After a week or so I went back to my sketchbooks and flipped through the pages and I saw another theme coming through: the empty space created between the lines. It was an aha moment and I was off and creating… “the space between the lines” work in progress
Carol here. In my last post, I talked about gathering the collage items that I felt I might use in the “Empty Spaces” group theme. I was approaching the theme from this viewpoint or perspective - “I began to think about the theme as that kind of empty space – the space left after the “usual or appropriate contents” were emptied. With this seed of an idea germinating in my mind, I began to think of other empty spaces. Spaces that existed for another purpose. Like in the garden. You dig a hole (a space that is now empty) to drop a seed into it. Or maybe in the forest. A tree falls to the ground, rots and eventually leaves an empty space there. Yet, in that space, mushrooms begin to grow. Small plants sprout up. The space is empty yet the death of one thing has provided a fertile space for another. Life finds a way to fill that empty space. After thinking about the theme with those things in mind, I returned to the original thought – the empty spaces that loss can leave us with. It doesn’t have to be death, it could be the loss of respect, loss of love, loss of trust. I spent a few days hiking in the forest right around this time. I had many hours of solitude to work through this thought process. I wrote pages of notes while I was out there. Sitting there, surrounded by nature, hearing the rushing water of the nearby river helped to clarify my thoughts.”
I only had a vague sense of what I wanted to do, I began by randomly moving papers around on my background. But first – I want to share a piece of information about the way that I work. One that could help you as well. When I first begin a new piece, I pull out enough raw material to make TWO pieces. I practice my ideas and layout on one and use the other as the “real” piece. This gives me SO much freedom to try new things, to experiment with all those “what if’s” that I listen to and allows me to screw up all I want while saving one piece to proceed with (most of the time ). Oftentimes, my practice piece turns out to be my favorite one! You should definitely try operating this way (especially on smaller pieces) if you are terrified to try new things or just want to experiment with listening to your intuition (instead of doing things the same old way or the “safe” way).
I decided on the finished size (16 inches x 16 inches) and added about three to four inches to this measurement so I’d have enough room to place the canvas onto stretcher bars when it was completed. I used two different substrates since I wanted to experiment with the Multi-Purpose Cloth. The other one was a piece of canvas (medium weight) that had a light to medium coat of gesso applied to it. I used Golden’s Soft Gel and Matte Medium as my adhesive and sealer. The first approach was to collage a bunch of different things onto the background- everything from handwritten notes to tissue paper. And keep in mind that this layer is NOT about beauty. It’s about embedding my thoughts, the physical evidence of those empty spaces left from personal loss or grief and about adding items that will deliver some texture in a subsequent layer. Here’s a look at how they started.
The photo above is of the Multi-Purpose Cloth (MPC). It’s much thicker than the canvas. I lived with the background for a day or two before proceeding. That’s one thing about working intuitively – you have to spend time quietly listening to your inner voice. There are times that my voice screams at me (lol) to do things but other times she has me quietly looking and listening for what’s next. One thing was pretty clear to me though – the abundance of color on the MPC background had to go. I felt any piece that was approaching the topic of “empty spaces” as a loss, as a space left after the “usual or appropriate contents” were emptied didn’t need to be colorful…I felt that it needed to be very quiet, very soft and a noticeable lack of color. I decided to add a wash of acrylic paint over it. I used a watered down fluid acrylic paint and spread it across the entire piece.
I had several deadlines looming that were playing through my head. I believe that this fact combined with the addition of some physical pain that I was going through caused me to rush the process. I tried to push the creation of this piece, which resulted in – you guessed it- a lot of (what I considered) mistakes or poor decisions. That’s one good thing about using acrylic paint and image transfer. You can cover things up or bury them so deeply into the background that no one will know what you did! Well, except now you will know what I did…but it’s all about learning and growing, right?
The wash helped to knock back the brightness but it still wasn’t what I wanted. I used an old credit card (my favorite paint mover) and scraped some watered down white paint across the surface. I loved the way that the texture from the addition of the tissue paper and napkins took the paint!
