Dec
31
2006
Serena Fenton
Let’s hear it for the holidays! Sleeping late, eating well and letting the mind wander – can life get better than this? Two compelling wanderings: Beeton’s Book of Needlework, reproduced from the 1870 original book and some great web explorations directed by Kim Carney in her blog, Something To Say.
I have been watching movies and doing more handwork (see image at left.) But I am realizing that I have forgotten many of the more elaborate stitches that I used to know. Beeton’s Book of Needlework to the rescue. The entire book is fascinating. It contains knitting, crocheting and many other specialties which are foreign to me. The easiest way to view the entire book is to download it as a zip file and expand it on your computer Therefore, I have reproduced only the embroidery sections here on site.
For the times when I am at the computer, I have been exploring Something to Say. What a great collection of links and commentary! A few of her recent posts are: “Motherlode Of Fun, Visual Acoustics, Painted Shoes, Illustration Friday – Peace (and Piece).” Kick back and enjoy!
New Year’s resolutions?? My most successful resolutions were when I resolved to “sleep more; work less; eat more barbecue.” But I can’t just keep repeating that forever. This year I am aiming at 30 minutes of art-making 3 X per week and filing my papers (so that I can find the desk to do the art.)Â Happy New Year!!
image: Thinking by Serena Fenton; 5″ X 7″; cotton on felted wool
Comments Off | posted in Side Trips, Textile / Fiber Art
Dec
24
2006
Serena Fenton

In the introduction to her book, In the Making: Creative Options for Contemporary Art, Linda Weintraub poses four key questions that any artist should be asking themselves:
- Why am I an artist?
- Who is my audience?
- How can I communicate with this audience?
- What is art’s function in society?
These are great questions. Weintraub’s book, (reportedly – I have only skimmed parts online) never answers these questions, but instead looks at artists work for the answers.
Hugh MacLeod, in his blog Gaping Void, has provided one answer to these questions of why make art and how to sell it:
“If people like buying your product, it’s because its story helps fill in the narrative gaps in their own lives.
Human beings need to tell stories. Historically, it’s the quickest way we have for transmitting useful information to other members of our species. Stories are not just nice things to have, they are essential survival tools.
And yes, the stories we tell ourselves are just as important than the stories we tell other people.
Ergo, marketing is not about selling. Marketing is figuring out where your product stands in relation to personal narrative.
So where does your product fit into other people’s narrative? How does telling your story become a survival tool for other people? If you don’t know, you have a marketing problem.
Narrative gaps. It’s all about the narrative gaps.”
image: sheep embroidery by Serena Fenton 8″ X 10″
Comments Off | posted in Creativity / Art Journaling, Images - Inspiration, Side Trips, Textile / Fiber Art
Dec
19
2006
Serena Fenton
A few years back, I was in an artquilt crit group with a woman who struck me as a genius. I thought that she was far too modest about her talents. After running into a mutual friend, I was delighted to learn that she has been working hard and in turn is getting the recognition that she is due – possibly proving that there is goodness, balance and karma in this world.
The artist is Tricia McKellar. By day, she is an instructional technologist at North Carolina State University. Nights & weekends, she is an artist. Like so many of us, she is fitting together the disparate parts of her life, but she does not segregate them. Her work with technology and fine machines inform her art. Through imagery, photography, McKellar provides beautiful insight into the manmade world. Her media is silk, dye and printer. She explains her quilts and collages:
My shibori is a modern adaptation of traditional Japanese hand-dye methods. Shibori techniques produce patterned fabric with subtle variations. These patterns are natural, organic, complex and somehow, simple.
Digital shibori is my process that involves hand-dyeing shibori fabrics, then photographing and digitally altering, sometimes collaging, the digital shibori imagery. After working for a couple of years dyeing shibori and creating digital images to print on silk, it occurred to me that my shibori would be an interesting element in my digital collages. Sometimes these digital shibori collages are printed on silk and quilted, sometimes they are printed with my archival inkjet printer. Quiltart Gallery
Sadly what is lacking in viewing McKellar’s works on the internet is a sense of scale – many of these pieces are quite large – and of the textural richness of the washed silk. If you are near any of Tricia McKellar’s showings, it is well worth a visit.
Comments Off | posted in Textile / Fiber Art
Dec
14
2006
Serena Fenton
Missy Stevens is another American artist whose embroidery will be featured in the 2006 Art of the Stitch, Embroiderers’ Guild, International Biennial Exhibition, Bristol, England. Her work, Blue (shown at left) will be over there, keeping company with some of England’s finest!
Stevens has brought punch needle embroidery into the contemporary vein through her imagery and use of color.
