Showing posts with label lacrimae rerum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lacrimae rerum. Show all posts
Thursday, 22 November 2018
Tree light
My absence form this part of my blog universe has two causes, one medical one personal. The ability to work can be thwarted by the actions of others and as the world seems to polarise between madness and sanity I have found myself caught in that breach.
The space left by a tree is a sad space. When a tree is cut down the light that was is now no more. The light that was filtered and cast by that tree is a nuanced ever moving joy. When the tree is gone the light is flat and still. Who can live without the dappled light of trees? The cathedral sound of birds in the high trees is high art, it is transcendence. After rain on a May morning the light and sound of trees are God's eyelashes.
My studio trees are gone and my fox came and smelt their absence.
Saturday, 26 September 2015
Lachrimae Rerum
This piece is ready to go to the show, finally. It has a leaf missing but after two years making all the different parts I think it needs to get out ! Obviously it didn't literally take two years to make but there have been other things to do and the moths took so long..... It has a lovely dome to live under now so you can get very close to it and will be at the front of the stand.
Like most of my work it has its' roots in ideas about transience and fragility. The moths are in a state of evolution from flat lace to full bodied flight whilst the book grows moss along its' spine. One of the pages in another book has embroidered clover with dew and a sycamore key sits with a real but rusting key and escutcheon. Eventually there will be some ivy too....
Lachrimae rerum translates as 'the tears of things'. I have always been drawn to things in a state of passing or decay be it old books or textiles or autumn leaves and so it seemed appropriate to show my work like this now. It is difficult to give modern textile work context outside of either domestic use or just being in a frame so I decided to stage my tiny little pieces to give them meaning.I must admit to being secretly pleased when people ask me why I'm just showing some dead leaves!
Labels:
lacrimae rerum,
mono no aware,
needlelace,
stumpwork
Saturday, 25 July 2015
Sycamore key
Some people aren't happy to have these in their garden but I love them. I used some lovely subtle shades from Weeks Dye Works for this piece, the small changes in shade are perfect for something that was always going to be tricky !! I am still trying to work out how to put veining into stumpwork without it looking heavy so I tried to suggest it with colour and technique. The wings of this seedpod I made in single strand corded brussels stitch so that it was very fine. To give a hint of veining I freestyled a bit with the rows as I went, sometimes starting mid row and then again in mid row so to fan the rows out.
This technique meant that I avoided stripes in the colour of the thread as it moved from one shade to the next and instead gave it natural patches of colour.
For the seed pod section I tried hanging the stitches off a pre-buttonholed strand so as to retain a ridge for the vein. It sort of worked!!!
I had to take the work off the cordonnet pad to flip it over and make the pod cases . I used the same stitch but built 'up' and around to make a small cavity for a real seed to fit into ! (this is to scale )
Before I sewed the last row I put the seed in ...
For the second pod I wanted it to look as if the seed had already fired out. I did some tiny ghiordes knots inside and then furred them out with a pin...
and then built up the open pod case as before.
Sunday, 12 July 2015
Moth assembly kit
How to make a moth.......
You will need: 1 undercarriage with wings in needlelace,
1 small wing in needlelace,
1 furry body in ghiordes knot stitch
( with feather antennae)
6 furry legs.
Make the furry body with very dense stitches and learn how to tie flies.......
Spend weeks making a wired segmented undercarriage with patterned wings,
Attach everything together and teach him to walk.....
One tame moth.
Release him to join his friends...
'feel pleased with yourself !
This is the last moth (and the largest at 6cm long) for this piece entitled 'Lachrimae Rerum ' ( The Tears of Things) . I'm nearly finished, only a couple more things to make and add. Every time I think it's done I realise there is some more I can do.
Tuesday, 19 May 2015
Clover
My desk has been full of equipment just so that I can see to embroider these clover leaves! I had some lovely embroidery silks which are no longer in production so I wanted them used on something special. I worked on a type of silk fabric called 'paper silk' which is very fine but robust because I wanted to make an embroidered page to slip into one of the books on this piece. After the embroidery I wanted dew on the leaves but it can be a bit tricky with something like this as the scale and shape of the beads can ruin it if they are wrong...I hope I got it right! I used tiny miyuki seed beads and a few of the smallest magatama beads that I could get.
Here they are off the hoop and ironed (carefully),then trimmed down, a little edge stitching and then pinned into place with black entomology pins. As I put them in place I found that the page I had chosen gave a lovely description by Herman Melville of an elaborate tattoo of leaves.
Monday, 4 May 2015
Art Workers Guild
This is a picture of the hall at the Art Workers Guild of which I am a member, or brother as we are known to each other !!! Under the busts at the top of the picture runs a name board with everyone's name from the start over one hundred years ago, my name is up there too! (William Morris is the man in the middle). This Friday we are opening our doors to the public as part of London Craft Week and I will be demonstrating...probably part of a big piece that I'm working on at the moment...
Labels:
art workers' guild,
exhibition,
lacrimae rerum,
mono no aware
Tuesday, 21 October 2014
Next.......
Lady Google
invites you
to a viewing of her collection
at
The Art Workers Guild
6 Queens Square
London WC1N 3AT
on
Monday 27 October 6 - 9 pm
Featuring work by
Celia Ward
with contributions from
Max Alexander Gwendolen Dupre Kang Sing Fung
Deborah Hopson Wolpe Rachael Matthews
The McGrath Makers & Sophie Ramsay Fleur Oakes
Iona Ramsay Sonia Tuttiett Charlotte Ward Sarah Winslow
Saturday, 26 July 2014
Lacrimae rerum
...the tears of things.This is still in progress, more moths to come and some other things to make.Essentially a pile of old books with embroidery !
Thursday, 20 February 2014
Moss Book
I wasn't supposed to be making this at all but I sat looking at this old book and decided that it needed moss more than I needed to be getting on with stuff .
Ghiordes knots in four shade of green , two in cotton , two in silk,
..stitch density of about one hundred to the square inch ( more than an expensive carpet....which takes my mind to unrealistic notions)
...four big tufts (12 hours) and three tiny ones to fill the spine of this old French-English dictionary. After listening to very inspiring music I decided that this will be part of a larger piece that I have been working on for a while...the piece I was, in fact, supposed to be doing anyway ( thankyou Sigur Ros).
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