I began working on the canvas right about this time. The time spent playing on the first piece taught me that I didn’t want bold, loud colors for this canvas. I was starting out with an empty space of canvas with a light coat of gesso on it.
I knew that I wanted to embed the definitions of the words into the background. I wanted them to be partially hidden, elusive to the viewer and fairly transparent at this point. I decided to use Matte Medium to transfer since it would be kinda grungy, transparent and I already had several things printed out. I had forgotten to “flip” (or “mirror”) the text before printing it. This would result in the text being backwards if I used it for transfer. I decided to go ahead and use it anyway since most of it would be covered up anyway. I cut out the text that I wanted to transfer, leaving a narrow strip around the edge so I would have something to grasp when I removed the paper. I also fold one corner back to make it even easier to begin that process of pulling the paper up. Spread an even layer of matte medium on your substrate, not to thick but not too thin either. I would practice this a few times if you’re just learning how before you do it on a “valued” piece of artwork. It certainly isn’t a perfect transfer but I love the dreamy/airy look of it. Burnish the area that you want transferred, making sure there is solid contact. Since I used an ink jet printer, I didn’t wait for the medium to dry. After a couple of minutes, I pulled back one corner of the paper to see if the ink was transferring. If it is you can pull the paper up (as much as you can), being careful to stop if you notice that you’re pulling the entire image up. I wet my fingertip and rub the area to remove the rest of the paper from the transfer. It can be a pain if you have a large area to work with but it sure is a lot of fun to see your image appear!
In the photo above, you can see that I have several images that are overlapping each other. That’s one of the things that I like about this type of transfer, you can layer your images and they still remain transparent. I’ll pick up from here on my next post. Jamie Fingal checking in. I often do a lot of research before embarking on a new project. The thought of empty spaces intrigues me. There are so many ways that I could go with this idea. But, where I am right now, is in an emotional state of turmoil. My dad passed away suddenly in late November, and it has forever changed my life and left an ‘empty space’ in my heart. I’ve been drawing hearts, of all things, and this symbol never reaches the radar in my brain when I am attempting to create a new piece of art. The fact that this heart wrenching emotion has totally taken over my thought process lately, and for obvious reasons. This is just the beginning of looking at some of the empty spaces in my life. I sat down and started drawing, everything that I was feeling, with my heart on my sleeve, or on the sketchbook page.
Then I decided that I should create one of those drawings into a painting on canvas to get a larger visual understanding of what I was doing. I like the colors, but don’t really like the heart or the writing. It seems to trite to me. I feel that more should be left to the viewer. This is in your face art, and I am not sure if this is what I want to convey in an art quilt. And let’s be real, it’s just a little on the depressing side. I need to think some more on what I can create with this theme. So, enter the camera – and we have a button jar that is partially empty that might have some potential. Words swirling on the inside perhaps…or a story of the antique buttons. Thinking out loud here. Are you enjoying my design process? and then there is this. Spaces between the openings. Might be too literal, or perhaps to easy, but I do love the lime green. and then I’ve been making red backgrounds, which could be hearts or something else. It seems I am really drawn to this right now. It’s easy and I can wrap my mind around it, as opposed to other work that I can’t seem to focus on right now. and then I started thinking about what I do best, my roots so to speak in my art. The art of the house. The empty spaces could be negative space. It would all depend on how it is designed and what kind of fabric I would choose, but it could work, and be something interesting, happy and it could invite the viewer in to see more. Maybe or maybe not. Stay tuned.
