Friday, April 30, 2010
Rachel Parris - Birmingham, Alabama
2. What is your creative process? I think my creative process is mostly internal. I get an idea pictured in my head. Since my ideas generally exceed my technical skills, I then do a lot of thinking about how to bring it to life. I can still get easily sabotaged by the basics.
3. What's your style? Wow! It is hard to think of myself as having a style. I tend to be a story teller. So I think my style at this stage of the game is mostly whole cloth pictorial. I really enjoy working with digital images on fabric.
4. How long have you been a quilt maker/fiber artist? Almost four years.
5. Do you listen to music when you make art? I am quite comfortable with silence, so, I do not always listen to music when I work. But when I do, it is usually meditative or jazz or country.
6. What do you do when you are blocked creatively? I get outside, read my favorite blogs, read books by good teachers, or just leave it alone for a while.
7. Do you teach? I do not teach. I student.
8. Are there artistic endeavors that you have yet to do? Tons. I want to do all sorts of surface design, portrait quilts,etc.,etc.I want to learn to draw.
9. How do you balance your family life and art? Whichever one needs the most attention at the moment gets it. But if it is a toss-up, the family side of the coin wins.
10. What is the best part about what you do? Meeting wonderful people. Growing, growing, growing.
http://rachelparris.blogspot.com/
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Joanell Connolly - Huntington Beach, CA
2. What is your creative process? Creative process. Usually starts with a piece of fabric or a color combination. I never draw out the design but often will start with a sketch or mini collage - and work from there.
3. What's your style? Abstract, even when I am working with a photo as the center piece. Surface design techniques and words have been part of my work for more than 20 years.
4. How long have you been a quilt maker/fiber artist? I did my first Art in the Park show in '88, working with hand painted silk and paper earrings. (paper is fiber just not fabric). I was a wearable artist for years, am/was as Fairfield and Bernina fashion show designer. The transition to quilts just sort of happened. I burned out making and selling clothing - Quilts just evolved.
5. Do you listen to music when you make art? what kind? I usually work in silence. Sometimes in the afternoon I turn on CSI or one of the many police reruns. Background noise without much plot.
6. What do you do when you are blocked creatively? Doesn't happen often but if it peeks in, I go do other stuff. Somethings cannot be forced.
7. Do you teach? Wish I felt more comfortable teaching.
8. Are there artistic endeavors that you have yet to do? Don't know. I am waiting for my next big direction to present itself. So far, these passions have just appeared.
9. How do you balance your family life and art? I have always had a very supported husband - so balancing has not been an issue - except sometimes in my head.
10. What is the best part about what you do? The best part of doing what I do is the privilege of being able to do it. The hardest part is remembering what a privilege it is.
www.joanell.com
http://joanellconnolly.blogspot.com/
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Terry Grant - Portland, OR
2. What is your creative process? I plan in my head as I am falling asleep each night, then the ideas that are still there when I wake up may become a quick sketch, either by hand or computer. It all ends up in Illustrator eventually, where I make a simple line drawing of my composition that I print at full size. (I tape a lot of sheets of paper together) I use this as my guide, but am apt to make changes as I work. Pulling the fabrics to find what works is my favorite part. I use a lot of commercial fabrics, but often— well almost always—alter them in some way to suit my needs.
3. What's your style? Most of my work is representational, but definitely abstracted rather than attempting photo realism. My work is graphic and incorporates rich color and strong line elements.
4. How long have you been a quilt maker/fiber artist? I have been an artist all my life—quilter for at least 30 years—fiber artist about 20 years.
5. Do you listen to music when you make art? I often listen to music. As a Baby Boomer, child of the '60s, I listen to the music of that generation—The Beatles, James Taylor, Bob Dylan, Joanie Mitchell, etc.
6. What do you do when you are blocked creatively? Draw and look at art. A trip to the Portland Art Museum or downtown galleries always gets my creative brain percolating.
7. Do you teach? I used to teach and am seriously considering doing it again. My favorite part of teaching is learning all the things my students teach me. It never fails and it is amazing.
8. Are there artistic endeavors that you have yet to do? I am really interested in making silver jewelry. I have taken a couple classes, but have yet to get myself set up to work on my own.
