Showing posts with label boro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label boro. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Artist Statement

What is it about writing an artist statement...one's own artist statement...that is so incredibly daunting? Paralyzing even? Last week Fiona wrote about composing hers. How timely her post was because I too needed to update, well...let's be honest...write a whole new artist statement - one about my mark making rather the oh-so-out-of-date-one that was for my weavings. 

Sunday morning, the painful process began. I kept going back to Fiona's post to review the points that Alyson B. Stanfield of Art Biz Coach suggested one consider when writing one's artist statement. 


Soon enough, two pages were filled with what my inspiration is, what gets me in the studio, what it is about rust that excites me, etc. The lists were easy. Taking those lists and turning them into a cohesive paragraph or two was anything but.

Monday morning found me at the computer, alternately staring at the blank screen and the lists, trying desperately to write...something...anything. An artist statement was needed, like NOW. Really. Today in fact. 

All the while, a comment Pam made during our usual Friday Skype session kept flitting through my mind...that I am good at writing stories. So why not write my artist statement as a story? And so it began...

You know that person you see every now and then who looks both ways to make sure no cars are coming, then steps out into the street only to bend down and pick something up before continuing along their way? That would be me. What I just retrieved from the road is a rusty bit – a washer perhaps – that caught my eye.

And then the little urchins woke and came shuffling sleepily into the studio to say good morning. The moment was lost. 

Later in the day, I found myself with a bit of free time and decided to go to the mall. Walking through the parking lot, something on the ground caught my eye so I bent to retrieve it, making sure to look both ways to insure no cars were coming...and a small laugh escaped remembering the words I'd written earlier


This morning, facing a 5 pm deadline, I continued the story and finally...FINALLY...finished my artist statement.

Rust has a quiet power, a vibrancy and mysteriousness that draws me in and begs to be explored, to be played and experimented with. Mark making with rust is unpredictable and complex yet the marks themselves have a simplicity that allows the quiet power to come through while the many textures and layers left by the rust hint at stories yet to be told. 
 
My current work combines mark making with rust and hand stitching with my love of Japanese boro.


Saturday, March 24, 2012

Details

My friend, Julie Booth, put in a request for detail shots of Rust Boro #1.
Not quite sure these are the kind she had in mind...

 rust boro #1 detail 1 © jennifer coyne qudeen 

 rust boro #1 detail 2 © jennifer coyne qudeen

rust boro #1 detail 3 © jennifer coyne qudeen

...but then again, maybe they are.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Rust boro #1

Woohoo! The first completed rust piece. 
Cue music...time to do the happy dance in the studio.

Rust boro #1, 2012
20" x 40"

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Wistful

The girls are asleep. My husband is traveling until Friday. The cats are curled up near my feet as I sit here at my studio desk and wistfully look around the room.

to my left

straight ahead

 to my right

I need to respond to emails from friends that came in last week while we were on vacation. Need to edit more photos of the trip to update my other blog. Need to work on pieces begun and abandoned. Need to rust more cotton. Need to sit and wistfully look around the studio because it isn't going to happen today no matter how many what ifs are flitting through my mind right now. Ever have one of those days?

Thursday, January 12, 2012

In the studio

xxxxxxxx
patch 3 hand stitched to the rust boro piece
keeping it simple

Monday, January 9, 2012

Not so much

From circles


to squares 


to rectangles


and now lines.


All to be used in good time. And, as usual, rusting one piece sparked an idea. When the line above was unfolded, it looked like this.


Folded in thirds and wrapped so the cotton circled the gear once, this piece rusted over 5 days. In places, I managed to match the lines perfectly. In places, not so much. It's the not so much areas that had me seeing a finished piece made of numerous sections of lines sewn together boro style. Can you see it? I can.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

In the studio

Made a bit of progress on the rusted boro piece today. 

Sunday, December 4, 2011

That kind of day

Yesterday was a rare day. It was a day in the studio...Pam's studio. 

A just do it  kind of day.

A day for stitching.

A day for admiring work. 

A day for what ifs

What if  I paint on the back?
 
 What if  I dip it?

What if  I let it soak?

Will it run? 

It was that kind of day.

A day for taking photos of friends.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Kansas bound

This time tomorrow morning I'll be at the airport waiting to catch a couple of planes that will, ultimately, take me to Kansas for short visit with Pam.  We're both in need of some time to stop and breathe, relax a bit, create a bit, stitch a bit. Oh heck! Maybe even bitch a bit. Well, probably not the last, but we'll definitely chat a bit...or not. Yep. It's that kind of friendship.

 Some of the rusted boro pieces

 as well as the latest stitching on black cotton 
will find their way into my carry on bag 
for those times when we decide to just sit and be.

 
And back home, the rusting will continue in my absence.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Rusted boro

The title of this post really should be Over thinking it, but rusted boro was more appealing...I think. Midst all the preparations for turkey day, working on the Christmas cards and life as usual in a household with 4 year olds, I managed to squeeze in a bit of time to crop the rusted cottons and sew them together.

They went from this                                                             to this

























and now they're hanging like this.


In my own defense, it was viewing photos of indigo boro online that got me here what with all the wonderful contrasts in hues of indigo, patterns, stitches, etc. Well, that and I'd already decided that a bit of contrast was needed. So out came the box of rusted cottons et voila! Here we are. 

One could put forth the suggestion that I am procrastinating a bit longer before starting the patching process. One would probably be right too. Hmmm...what were those mantras I adopted this year? Oh yeah...keep it simple and just do it. Ha! Obviously, I have work to do.


Sunday, November 13, 2011

Magic

Those of you who follow the blog have heard me mention my friend Pam. It's to her house that I escape for the artist retreats. And it's her that I Skype with on Fridays as often as life allows.

Life, however, has been throwing curve balls at both of us lately. Mine came in the form of the snow storm and power outages that plagued Connecticut for a week...or more in some towns. At some point, our curve balls have been family related. My charming little urchins have a way of frying my brain to the point where I wonder if senility is setting in early...when I can think coherently enough to wonder, that is. 52 is too early for senility, isn't it? Please say yes.

Back to the art stuff. Two lengths of discharged fabric hang on one display board while rusted cottons hang on another - both waiting for inspiration and/or genius to strike. During our most recent Skype session, I mentioned to Pam that I've recently become intrigued with the Japanese boro method of patching and thought it could be interesting to attempt a simple version of it with the discharged fabric.

I'm not quite sure at what point...or even why now...that I moved the computer over to show Pam the current arrangement of these rusted cottons, but she took one look at them and said,

 
 Crop it.

So I did. And that became this


Can you see it? A piece? It's there. And to think that Pam looked at it for...oh...maybe 3 seconds before saying the magic words which took rusted cottons that have just been hanging around in the studio and transformed them into an actual piece of rusted boro cloth. There's work to be done, sure, but now there's a story to be told. 

Pam worked her magic with the discharged fabric, and possibly even my Christmas cards, in the space of...hmmm...5 minutes tops. My snow storm and twin fried brain was amazed by it all. Hopefully the amazement will lift soon. After all, there's work to be done by Friday.

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