Wednesday 25 June 2014

The Bride Series - The Bride Masked

Continuing with the theme, inspiration came from many women/girls who are masked or veiled for the ceremony - which also has comparisons to the veil worn at traditional western weddings....




Beaded, painted and adorned with precious threads and fabrics, all eyes are on her as she makes her way to her destiny.



Height:   69 cm
Width:    60 cm
Depth:    20.5 cm

Materials:             
·         Wood
·         Sun dyed cotton fabric
·         Cotton batting
·         Silk cord
·         Cotton threads
·         Perle embroidery threads
·         Linen threads
·         Silk threads
·         Steel
·         Corflute
·         Beads
·         Commercially printed fabric

·         Fencing wire

Wednesday 18 June 2014

The Bride Series: The Bride Scarred

The theme for this exhibition, held at Manningham 29 January to 22 February 2014, was ADORNED.

Quite a few thoughts went through my head about how to represent Adorned...


I thought about continuing work on my felted fat lady, which had been started some time before for another exhibition, then abandoned...


..but she was again assigned to the WIP box....

...and then flitting through Pinterest, I saw some beautiful faces of young women/girls which had been decorated and adorned to either attract a mate or to meet their new spouse in marriage...and I got to thinking about how they might feel about it...whether it was with joy or trepidation...whether if it was possible, would they still choose to marry or would they choose another life for themselves if the boundaries imposed by tradition, opportunity and geography...and what the carefully crafted adornment masked...............

...and I had it - the Bride Series...

The Bride Scarred

Photo courtesy of Carol O'Loughlin

Adorned with feathers, she waits to see what will unfold, whether the pain she endured through scarification was worth it or was simply a forerunner of things to come...

Height:   118 cm
Width:    64 cm
Depth:    23 cm

Materials:             
·        Wood
·         Sun dyed cotton fabric
·         Cotton batting
·         Paper cord
·         Silk cord
·         Hessian
·         Fencing wire
·         Cotton threads
·         Perle embroidery threads
·         Linen threads
·         Silk threads
·         Corflute
·         Beads
·         Feathers
·         Commercially printed fabric

Come back next week for the next in the series....

Tuesday 10 June 2014

I'm baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaack

What has prompted this blog post??

I've been published - and my blog address is in the magazine - so I've decided I shouldn't be such a slacker and start blogging again - I'm thinking I could be showing processes, works, whatever - but definitely get back into the habit - it's amazing how quickly one loses the discipline when getting stuck into something else - for me it was getting ready for the end of my course....

Since my last post myself and my fellow emerging artists from Stitch Theroem (the last graduates of the Diploma of Textile Arts at Box Hill - they've cancelled the course) held our graduate exhibition at Tacit Contemporary Art - we had a fabulous time and Keith and Tim were so supportive of us and our work - thanks guys.

I'll come back with more about the exhibition in my next blog post.

So, published - I was very excited to be included in the latest Down Under Textiles, a magazine that provides fantastic information and inspiration to me as a textile artist.

This is an Instagram photo collage of the article.

Using a Peruvian technique called Mola - which is more widely known as Reverse Applique - I created images from photos using fabric and thread.....

I was advised by my dear husband that I should have smiled!!


Abstract
Check out the magazine for a step by step process of how to turn your photos into fabric images - it's easy to do and it's a lot of fun.