9. How do you balance your family life and art? When my children were home and small I worked on art after they went to bed. Sometimes late into the night. I am glad I don't have to do that anymore. I have a very supportive husband and family and I have learned to make time for my art.
10. What is the best part about what you do? Two things: Working alone and "in the zone" and then sharing what I do with my artist friends. A more recent "good thing" has been writing about what I do. I have been writing my blog for nearly 5 years, written magazine articles and am currently finishing up work on a collaborative book.
www.andsewitgoes.blogspot.com
Etsy shop: www.terrygrant.etsy.com
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Virginia Spiegel - Byron, IL
2. What is your creative process? I work very intuitively after exhaustively researching a topic. I think and read a great deal about topics of interest to me. When I am ready to begin work on a new series or artwork, I endeavor to not THINK, but to FEEL and to directly translate that to my artwork. I definitely have something specific I am talking about in each artwork and usually write a one sentence statement of intent before beginning an artwork or series. But I endeavor to bring enough mystery to the artwork that viewers may bring their own experience to their response/interpretation.
3. What's your style? I work almost exclusively as an abstract artist, but do occasionally work figuratively. I "make" all my materials for art quilts from white fabric by painting (with many tools including brushes, stamps, and brayers) and screen printing. It is a very meditative process and integral to the type of art quilts I produce. A very common response to my artwork is that no photo ever conveys the depth and complexity apparent upon personal viewing.
4. How long have you been a quilt maker/fiber artist? About twelve years.
5. Do you listen to music when you make art? No. When I am doing hand work I listen to the "Great Lectures" series on topics unrelated to art or to my academic background. Recent topics have been about the Civil War, music, American history, and economics.
6. What do you do when you are blocked creatively? Fill the well. One way I do this by switching art forms. If I have been working exclusively in art quilts, I work on mixed-media collage or sculpture (with wax), paint on stretched canvas, or make an artist book. Additionally I usually am away from the computer and my studio from long stretches during the summer months for travel, adventures in the Boundary Waters, family events, and landscape gardening. These months are crucial to my artistic production and development as they are a space for me to think about my art and its trajectory in a subconscious way. I have a general and long-standing goal of reading five books per week (undergraduate English majors learn to read very fast). I read widely and eclectically with occasional bouts of vertical depth on one subject or with one author. I also read about and look at a lot of art outside of the art quilt world. I also find writing, photography, and making poems to be activities that are self-perpetuating in terms of inspiration and integral to the creation of my art quilts.
7. Do you teach? I used to teach, but found it severely limited my studio time. I am an
artist who needs a lot of time for process -- thinking, experimenting and creating.
8. Are there artistic endeavors that you have yet to do? No, but I appreciate that I can switch among many forms that I like to do and are all very different in approach and concept. I have learned that while I appreciate many art forms, the media I have the most affinity for are fiber, in all its forms, and paint. They both seem very warm and alive media to me.
9. How do you balance your family life and art? I am learning to limit computer time to the bare minimum and to decline, with regret, opportunities that do not directly align with my current artistic goals and intent.
10. What is the best part about what you do? The freedom to choose what I do and to be the sole arbiter of its worth.
My new book - "Wild at the Edges: Inspiration from a Creative Life"
". . . wise insights into living a genuine life as a person and as an
artist. The photos of nature and art dazzle, inspire, and soothe the soul."
http://bit.ly/7RMmrS
Monday, April 26, 2010
Desiree Habicht - Riverside, CA
2. What is your creative process? I keep many sketch journals and sketch almost everyday, I also have a bigger sketchbook by my bedside that I can draw out ideas. If I get an idea suddenly for a quilt or for a fabric I will write it on my dry erase board until I have time to get back to it.
3. What's your style? I don't like being categorized or put into a box as an artist but I would have to say I am a pictoralist mostly but I know my artwork will continue to develop and change.
4. How long have you been a quilt maker/fiber artist? I started quilt making in 2001 and soon jumped into making art quilts when I entered a challenge in a guild.
5. Do you listen to music when you make art? Sometimes, but often I am so focused in that creative zone that I am happy to just have the quiet.
