I feel fortunate to be able to combine my love of festivals, like the Oregon Country Fair and Burning Man, with my more formal studio work. For the last three years my family has been a part of Ambience crew at OCF, creating a “living room” call Yew Are Here where fair goers can relax for a while. I bring painted silk banners and lanterns, rugs, pillows, and a few games and create a welcoming and beautiful little chill spot. At night we light the lanterns and it becomes a magical oasis all night long.
Author Archives: Cameron
Foster/White Show
Here are some photos from the Foster/White show. The gallery did a great job hanging and lighting it. I find in making and showing art there are many steps to letting go of your work, much like in raising children. I find I hold the pieces so close during the making, the first step is letting go is getting the work photographed. It allows you to see the images for the first time through someone else’s eyes. Another step removed is to see it displayed, and then the final letting go is having the work go to a collector. I love it when purchasers send me a photo of how they display the work. It’s a chance to see it go full circle.
Artist Statement for Foster/White
My work is inspired by nature and the touch of human hands upon it. The fabrics are maps implying ancient messages. The forms are documents of the passage of time.
Seedpods hold the germ of life, receptacles of potential, able to burst forth with new growth or slowly drying up into reminders of what could have been. I began working with this particular form at the end of 2009. This Spring I traveled to Hawaii, and on my walks found seedpods in the shape that I had begun drawing months earlier. I was amazed by the variation of the simple form, the warts and bumps and undulations. This inspired me to focus on the one shape for this series, finding richness in a narrow groove.
Both the Artifact and the Vessel Series interpret natural forms and textures through the lens of culture. These pieces reference the vessel form as both useful and sacred object, an imagined series of Rosetta Stones discovered by an archaeologist’s assistant.
Three practices come together to form my work: The sketchbook, surface design on fabric, and stitch. Drawings become paper sculpture become patterns. Fabric is dyed, over-dyed, discharged, resisted, printed. Panels are free-motion embroidered on a sewing machine and hand-stitched into their final shapes. I am invested in process: Exploring, teaching, documenting, and writing.
Bellwether Art Walk
I attended the opening of the Bellwether Art Walk, a group sculpture show in Bellevue that includes one of my pieces. The indoor sculpture is at Bellevue City Hall, a beautiful building with an amazing terrazo floor. The outdoor installations are at the Downtown Park.
I hadn’t realized that the show was not only national, but international, with 37 artists from places as diverse as New York, Maine, Korea, Australia and Japan. There is also a good showing of local sculptors including Steve Jensen, Michael Johnson, and Julia Haack. The City of Bellevue did a beautiful job displaying and installing the work and printing a nice catalog and walking map. I was thrilled when I got an email showing the printed materials and found my piece was one of three featured along with Jae Hyo Lee and Christopher Pfeifle.
I didn’t get a chance to go to the park to see the installations there but am planning on doing so soon. The exhibit runs through October 17th and is well worth a trip to Bellevue.
Going to Rio!
I was invited to show two pieces, Leaf Vessel and Can I Help You?, in the Rio Patchwork Design Show in Brazil this year. The organizers of the show have a strong desire to introduce their local quilters to art quilts. Through their research they found CQA and invited a number of members to participate in the show. They did a beautiful job with the display of the artwork and the show will travel to two other cities in Brazil.
I was amazed to find out that I won the audience choice award for Leaf Vessel which means I’ll be traveling down to Rio next June to present at the 2011 show! How about that?
Seedpods II
Now that I’ve refined the Seedpod shapes, cut them out in the peltex, and done a trial sewing of the forms I’m ready to go on to the next steps: fabrics. I’ve chosen the fabrics and have been cutting, layering, and making the panels.
When making patterns I save both the positive (pattern) pieces and the negative shapes left behind. I use these negative shapes to select the areas of the fabric to cut out for the final. The negatives are very helpful in using hand-dyes because they isolate the areas of fabric. I can then use the pattern piece to cut out the fabric.
Here are the fabrics, peltex, and fusible web all ready to be made into final panels.
And here are the panels ready for the next step: sewing!
Layers on Red
Further layering on the red base (and more white) fabrics. I used a flour resist on the fabrics and then went over them with thickened dye in two browns.
And here’s how the red based one turned out.
Seeing Red!
Fabrics hot out of the dryer.
And then nicely pressed. That’s good for a first layer. I wonder what you will become?
Seedpods
I’ve started a new series based on seedpods, the first of which was displayed at Foster/White in March. This series is a departure for me from the vessel form. Although they became quite abstracted, the Vessels still held the idea of a container. This new series breaks from that altogether. They are different in both form and intention.
The seedpods, although the ideas are still developing, are a way of holding the image of containment of new life and ideas. The time when everything is held tightly, or just beginning to break free. I’ve been thinking about seedpods as a metaphor for a while and I started the patterns before my trip to Hawaii. There I was excited to find several different kinds seedpods that I smuggled home in my suitcase. The are fantastically irregular, a whole world of variations on shape. I reworked what I had started and created new patterns. They are all variations on one form. These seven new pieces are less smooth curves than my previous work. They are bumpy and warty and I quite like them.
