Before I tell you about the new one,
here’s the rundown of my past projects.
It’s still January, maybe you’d like to start your own?
2007 Rothko
I bought the only image-per-week diary left in the discount
book shop, Rothko paintings.
Each week the sample was inspired by the image and stuck
in opposite with notes. The broad bands of colour became textural, patterned,
anything! And I became familiar with an artist I knew very little about.
2008 Van Gogh
The only other suitable diary in the same series. This
one was much more varied and fun. Samples ranged from the pattern of a chair
seat in slashed silk to a row of olive trees stitched on soluble.
2009 Earth From the Air
A photographic diary – tougher than paintings where the
artist has already simplified the subject. Great fun when I got the hang of it.
2010 Earth From the Air
Another set of wonderful photos to work with.
2011 The Guardian
I couldn’t find a suitable diary, so decided to pick an
image from the newspaper each week. I used news, reviews and even ads. This one was about a flu virus!
2012 Underwater Eden, 365 Days
Chose one of the seven glorious sea life photos for each week.
Excellent subjects for embroidery, including this anemone.
2013 John Muir Trust Wild Nature Diary
Lovely photos, but more limited subject material. A bit of a struggle.
2014 Random 5cm squares
See just below! This didn’t really grab me, not
challenging enough, but it was a chance to play with some new stitches and old
favourites. I mostly kept away from the Bernina.
So, I think I understand what I want from this exercise
now:
- use the full range of textile techniques I’ve learned over the years
- take inspiration from the images without trying to reproduce them
- be challenged by subjects I wouldn’t normally pick
- practise making a quick response then moving on without trying to perfect it
- just a sample, not a fully realised work of art!
And what I’ve definitely got, is a collection of
incredibly varied samples that are fantastic to browse through. Over FOUR
HUNDRED and counting.
Go on, try it… but I warn you, it’s addictive!
2 comments:
I'm in awe. I'm not sure I'd have the patience, even for little samples.
What a great idea and so inspiring.
Post a Comment