Here is the third installment of CC#7 Closeup and Artist Statements!
"Something"
Lisa
This was my challenge and I choose music as my artistic inspiration. Two love
songs to be specific, "Something in the Way She Moves" by the Beatles and
"Layla" by Eric Clapton - two different songs by two different guys about the
same woman they fell in love with. My visual inspiration for this piece were
three different pieces of art, one was a black and white quilt that hung in the
Houston quilt show, one was a tattoo I found on Pinterest and the third was a
painting that hung in the apartment of an old family friend - all had the same
pose but are completely different. I used only black and white for my piece,
fusing the black outline on to the white fabric and then I used a technique for
transferring writing on to fabric I had been wanting to try and Annick showed us
how she did her's. Machine pieced and quilted.
(Note: I could not decide which way this quilt should go so here is both views! What do you think?? Beautiful quilt Lisa!!)
"In the beginning, there was TAGGIE"
Lois
(Note: Again - same quilt with time with two backgrounds... OK not so much a quilt as a beautiful Fiber Piece! Dark background adds richness but Light background shows the detail.)
This month's challenge, black/white and the color you gave the group in this challenge as assigned by Lisa. She asked that we be inspired by a form or art, or a piece of art. For me, this entire process has been a learning experience full of challenges and pitfalls, learning to get up dust off and move on. Trying new things, new ideas, new concepts and being willing to deviate from my original design or direction. We used to do it when we were kids. We spent days dreaming, playing, and sharing excitement with our friends in the discovery of a treasure. We've heard, "Stay inside of this box, don't color outside of the lines, and whatever you do don't deviate from following the directions!" And, while many things in life now require us to do so, we can't forget to think back and remember what that was like, the excitement of experimenting and of letting go. I'm a quilter yes, but first and foremost I'm an artist and a fiber enthusiast. With that in mind, I DIDN'T make a quilt. I made a "fiber art piece" and continued on in my creative journey, pushing the limits of what I was comfortable with. I continued to play with contrast and color but this time, I was inspired by my dear friend Ellen's descriptive of a "taggie." As quilters we all find sometimes it's helpful to use a scrap of fabric to start a seam. We're in fact, attempting to rescue it from the hungry throat plate that inevitably, at the most INCONVENIENT time, reaches up and grabs our seam to make a jumbled mess of tangled threads jammed down in the mouth of the machine! Those tiny pieces of fabric are to me a bit of art all in themselves. With that in mind I used a paper water soluble stabilizer on the bottom and a gel soluble on the top as I began stitching to join each colorful taggie. Some were of cotton, some of velvet, and some of silks and satins. I placed carefully with color and value in mind. After stitching I removed the stabilizers and embellished the surface with beads.I found it tricky to hang as there was NO backing and it floated against the backdrop so, I used a tiny scrap of ribbon on the back of each taggie on the top row. Threaded a painted dowel through my piece and made sure I'd painted it to match the backdrop we'd all used to display our pieces. I left threads hanging, dangling on all sides. All in all the experiment to play was as freeing at a day in the park as a child. Not everything in life has to be tidy, sometimes we need that reminder as adults to enjoy the messy process and maybe just maybe in the end we uncover the beauty in the journey.
"An afternoon with Leah Day"
Marie
For this final CC piece for this challenge I has given Black and White plus Cobalt to work with then asked to be inspired by an artist or a piece of art.
For my artist I chose Leah Day. In case you haven't heard, Leah Day has a wonderful blog called freemotionquilting.blogspot.com and through this block she has brought over 365 free motion designs to life in her video classroom that invites all to try free-motion quilting for themselves.
In my piece I appliqued plain black circles onto a piece of neutral white/gray fabric, I then incorporated seven of Leah's designs:17 - Matrix, 22 - Double Pebble, 52 - Spider Web, 81 - Lollipop Chain, 141 - Swirling Water, 130 - Graphic Flower,197 - Funky Party Flower - one in each circle. My next step was to couch around each of the circles with cobalt fibers. I finished the quilting with echos of the entire design. For the edging on this quilt I couched multiple fibers to the edge then added a cobalt fiber to the inner edge to complete the piece.
We hope you have enjoyed this Challenge series and will be posting pictures of individual groups.
Thanks for following our blog.
Marie, Lois, Lisa, Patty, Ellen, Annick, & René
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