Friday, January 23, 2015
Friday, January 16, 2015
This is SAQA Europe/Middle East: Germany
Hildegard Müller
I started quilting in the mid-90th of the
last century as a very traditional quilter and enjoyed quilt making. But some
years ago I got in touch with modern quilts and art quilts. I became fascinated
by the idea to create my own fabric by various methods of dying or printing. So
I started to learn these techniques and took part in workshops of well-known
art quilters.
Usually I start with an idea, a theme, then I create
my fabric by dying, printing adding other materials, sometimes non-textile
materials as well or add fabrics and embellish it.
An example for my way of working is “And we will go
on…” This work was exhibited in 2012 in Saint-Marie-Aux-Mines at the contest
“Yesterday, today, tomorrow”.
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And we will go on .... Detail |
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And we will go on |
The diptych "Love in Wartimes" shows parts
of poems and love-letters, written during World War I (about 1916) by my
Grandmother and a French prisoner of war, who - as far as I know - was forced
to work on the fields in that rural area, where my Grandmother lived. Extracts
of her letter are on one part, the prisoner's letter is on the other part. I
found those writings in my Grandma's poetry book.
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Love in War Times |
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Love in War Times - Detail |
Tuesday, January 13, 2015
Thursday, January 8, 2015
This is SAQA Europe/Middle East: Germany
Barbara Lange
A theme that has intrigues me lately is insects - especially bees. They are the most successful species on earth when it comes to evolution, and yet they are threatened by man.
This a topic I focused on while making my pieces for the Radiation exhibition I curated together with Angelika Henrichs. This exhibition was presented at the International Radiation protection conference in Geneva 2014 for the first time and is currently travelling through Europe. For more information please go to: http://strahlenausstellungradiationgenf.blogspot.de/
A second theme I like to ponder is our role in life - we are only small cog wheels in the busy turn of life - and yet the whole machinery is affected when one little wheel blocks or stops working completely.
2015 I will be presenting a solo exhibition at the European Patchwork Meeting in Sainte-Marie-ax-Mines. I would love to meet as many of you as I can there!
www.barbaralange.com
I have been
a quilt enthusiast for the past 20 years and am a proud new juried artist
member of SAQA Middle East since October 2014.
I would describe my signature style as a combination bold colors, machine embroidery, intense quilting and interactive elements.
One example form my interactive pieces are the mirror pyramids I incorporate. When the spectator looks straight on to the tip of the mirror pyramid, he or she will discover a new image that is set together out of the reflections of the areas surrounding the pyramid. Once you move aside, the image vanishes.
I would describe my signature style as a combination bold colors, machine embroidery, intense quilting and interactive elements.
One example form my interactive pieces are the mirror pyramids I incorporate. When the spectator looks straight on to the tip of the mirror pyramid, he or she will discover a new image that is set together out of the reflections of the areas surrounding the pyramid. Once you move aside, the image vanishes.
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Magnolia - detail shot of pyramid and beetle |
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Magnolia - overall |
A second example are the
spiral zippers I have added in multiple pieces. They can be opened and closed
by that visitors and reveal - or seclude - images that are behind the
zippers.
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Gesamtansicht mit rotem Kreis |
And a third example I would like to introduce here are glow-in-the-dark threads I use while quilting. Many of my pieces look totally different in the night
than they do during the day.
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Monochrome VI - Dragonflies. Daytime. |
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Monochrome VI - Dragonglies. View in the dark. |
A theme that has intrigues me lately is insects - especially bees. They are the most successful species on earth when it comes to evolution, and yet they are threatened by man.
This a topic I focused on while making my pieces for the Radiation exhibition I curated together with Angelika Henrichs. This exhibition was presented at the International Radiation protection conference in Geneva 2014 for the first time and is currently travelling through Europe. For more information please go to: http://strahlenausstellungradiationgenf.blogspot.de/
A second theme I like to ponder is our role in life - we are only small cog wheels in the busy turn of life - and yet the whole machinery is affected when one little wheel blocks or stops working completely.
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Interlocked |
2015 I will be presenting a solo exhibition at the European Patchwork Meeting in Sainte-Marie-ax-Mines. I would love to meet as many of you as I can there!
www.barbaralange.com
Saturday, December 27, 2014
This is SAQA Europe/Middle East: Lithuania
Maryte Collard
I was born and spent most of my life in Lithuania, country of amber, songs and rain.
Despite my career in a medical field I was always interested in fiber arts and crafts but quilting stole my heart when I was introduced to it in 1997.
For 11 years since 2002 till 2013 I lived in US and there I realized that quilting was much more than a craft, it was an ART.
I started making traditional quilts but soon I realized that I wanted to explore endless possibilities fiber arts offer: raw edge applique using my own hand dyed silk and cotton as a background, painting and thread painting and free motion quilting that is my favorite part of quiltmaking.
I draw my inspiration mostly from nature and life around me but also I love creating abstract quilts letting the pieces of fabric to fall into places just like they knew where they belonged.