6. What do you do when you are blocked creatively? Jump over to something else, gardening, going to museums, dive into some books, visit with other artists all can be very motivating and encouraging. If all that fails I just force myself to keep going.
7. Do you teach? I do teach occasionally, I am trying to do more of it. I think my favorite part is seeing the excitement in the whole creative process in the faces of others.
8. Are there artistic endeavors that you have yet to do? Always, you never know what door will open next and where it will lead.
9. How do you balance your family life and art? I find this to be the biggest challenge, it takes time to do any interest and if its a business requires more time and energy. Like most other working women, I struggle with how to fit so much in when there are only 24 hours in a day!
10. What is the best part about what you do? It's this whole creative journey I am on and the wonderful people I am meeting along the way.
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Susie Monday - Pipe Creek, TX
2. What is your creative process? I have a very ingrained and deliberate creative process, one that I've essentially used since I was 12 years old. First I settle on a notion of something I want to say, explore or examine in a piece of work. I first collect ideas, visually, verbally, in reality and virtually, taking digital pictures, journaling and sketching, piling up fabric and colors and images. Then I play around with what I have, playing with scale, composition and story-telling. Then I produce, editing and polishing and working technically to do what needs to be done, and then I start all over again!
3. What's your style? My style is somewhere between expressive, narrative and abstract, but not non-objective. Surface design and a wild variety of materials, recycled and reclaimed
4. How long have you been a quilt maker/fiber artist? I've been a serious, professional fiber artist for about 12 years now, but I've been fascinated with and worked with fabric, pattern and color all my life, since I could hold a pair of scissors.
5. Do you listen to music when you make art? No music usually, I am the world's least auditory person. I do sometimes like to work with mindless TV on because it occupies an otherwise over critical part of my brain chatter. I can pay attention on that level to the tube, and the inner critique lets me alone.
6. What do you do when you are blocked creatively? I am rarely blocked creatively, but sometimes I am over-committed and over-involved with other-than making art. To get back in the studio, I usually have to find a deadline to meet or invent one!
7. Do you teach? Yes What’s your favorite part about teaching? I teach lots of different things, both at my home/studio in the Texas Hill Country (my El Cielo Workshop retreats), at the Southwest School of Art and Craft and Majestic Ranch, around and about at guilds and conferences and shows, but the common thread, I hope, is an interesting mix of creative process and surface design techniques. I also teach in an International Program at a local community college where my students are Spanish speaking teachers from 5 different Central American countries. There, I teach cognitive psychology theory and practice as one of a team, and technical skills these teachers can use in their rural schools -- like bookmaking, using recycled materials in toys and games, etc. It's a really incredible program..
8. Are there artistic endeavors that you have yet to do? Always. I am really getting tempted to take up painting after not touching a canvas since graduating with a BA in studio art in 1970. Also I am always working on something arty around the house.
9. How do you balance your family life and art? It helps to live where I do, and how I do. I drive 20 minutes to an hour to get to any stores, so that keeps me home and/or in the studio unless I am teaching outside of El Cielo. I don't have children and I do have a woman partner, and both those choices make it a bit easier to balance home life and art work. My partner is also a teacher and artist (college teacher, videographer, producer and writer), so we both value our creative time alone and together. I am traveling more this year to teach and that is a new challenge for both of us --finding balance, ways to work on my art when on the road, and how to keep having fun together, too. When I play, I play! When I work, I get it done, really trying not to waste time or fritter my studio time away.
10. What is the best part about what you do? The best part of what I do is getting to do it all and getting to do it my way. No one can tell me how to get my work done, or how to get my life done. I love the part of teaching that is sharing and helping others to reach into creative directions that they haven't tried before, to take themselves seriously as artists and makers -- I truly believe we are on this earth to do our best and most creative work, no matter what field its in, and I try to empower others to do so. My work as an artist is what makes my teaching authentic, if I didn't do my own creative work I don't know how I could be a teacher.
Saturday, April 24, 2010
Yvonne Porcella - Modesto, CA
2. What is your creative process? I just go for it in most quilt designs. I have also done small sketches and enlarged those to size for my quilts made with applique over a full size cartoon.