About her technique she says, “When I first saw loop embroidery I was immediately enamored of its dense, plush surface. I felt a jolt of recognition, as if I were meeting a dear, old friend, whom I’d only previously met in a dream. Seeing the tiny, glossy loops of sewing thread filled me with warmth and recognition . . . More than a first encounter, it was a deeply heartening reunion.” The imagery is a dream-like interpretation of her natural environment. hibberd mcgrath gallery
On an unrelated note: I have become intrigued by the work of Danish artist Petter Hellsing. I came across his name on a list of embroidery artists who received official recognition from Pfaff sewing machines. Danish is a complete mystery to me, but the pictures communicate anyway.
kopenhagen.dk has a page featuring Hellsing’s work (scroll down to the middle of the page.) There are some photos of a series of upholstered chairs and hanging screens. The works appear to be political: airplanes, a man in a beret, a mountaintop and rows of bunnies. I don’t know what they mean – or how there are made. I spite of the lack of commentary, the imagery is engaging. Perhaps most important are the flights of fancy that arise from the images: angry, jarring colors, strokes and images juxtaposed onto comfy chairs and wispy curtains.
Comments Off | posted in Textile / Fiber Art
Dec
10
2006
Serena Fenton
Oddly, the name Carol*n Dahl is shared by two gifted fiber artists. One is the Carolyn Dahl, book author and quilt artist. Her work is stunning, but not the focus of today’s outing. The other Dahl is Caroline Dahl, pianist and embroiderer. Dahl’s embroidery, Shopping Mall Day of the Dead, was included in the 2006 Art of the Stitch, Embroiderers’ Guild, International Biennial Exhibition, Bristol, England. This is a high honor for an American to crash the international exhibition. Dahl’s embroideries deserve it. They are fantastic embroideries. These are fantastic in both senses of the word: the workmanship and intricacy of the images is stunning, and the imagery appears to take place in the world of alternate reality and magic realism. Dahl’s statement on Fiberscene gives this glimpse into her work:
When you graduate with a B.A. in English, as I did, the time eventually comes when you say, “Now what?” My answer to that questions, after a period of several frantic, tangled years, about which the less is said is better, was to become a musician and textile artist.
I enjoy the balance of these two different activities. Textile art is a solitary, meditative pursuit, with visible results over time, while playing music is active, in the moment, and usually group oriented.
After starting out making quilts nearly thirty years ago, my textile work for the past twenty-five years has been primarily embroidery with more recent use of applique, piecework, and/or beading. I make contemporary narrative textiles that are very energetic with color and pattern. DMC embroidery floss and Kreinik metallic braid on cotton muslin are my materials of choice. My imagery comes from my observations of popular culture and from my experiences over time at my job as a piano player.
Make time to click on several of the links on Dahl’s gallery page. I wish there were thumbnails, so that I can pick and choose the links in a logical manner, but then, the random click has the same thrill as grabbing a random chocolate out of the box: you are usually rewarded and seldom disappointed.
Comments Off | posted in Modern Embroidery, Textile / Fiber Art
Dec
9
2006
Serena Fenton
I confess. I threw my back out; it was caused partly through stress; partly through lugging around 20 pound computer textbooks. I will reform. In the meantime, I am getting to spend quality time sleeping on the sofa with the little animals of the house and playing with things that I have postponed for too long. Expect more posts this week – most of them lightweight and fun. I am just not up to tackling the deeper meaning of textile arts.
Three related, definitely crafty entries; all suitable for the Holiday Season and both look to be a good hand-filling projects to take up while lying on the sofa: Stitched Christmas Garlands.
The first is by Anna Maria Horner. She has made her garland out of circles of felt. This looks like a great project for both kids and adults. Steps:
1- get the felt. Horner has used the regular synthetic felt, but I say if you are going to do this, do it right and get some wool felt (Don’t have any wool felt? Stop by the thrift shop and grab some 100% wool sweaters and toss’em in the wash.) Wash hot; Dry hot.
2 – Cut circles (size is your choice, but I would cut them about the size of a fifty cent piece) Horner recommends 60 sets (120 circles).
3 – Stitch two circles together, using a blanket stitch and join them in a long garland.
4- Optional: embellish them with antique buttons.
Second: How to make yo-yos; a tutorial by Heather Bailey. This is a beautifully illustrated piece for yo-yo making (those circle-y things that were popular for quilts in the 1920s-40s.)
Heather Bailey offers her take on a Christmas yo-yo garland. Her garlands are stitched together at the edges, the colors are less candy cane and more cozy.
Soule mama strung her yo-yos on a piece of red rickrack and hung them around the windows.
Still not inspired? Try the Flickr group: Ga-ga for Garlands for lots of garlands: all colors, materials and for any occasion.
Third: Juju Vail has a cute photo of a single yo-yo with fabric topper turned into a magnet or decoration or… Vail also has a beautiful hand sewn trivet-ornament, which she made sitting by the fire with her daughter. (Sounds wonderful.)
Comments Off | posted in Textile / Fiber Art