Next step, fabrics. I got some lovely new fabrics from Exotic Silks that I ordered when I was at the Reinvention conference. I’m in love with a silk/bamboo twill and a silk/linen double -weave. I also got a sample of transparent and translucent silks for the next work that’s just glimmering in the corner of my eye for now. Yesterday I dyed eight pieces of fabric in reds and terra cotta. I’m ready for some color after all the earthy browns and greens in the last few series. Hard to believe, but it was first dyeing of 2010! I also “interviewed” my stash. At this point everything seems possible and I was surprised at how little went into the reject pile.
SDA/SAQA Reinvention Conference
I recently attended Reinvention, a conference cosponsored by the Surface Design Association and Studio Art Quilts Association at San Francisco State University. It was my first chance to attend a national conference, and was a great opportunity to meet members of both organizations from outside Washington state. Attendees heard from museum directors and artists their viewpoints about the role of fiber in the art world. And personally, it inspired me to do some hard thinking about my own work.
The conference started with keynote speaker Marci McDade, editor of Fiberarts Magazine, who gave an overview of current fiber exhibitions. Other presenters that day represented museums. Jane Przybysz (pronounced “Prizbee”), of the San Jose Museum of Quilts and Textiles, brought a historical perspective to the question of “What is Fiber Art?” drawing heavily from the book, String, Felt, Thread: the Hierarchy of Art and Craft Through Fiber. Jill D’Alessandro, of the de Young Museum, described the evolution of the Textile Department of the museum.
Stefano Catalani, of the Bellevue Arts Museum, gave a presentation called “Reinvention or Reassertion?: Fiber Art and the Contemporary Identity Discourse.” This presentation was a standout for me because of the artists’ work he showed and because he put their artwork into context by telling the artists’ personal history. He focused the theme of reinvention by highlighting work of three artists who have “reasserted” themselves through the lens of their artwork, Dinh Q Le, Ed Pien, and Mandy Greer. Although each of these artists works in different materials and content, each approaches media from a grounding in culture. Craft is, in each case, a functional part of the meaning.
Later in the day the panelists participated in a question and answer session. The question that caused the most heated discussion was a theory put forth by an audience member that quilt artists are marginalized by their media. The panel’s response was that any media can be successful as long as artists are intentional about how they use it. Mastery and technique do not make the artist; rather they are applicable only in the way that they convey the meaning of the artwork.
Saturday’s sessions started with a dynamic panel of emerging artists: Mung Lar Lam, Lacey Jane Roberts, and Bren Ahearns, moderated by Victor De La Rosa, head of the textiles department at SFSU. Each of the artists works in fiber as a way of addressing gender politics. Mung Lar Lam’s work includes her “Ironings” series in which she performs the act of ironing in an exhibition setting, creating sculptural work by pressing creases into cloth. The performative aspect of the work provides context and a way for the viewer to engage through observation and discussion with the artist. Lacey Jane Roberts knits her artwork using a Sparkle Barbie Knitting Machine, incorporating ideas of gender assignment for children and definitions of craft. Lacey has created barbed wire fences, knitting both the wire of the fence and a pink yarn covering. Her work asks many questions including “Who is being excluded?” and “Who is locked away?” Bren Ahearn uses stitch as a way to question definitions of gender and sexuality, crosstitching “manmade” onto samplers, and stitching images of men cage fighting, bringing the homoerotic nature of this macho sport out into the open for reconsideration in another media.
A panel on environmental art, an historical look at the magazine American Craft, and a talk by four experienced “elders” in fiber rounded out the day. Michael Rohde, a weaver for over thirty-five years, talked about his process and evolution in the craft, moving from his work exploring colorways and pattern to more thematic work. Consuelo Jimenez Underwood, a Latina artist whose life story is as fascinating as her work, talked of finding her voice in political art. Throughout the conference, panels discussed themes including “Art vs. Craft”, messy art vs. mastery in craft, and the perceived disrespect of quilts, and other “women’s work”.
I learned of some upcoming opportunities to get involved in these national organizations. SAQA is looking for a Washington State representative; you may contact Pat Gould, the assistant executive director of SAQA, for more information, at patriciagould@msn.com. SDA is starting an Ambassador Program to get more people involved at the state level. We’ll hopefully be starting a small group of Seattle area SDA members. I’ll relay more information about that as it becomes available.
I would definitely recommend attending a national conference. I came away from the conference reinvigorated about my work. The overarching theme that resonated for me was the necessity of intentionality in art, whatever your media. I tend to work very intuitively, often not verbalizing themes and meaning in my work until it comes time to write an artist’s statement. My new resolve is to be more mindful in my work, bringing meaning to the forefront while (hopefully) still tapping into the intuitive choices I make.