A new challenge in my quilting career emerged when I moved back to Lithuania in 2013. There were no tradition of making quilts here and there were no supplies. I had to start dyeing my own fabrics and to this day I am searching for my new style. For now my style often is recognized as “American” when I put my quilts on display in Lithuania or in Latvia.
Even there are few quilters in Lithuania now, there is no sense of community and I feel rather isolated. That's why I joined SAQA and also became a member of Latvian Quilting Association.
I was born and spent most of my life in Lithuania, country of amber, songs and rain.
Despite my career in a medical field I was always interested in fiber arts and crafts but quilting stole my heart when I was introduced to it in 1997.
For 11 years since 2002 till 2013 I lived in US and there I realized that quilting was much more than a craft, it was an ART.
I started making traditional quilts but soon I realized that I wanted to explore endless possibilities fiber arts offer: raw edge applique using my own hand dyed silk and cotton as a background, painting and thread painting and free motion quilting that is my favorite part of quiltmaking.
I draw my inspiration mostly from nature and life around me but also I love creating abstract quilts letting the pieces of fabric to fall into places just like they knew where they belonged.
A new challenge in my quilting career emerged when I moved back to Lithuania in 2013. There were no tradition of making quilts here and there were no supplies. I had to start dyeing my own fabrics and to this day I am searching for my new style. For now my style often is recognized as “American” when I put my quilts on display in Lithuania or in Latvia.
Even there are few quilters in Lithuania now, there is no sense of community and I feel rather isolated. That's why I joined SAQA and also became a member of Latvian Quilting Association.
Saturday, December 20, 2014
This is SAQA Europe/Middle East: Belgium (Denmark/Netherlands/USA)
JETTE CLOVER
I was born and raised in Denmark, but I
have lived and worked for many years in the US and in the Netherlands. Since
2005 I live in the beautiful old city Antwerp in Belgium. I started out as a
journalist and worked for five years at the daily newspaper Information in
Copenhagen, but then I met my husband and moved to America, where I got a degree
in art history at the University in Seatttle. And I saw my first quilt, an
Amish quilt hanging on a wash line.
When we later moved to the Netherlands I
worked at the Dutch Textile Museum, combining my love of textile, of art and
art history and of writing. I was excited about
the opportunity to organize exhibitions and introduce ‘new’ quilts,
first with an exhibition about American art quilts, and later in 1997 I was the
curator of the very first European Art Quilt exhibition.
That last exhibition, however, also made it
clear to me how much I missed making my own art work, so in 1998 I left my
museum career to make art quilts full time.
Besides being a maker I am also teaching
workshops and masters classes , and in 2001 I organized the 2 year course Quilten
Speciaal in the Netherlands for quilters who wanted to further their artistic
development - and this course is still taking place; we
just started with group # 13.
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Metropolis 1 |
Since 2000 I have been a member of the
European group Quilt Art. This group celebrates its 30th anniversary
in 2015 with two traveling exhibitions and a big book.
And I have been a member of SAQA for about
as many years and served as the SAQA representative for Europe and Israel from
2005-08, when we introduced the first Wide Horizons exhibition at the Carrefour
in Alsace.
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White Wall 2 |
I construct my quilts like a collage with
many layers of cotton, linen, cheese cloth and paper, which I have painted,
printed screened, rusted and bleached. I am fond of monochromatic colors and
subtle tones and of hand quilting with big stitches. For the last five years I
have focussed on the color white.
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Words 5 |
Almost all of my work refers to writing. I
was a journalist before I became an artist, and language and communication
continue to be my main source of inspiration – from printed book pages to
handwritten notes and letters and from
crude graffiti to posters and advertisements in the streets. The text on my
pieces is meant to be seen rather than to be read, and to be seen as the human
need for communication.
You can see more examples of my work on my
website, www.jetteclover.com
Friday, December 19, 2014
This is SAQA Europe/Middle East: Ireland (Netherlands)
Ireland
Joke Buursma
Originally from
The Netherlands, I am now residing in Portlaw, Co. Waterford, Ireland.
I started
quilting when I moved to Ireland in 1996.
The Dutch
multicultural society has influenced my colour palette, while travelling has
evoked my interest in the cultural legacies of the countries I have visited
over the years. My collection of books about the cultural history of diverse
countries is another source of inspiration.
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Burying their children 4 |
My work often
references a sense of place derived from places which affected me.
In the course of
the last ten years I have been working on pieces alluding to the Adobe
architecture in Mali (West Africa), South Africa's nature, and in other pieces
to the past of Ireland, France, Spain, and Syria.
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Chameleon |
My work consists
mainly of cotton fabrics, occasionally of silk, linen and man-made material as
well.
I use a mix of
commercial and self hand dyed fabrics.
In my work I
apply appliqué, painting, discolouring, stamping, stencilling,
piecing, and densely free-motion stitching.
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Hermaphrodite 1 |
In the course of
this year (2014) I had two solo exhibitions in the South East of Ireland.
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Red Earth |
If you want to
see more of my work you can visit my website:
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