Serendipity & the Art of the Quilt

Affinities & Influence

July 29, 2006 | Filed Under Inspiration | 1 Comment

What a treat to visit the Greg Kucera Gallery in downtown Seattle to view a selection of quilts from Gees Bend together with prints by Gee’s Bend artists Mary Lee Bendolph and Louisana Bendolph and a collection of other works influenced by the tradition of patchwork and quilting.

The workmanship on the quilts was rather crude but the design sensibilities more than compensated:

This “Bricklayer” quilt by Mary Lee Bendolph is made from corduroy. The wale of the fabric creates a whole new dimension:



This quilt top is made entirely from labels:

Today’s BBQ party is “all about me” (sorry Tommy) so I best log off and go meet my guests.

It’s A Small World…

July 29, 2006 | Filed Under Travel | Comments Off

So I made it to Seattle and it is way cooler than eastern Washington. Ahh, blessed relief. I am staying with some friends who are very close to two of my host sisters from exchange student days. I could go into details but it would sound like a soap opera. It is great to be here. Tomorrow we are having a BBQ all together but first I get to see some of the quilts from Gees Bend which are currently on display in Seattle. This is an unexpected but welcome surprise.

Julia, a friend of my hosts, told them about the exhibition. Here is Julia’s blog and website - do her paintings have a familiar feel about them??!!

Chilling Out

July 27, 2006 | Filed Under Education | 2 Comments

I am currently in Sunnyside, Washington State where I was a Rotary exchange student in 1983. The city is living up to its name with temperatures hovering around 100 F. Indeed the entire country has been in the grip of a heatwave since I arrived earlier in the month. Air conditioning brings welcome relief and I have been taking some quiet time to visit with host families and friends. Only tonight have I been able to access a computer with broadband, hence a belated blog update.

Thanks to classmate Nita for sending through these pictures of me with my compositions at the Crow barn. Something tells me that I like to talk with my hands these days (comes from living with an Italian?):

In this photo, I look like I am doing a haka (Maori war dance):


After a marathon journey from Columbus to San Francisco (via Washington Dulles) I visited a dear friend in Sacramento who recently gave birth to Erik:

I then flew from San Francisco to Washington State via Portland. There were some fantastic crop formations as I flew into Portland and I was kicking myself that my camera was snug in my backpack in an overhead locker. This shot as I flew out of Portland was not as compelling:

but I loved these irrigation/crop circles that I saw on my flight into Pasco:

I love the dusky colours too.

Tomorrow I head over the mountains to Seattle

More photos from the Crow Barn

July 23, 2006 | Filed Under Education | 1 Comment

On the last afternoon of our workshop with Nancy, each student displayed their compositions for the week and discussed some of the things they had learned in the process. We had all been most productive and there were some beautiful quilt tops on exhibition. As I didn’t ask permission, I will not post any pictures of the work of other students but here is the balance of my output.

I enjoyed making these shapes from the fabrics I created and think I could do something fun with more repetition:

These unsewn units were made with stacks, strategic cutting and rotations. Some of the shapes change/disappear with the seam allowances but it’s a great exercise in serendipity:

The final exercise involved making a black and white composition and then recreating a more exaggerated version in colour. I did not complete this exercise, partly because I made my composition so BIG and partly because I disappeared to the Post Office to dispatch my 40 odd pounds of fabric on a slow boat to Australia:

The Agony and the Ecstasy

July 22, 2006 | Filed Under Education | Comments Off

Or rather, the exhilaration and the exhaustion. My workshop with Nancy is over; the adrenalin levels have dropped; and after a week of early starts, late nights, restless sleep and intense days, I am feeling somewhat fatigued. It’s going to take me a while to process all of the information and feedback from this week. And since I will be spending 12+ hours in transit getting to San Francisco today, I have plenty of time to start thinking about it. Nevertheless, here are some preliminary thoughts:

1) The Crow barn is a superior facility - we had a large class of 20+ students but we all had good light and plenty of room to spread out;

2) Margaret, our personal chef, cooked fabulous meals each day for 45+ people in little more than a conventional kitchen. Our workshop output would have been severely compromised without refuelling from Margaret!

