Which means the best place to be is in the studio!
One thing Quarantine time has given me is a space to reflect and put things together. Finishing the Almost-Dones has been a pleasure, too. I have amassed a collection of little pieces, palm-size or a little larger, and when I came across them, I began to add to the collection. These are concerned with color and texture, some are about shapes. None are really finished pieces, but they are ideas. The best thing to do when you aren't full of inspiration and the muse is off visiting friends and partying, is to simply show up and do something. Lack of Inspiration and uncooperative Muse can be my excuses for not getting work done.
With that thought, I began to arrange some of the pieces into vignettes. Once done, I thought of filling in the white spaces between them with little oddments collected since I was a child and curious about all small things that could pop into a pocket and be pulled out later for closer examination. I found an old frame with a front-closing door and began to assemble these bits and pieces in some order. I call the collection "Oddments," and, with great originality, they are numbered 1 to 4. I have not kept any of them in the frame, but I photographed the individual vignettes. The idea of leaving them flexible and mobile is appealing, particularly in this time of turmoil and change. Nothing seems to stay the same anymore.
I offer you a guided tour of my day of play.
No. 1: Here the center green circle is a tag from a dress by Gudrun Sjoden of which I am particularly fond, so I did a little stitching on it. The other stitcheries are on linen, paper, even one in the lower line (on a yellow wedge ground) is unspun silk on a piece of paper towel with paint splattered onto it. The slice of house at lower right is what I secretly fantasize about painting my (presently) blue house one day. Painting the dots was an inspired moment, as the linen was from a very old shift I'd worn threadbare before I would take it out of my closet.
No. 2: The arched line is an experimental wrapping of thread and fabric scraps, really small shreds of fabric that I dug out of my waste clippings. The upper left leaf design is stitched on paper and cloth, with the leaf shape sponged onto paper from a wet cloth I'd just dyed. Next to it is part of a (very) old wax-painted sample. The wood in center is from a beautiful and large lavender bush that I brought with me when we moved back home from Knoxville in 2008, and after 12 years of bewilderment at its new location, the plant simply folded up shop. I love the wood, as even the roots of lavender are a feast for the eyes. The little boat at the bottom center is thumb-sized, to give you an idea of scale (or maybe of the size of my arthritic thumbs).
No. 4: Here I realized I had gone to setting things up in something like rigid exhibition order, and this page, though it has some of my favorite objects on it, is less animated than the other pages. I have confessed to you, with the photograph, of my love of buttons that aren't always perfect and round. Likewise, my feeling about trees and shrubs. The little trees were wrapped from snips of embroidery and knitting thread so they look as if they can dance and actually enjoy themselves. The black and white piece at top left ignited an interest in zentangle drawing and stitching that lasted almost a year, along with sketchbooking with white ink on black paper.
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