Classes Offered

Showing posts with label Fiberlandia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fiberlandia. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Conference Clips

 The 2015 SAQA conference opened on Thursday evening with the Ice Breaker event and opening remarks.  Everyone had a few minutes to follow the directions of Lyric Kinard in making an intuitive piece of art with just the materials in the center of the table.  Halfway through we switched tables and pieces of art.  I'm not sure these were masterpieces but it got everyone talking and laughing together.  Fiberlandia had been launched!
 Friday started bright and early at 8:30 AM.  Not sure we were all ready for the bright part! SAQA president, Kris Sazaki, got our attention and enthusiasm level to a high point in no time, though. Our first speaker was Namita Gupta Wiggers.  Quilt: A rose by any other name does not smell as sweet had us all thinking about the quilt as a deeper form of art than just a lovely piece hanging on a wall.

I attended two break-out sessions that day as well. Carolyn Higgins talked about mastering social media as an effective tool for marketing your work.  I can check some of her suggestions off the list but it looks like I should bite the bullet and have an actual web site, in addition to this blog.  Ugh!  Sometimes we forget that as artists the marketing part can take as much time as the making of the art. I did love her comment that Pinterest is like potato chips for the eyes.

The second session was an excellent presentation by Sue Reno on how artists can develop and maintain a daily artistic practice.  Besides her own suggestions, she shared the remarks from 16 successfully practicing art quilters and what worked for them.  Many of the ideas I already employ to get me into the studio and working but some were new things to try.  It was very helpful to hear how some had many other responsibilities to juggle and still made time for studio work.

Rosalie Dace of South Africa led a panel of international students after lunch.  They talked about what influenced their artistic style and how they, too, found balance between their creative lives and their studies and home life.  The slides of their work were really enjoyable.


That evening was the Maker Space event in a banquet room of the Doubletree Hotel.  There were 10 tables set up with someone at each demonstrating a technique of some sort.  I was one of the demonstrators, doing small, simple landscapes using fusible web.  This is me talking until my voice was hoarse.  It must have been a success because the noise level in the room was very high!

 Below is my friend Georgia French demonstrating needle-felting by machine.  She said her machines were humming away all evening.  It was a fast, and long, 3 hours.

The next morning we had an outstanding talk by artist Maria Shell who lives in a remote area of Alaska.  Despite that, she has been prolifically showing in her own state well as across the country.  She gave us many good tips to get into shows but the main three were:  1 - Do the work. Have at least 10 to 20 pieces ready to be entered before starting.  2 - Enter as many shows as you can that accept fiber art.  Follow the entry directions to the letter. 3 - Don't be discouraged by rejection.  She only gets accepted to about 40 percent of the shows she applies for.  She does think Visions has a special rejection stamp with her name on it, though.

We also had a panel of local textile artists from the Oregon College of Art and Craft.  The slides of their work were fascinating and the wide variety of artistic interpretations was delightful.  It will be fun to follow their progress as they work through to graduation.  The students are Molly Eno, Melina Bishop, Kaylin Francis and Tyler Peterson.

The afternoon was open to anyone who wanted to take a tour of a part of Portland.  I took one car load to the Alberta Arts District in north Portland.  We had a lovely lunch at a French-style bistro and then explored the shops and galleries up and down the street.  Here is Sherrie enjoying a shady moment in the doorway of the Guardino Gallery.  We loved having the sun out the whole weekend so out out-of-state visitors could really enjoy the natural beauty of Oregon.  One group even took a trip up the Columbia River Gorge to Multnomah Falls.


We got back in time for a nap (yes!) and time to freshen up for the Wild About SAQA dinner and silent auction of small quilts.  The dinner selections were delicious and then the fun began.  Everyone had some time before and during dinner to bid on their favorite pieces.  There were over 100 donations so it took some time to look and decide and then keep up on your bid sheets.
Here are two examples of the selections.  Each one was originally 6" by 8" and then they were matted and put into plastic sleeves.  The Mt. Hood rendition is mine which I made to look like the badges that the "Portland experts" wore all weekend.  The second one is a lovely little piece made by Terry Grant.

Sunday ended with remarks by Beth Smith and Charlotte Bird on the inner workings of Quilt Visions and how to successfully enter the show.  Unless you have actually mounted and curated a show, you have no idea how much work they can be. 

We ended the conference with a panel of four local artists led by Jeannette Di Nicolis Meyer.  They had actual pieces there to see along with slides of their work.  They were Sidnee Snell, Jean Wells Keenan, Bonnie Bucknam and Sheila Finzer.  Although I know all four women, it was still interesting to hear their stories of how they got to the level of achievement that they enjoy today.  No one is resting on their laurels though and we can all hope to see more of their work in the future.

And, this is now, officially, the longest post I've ever written.

Monday, May 4, 2015

Katano dying workshop


The 2015 SAQA Fiberlandia conference is over.  As they always are, the conference was alternately energizing and exhausting.  There is so much to take in, learn from and be inspired by that it usually takes several days to decompress and filter all the experiences through one's brain.  I was pretty tired by the time I got to yesterday's afternoon workshop with Ana Lisa Hedstrom but I wouldn't have missed it for anything.  Ana Lisa did a marvelous job of passing along the very beginning skills of doing katano shibori dying which is using stitching (in this case machine stitching) to act as a resist to the fabric dye.  I was too busy stitching to get a picture of everyone bent over their machines but here we are bringing the samples up out of the dye pots.
We couldn't wait to get all those little sodden pieces distributed to the correct person and start ripping open the stitches.  The four hours went by in a flash.  Below are my four samples that were rinsed out once again today and ironed flat.  My stitching lines on the two tan pieces are pretty light but I thought the blue samples came out great.  They look like x-rays of plants.  Can you see the meadow grasses on the far right and the fan palm leaf next to it? Pretty cool. I can't wait to try more of this.



Thursday, April 2, 2015

SAQA and Fiberlandia


It's only a few weeks away!  SAQA's (Studio Art Quilt Associates) national conference is coming to Portland, April 30 through May 2.  All the Oregon members are excited to have the conference in our own part of the world.  These conferences are a great time to connect with any folks whose names we have seen in publications over the years but never met in person and reconnect with old acquaintances.  Many new friendships are made and everyone goes home re-energized to keep creating and networking.

The little quilt pictured above is my donation to the fund-raising auction that will be held the weekend of the conference.  It is small, just 6" by 8" and will have a mat around it for the auction.  I called it Fiberlandia in honor of the conference being held here in Willamette Valley country.  This could easily be a scene from the Hood River Valley, just east of Portland, as well.  I'm hoping the bidding will be high on this piece since I made it to complement the 12 badges I am also making for the local volunteers to wear.

These are even smaller than the donation quilt.  They will be about 3" square when finished.  I'm still trying to decide how I will put the lettering on.  I'd like to have it on a piece of white silk organza (attached just on the edges) so it could be removed later if the recipient wanted it to keep as a little piece of art.  I'll see how that goes once the main stitching is finished on each piece.  Hopefully, they will be desirable enough to generate a lot of bidding on the larger piece.