3) Apart from a couple of throwaway comments about favourite colour combinations, Nancy talked very little about colour this week. Instead, we were left to our own devices. I have not worked with solid colour fabrics before and tried to experiment with some different palettes. My results looked different from my other quilts and were not entirely successful but I have lots of ideas that I want to try out at home; and

4) When I look over my portfolio of quilts, I realise that I have only ever made one asymmetrical, abstract quilt that did not involve repetition of a block or unit. This simple quilt was from a long time ago:

No wonder that one of Nancy’s comments was that I need to work on my composition skills. Food for thought…

Improvising with Nancy

July 19, 2006 | Filed Under Education | 4 Comments

I arrived in Ohio safely (no more escalator episodes) and have now completed two days of my workshop with Nancy. The days are full and exhilarating so there is not much opportunity to linger on the computer back at the hotel. Nevertheless, here are some photos:

This “composition” is from one of the black and white line exercises that we did on day one:

The next task was to isolate one unit from each exercise and create a 9-plex composition in colours of our choosing:

I left the hotel in the morning with a soft neutral palette in mind. My final colour choice I suspect reflects that I haven’t had a decent night’s sleep since leaving home and was feeling kind of wired! This is not a restful quilt:

So I made a few extra units that are not so wild (or “funky” as Nancy kindly put it):

I finally slept well last night so let’s see what today brings.

The Pleasure of [Being] Company

July 14, 2006 | Filed Under Travel | 4 Comments

My flight to America was somewhat uncomfortable owing to a foot injury that I sustained en route to the airport. (Acute embarrassment precludes me from divulging the precise circumstances of my accident - suffice to say that if an escalator is going UP, one should not try to go DOWN.) I spent much of the flight nursing an ice pack. This seemed to have the desired effect as I arrived in Annapolis with minimal bruising and sufficiently mobile to join the activities that my exceedingly gracious and hospitable hosts have lined up for me.

The first day involved motoring in a replica mini skipjack owned by the Maritime Museum of Annapolis to the dock in the historic downtown. We undertook of an orientation of the very human scale city and state buildings before returning to a folk concert of “waterman” songs and crewing the boat back to its berth. An authentic Chesapeake Bay experience. Today we are off to visit quilt stores so I am being thoroughly spoilt.

re-fabricating difference - call for entries

July 11, 2006 | Filed Under Inspiration | Comments Off

In less than two hours I start my journey to the east coast of the United States. I’ve never been to Annapolis but I hear that it is a pretty town. Check back for photos later.

In the meantime, you may recall the ‘re-fabricating retrospective’ contemporary quilts on exhibition at the Sydney Quilt Show this year. Entries for the next re-fabricating exhibition (”re-fabricating difference”) close on Friday 13 October 2006:

In a world becoming globalised, how is difference made
visible, respected and enjoyed?

For your assistance, you can find a 149KB pdf file of the entry form here. I understand that entry is restricted to Australian quilters only (one of the conditions of funding from the Cultural Partnerships program). If you have any other queries, please direct them to Annabelle Solomon at: amsolomon@bigpond.com

Firefox Update

July 11, 2006 | Filed Under Blog Admin | Comments Off

Problem solved - I looked under Tools:Options:Content:Images: Exceptions in firefox and found that photo blogger images were being blocked. Why? this is a mystery to me but I removed the block and everything is good again.

Where have all the pictures gone?

July 10, 2006 | Filed Under Blog Admin | 1 Comment

If any of you use Mozilla Firefox as your browser, have you noticed that all the blogger-uploaded photos are missing from blogspot blogs? Or is it just me? If I use internet explorer, I can see all the images just fine but with firefox all I can see is the text and the images that are linked from other urls. I haven’t tried rebooting and I’m too busy preparing to go away to fuss with computer stuff right now. But I thought I would see if anyone else had the same experience…

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©2006-2008 Brenda Gael Smith trading as Serendipity Patchwork & Quilting.
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