Sue B here… I thought I’d give you a glimpse into how I approach creating a piece of work once I’ve got a theme to work with. Actually, this process is pretty much how I approach any new piece of work that I create and it all begins on the pages of my sketchbook… Whenever I have a new theme or idea to work with the first thing I do is to make a list of words that relate to the theme. For “empty spaces” theme that we’re working with my list ran the gamut from literal and abstract interpretations to techniques and materials. As you can see from this shot of my sketchbook pages I am not worried about neatness and I definitely don’t censor myself at this stage of the process. By that, I mean I write down any idea that comes to mind whether or not I think it’s a good or bad idea or even if I think I have the skill set to bring it to fruition. I’ll keep coming back to these pages to review them and add to them over the course of days or even weeks until I find the ideas that I am the most excited about and that I think I want to carry off the pages and start developing. For the “empty spaces” theme I find that I have the problem of too many ideas. I know what you’re thinking – how can too many ideas be a problem? Well for me, too many ideas is overwhelming. I need to narrow down the list so I know what to focus on. Once I’ve got some focus I can start the actual art making process. For this theme I have several ideas that I’m considering: the empty space in a vessel, lace work and the space between two objects. Which one I will end up using will depend on the results of some sampling that I will be doing over the next few weeks which I’ve already begun by starting to paint a new piece of textured silk… I’ll be back with another look at my progress with this theme in a week or two so stay tuned! Hi from Kathyanne White as I post the beginning of my Empty Spaces piece. One of the things that is characteristic of my work is the way I work spontaneously, have an idea first and see what happens next. I don’t really plan my work I let it flow. I would rather start creating materials and as I work create supporting elements to bring my thoughts together in the form of artwork. For my interpretation of the Empty Spaces theme, I have chosen to create a free standing textural piece. As I work through my idea of the theme, things may change, but I will share my beginning plan here and continue to work on the composition of the pages. This piece will either be shaped like a book with a spine or it will be finished in the round. It depends on what happens as I create the textures of each composition. I have cut 5 pieces of hardware cloth and painted them to use as the base for the dimensional collage. I will build all my compositions on the face of each side of the hardware cloth as I assemble all my finished artwork. For now I have digital prints on the following surfaces: recycled printers plates, beverage cans, metal mesh and some other surfaces that have not been photographed. They are in my maybe pile right now. Here are 4 of the pieces of 8″ x 8″ hardware cloth. Three have nothing attached, the one on the bottom left has a piece of painted aluminum screen attached. Next is an image of the 5th piece of hardware cloth that has a brass mesh print attached to one side. First picture is of the front of the print and the second the reverse side attached to the hardware cloth. There are empty spaces in the print that were created when the metal mesh was constructed before printing. The hardware cloth has also been cut away. The next photo is the other side of this page for the assemblage. It is a print on a recycled printers plate with holes cut and small holes punch in order to use wire and beads to embellish the top of the page. You can see the brass mesh from the other side as the pieces are stacked together. This mix will evolve as I work on the composition of the page.
A couple other pics show elements that have been printed for other pages to be completed. As I proceed with the work, more prints and elements will be added to the mix. Many of the cut shapes in the hardware cloth will have nothing behind them and I plan to arrange them so those openings, or empty spaces will allow the viewer to look through parts of the work to textures on the other pages. Printed beverage cans and aluminum mesh Slivers of printed beverage cans In the next couple of weeks all the pages will be in the process of assembling and I will post pictures as this piece grows. Carol Sloan here. The group has been talking a little bit about what we’re going to post on the blog. We decided that you, our readers, would love to know the good, the bad and the ugly about how we are preparing our work for each theme. Most of the time we only share the successes of showing art, the fun details or the glorious outcomes. Today I will approach it in a more honest way.
Our theme is “Empty Spaces”. The very first thing that I do when I begin a new piece is research. I look up each word in the dictionary. I also look at similar words to really familiarize myself with the range of meaning for each word. Sometimes I search for poems or quotes on the word or the intention of each word. As I am reading, I jot down anything that I like, anything that has a special meaning or significance to me. And usually somewhere along the way, something will really resonate with me.
Let’s take this theme “Empty Spaces”. I looked up “empty” as well as “spaces” in an online dictionary. I’ve added links to the exact definition that I looked at. In looking at the list of definitions, several possibilites began to germinate in my head. One definition in particular resonated with me -”having none of the usual or appropriate contents”.
My ideas often stem from what is going on in my life at the moment or in the past. Since my mother passed away a couple of years ago, my extended family has not been as close. My mom was the glue that held us together. Her death left many empty spaces in my life. I have allowed myself to think about those spaces on a limited basis since her death. The pain is just too heavy, it’s buried so deep that it would take a lot of prying to get to that place. The death of my sister four years ago did the same thing. I struggled (and still do) with many issues after her death that I never considered before. An entire list of “should have’s, would have’s” that take on a life of their own after you lose a loved one.
I began to think about the theme as that kind of empty space – the space left after the “usual or appropriate contents” were emptied. With this seed of an idea germinating in my mind, I began to think of other empty spaces. Spaces that existed for another purpose. Like in the garden. You dig a hole (a space that is now empty) to drop a seed into it. Or maybe in the forest. A tree falls to the ground, rots and eventually leaves an empty space there. Yet, in that space, mushrooms begin to grow. Small plants sprout up. The space is empty yet the death of one thing has provided a fertile space for another. Life finds a way to fill that empty space.
After thinking about the theme with those things in mind, I returned to the original thought – the empty spaces that loss can leave us with. It doesn’t have to be death, it could be the loss of respect, loss of love, loss of trust. I spent a few days hiking in the forest right around this time. I had many hours of solitude to work through this thought process. I wrote pages of notes while I was out there. Sitting there, surrounded by nature, hearing the rushing water of the nearby river helped to clarify my thoughts.
I decided to approach the theme armed with the painful knowledge of that empty space that is left when we experience a loss. My loss would be one that was within my family structure. I could best illustrate that loss in an abstract way. The next step for me was to consider what I would need to begin. I decided that letters, pieces of clothing from each person, photographs, handwritten journal entries, symbols of grief/anger/traumatic events/death and other reminders of that time in my life would be a good beginning.
I’ll be scanning these items in order to print them out on various substrates, making thermofax screens out of some of them while printing others out on a suitable paper.
My hope is to document the journey while creating this piece of artwork as well as to inspire someone out there. Please comment on what you’d like to see, anything you’d like to have explained more clearly or any questions/comments.
Thank you! posted by Carol Sloan
Hi, I’m Jane Davila and I live in southwestern Connecticut in a suburb of New York City. I started out as a printmaker long ago and still feel a strong connection to paper. I work small and very small in scale and enjoy working within the constraints of the self-imposed “limitations” of size. Working small enables me to explore more ideas and themes and the work I produce doesn’t take up a huge amount of space. My husband is an oil painter and sculptor and he works in a much larger scale (6-8 feet on a side often) and let me tell you, they take up some serious room in his studio! Much of my work revolves around the themes of insects, leaves, birds, fish and other natural subjects. I am enamored of a Japanese printmaking technique called Gyotaku, which translates literally to fish rubbing. Although the technique is traditionally done with real, freshly caught fish, I use rubber replica fish (I have quite a collection!)
Often, the images in my work are visual metaphors for topics I am thinking about. For example, an ongoing series featuring beetles as subjects is all about exploring my dismay and concern about global warming and the harm we are causing the planet and all of its inhabitants. I am also fascinated by text and use letter forms of many languages to add texture and interest to much of my work.
I perceive letters as having colors (a condition known as grapheme-color synesthesia) and this perception adds another layer of discovery for me as an artist as I build a compostion incorporating letters, letter forms and text into my work, as well as the challenge of choosing titles for finished pieces that “go” with the work.
I have written three books for C&T Publishing, two with Elin Waterston – Art Quilt Workbook and Art Quilts at Play - and one alone, Jane Davila’s Surface Design Essentials. Elin and I also made a dvd for C&T called Elin and Jane Teach You Art Quilt Basics. I teach art quilting, surface design and mixed media workshops all over the world and have been fortunate to meet many interesting people in my travels. I am also the editor of two digital magazines, Quilting Arts In Stitches and Quilting Arts Surface Explorations. This emag format is so dynamic and exciting and exploring the possibilities of the ever-changing and growing technology is invigorating!
As a printmaker and former full-time studio artist, I gained a lot of experience with navigating the business side of the fine art world. I have prints in many collections around the world, I’ve worked with commercial galleries and print publishers for years and I’ve taken this insider knowledge and write a regular column in the Quilting Arts print magazine called Minding Your Business. I’m a bit of a kook in that the business, marketing and promotional side of being an artist is actually really exciting to me.
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