3. What's your style? I only made one whole cloth quilt, my first attempts at a baby quilt gift. I have done all styles of quiltmaking except traditional or classic. Only quilt made for a bed was a commission for Jim Henson, all my quilts are made for the wall.
4. How long have you been a quilt maker/fiber artist? Do I have to tell you how long?
My work was published in many books and magazines probably before you were born.
5. Do you listen to music when you make art? I like silence. If I had to listen to music it would be classical and opera.
6. What do you do when you are blocked creatively? Make something, anything!
7. Do you teach? Yes. What’s your favorite part about teaching? I love meeting students, showing the path to making their own work. I also like to lecture on many subjects, wearable art, history of art quilts, personal journey.
8. Are there artistic endeavors that you have yet to do? Oh yea, I know there are more quilts in my future, just can't wait until they appear. I was an oil painter in the past, if I had to pick an area of improvement it probably would be in improving drawing skills and mastering photoshop.
9. How do you balance your family life and art? They balance me. When I first started making fiber art, I used each interruption by family or life as an opportunity to re-evaluate the
work when I had the chance to return to my work space. When my children were old enough to enjoy a trip with me they were invited to see that Mom was indeed working while away from home.
10. What is the best part about what you do? The only thing I don't like to do is paperwork. Traveling and meeting people is the best part, making new friends is a gift.
Friday, April 23, 2010
Gerrie Congdon - Portland, OR
2. What is your creative process? I usually get a visual in my mind. Perhaps I see something that sparks my imagination. Sometimes, it is a word that I want to translate. I create my own fabric with dye, paint and discharge. Sometimes, I create the cloth for a specific piece and sometimes the cloth dictates the art. Because I do not want to cut into the fabric until I know a design will work, I often print photos of the fabric and cut it up to work out the design. Sometimes I do a sketch.
3. What's your style? I definitely love to work abstract. However, as I said before, surface design of cloth is an integral part of my work.
4. How long have you been a quilt maker/fiber artist? Then I retired in 1999, I discovered Simply Quilts with Alex Anderson. The first show that I watched was with Katy Pasquini Masopaust. I was in awe of what she did with fabric. I got hooked. I started with a few traditional quilts, but I quickly moved on to art quilts. I formed an art quilt group in Santa Rosa, CA where I lived at the time and we called ourselves The Pointless Sisters.
5. Do you listen to music when you make art? For some reason, I work better with the tv on in the background. I don't really pay too much attention, but the noise of people talking seems to stimulate my right brain.
6. What do you do when you are blocked creatively? I make small art quilts out of scraps. I really love doing this. I also look at art, not art quilts, to see how painters and sculptors and mixed media artists express themselves in their work.
7. Do you teach? No, I have been asked to teach, but at my age, I do not want to give up time that can be spent in my studio.
8. Are there artistic endeavors that you have yet to do? I would really like to have my work juried into one of the BIG shows, like Quilt National, Visions or Art Quilt Elements. A girl can dream!!
9. How do you balance your family life and art? I am so blessed to have a very supportive partner in my husband, Steve. We are both retired. He knows that I hate house work. I love to cook and make art. He does every thing else. I love making time in my schedule to spend with my grandchildren. We moved to Portland so that we can be a part of their lives.
10. What is the best part about what you do? Being in the zone and having the cloth and the ideas flow. The satisfaction of looking at a piece of art that I have created and knowing that it is successful. The incredible group of friends that I have gathered who share my passion and support and sustain me.
Gerrie Congdon in Portland, OR
Visit my blog at http://www.gericondesigns.com/weblog/
Thursday, April 22, 2010
Paula Chung - Zepher Cove, NV
2. What is your creative process? I study nature, it's form, color, line. I photograph subjects that I find interesting or have a message, then work directly on that photograph to create my designs.
3. What's your style? I do abstract and pictorial appliqued pieces.
4. How long have you been a quilt maker/fiber artist? I have been using the present process for about 5 years, but have been an art quilter for about 8 years. I had started traditional quilting in the 1970s, but lost interest in it shortly after that.
5. Do you listen to music when you make art? what kind? I listen to classical music or jazz.
6. What do you do when you are blocked creatively? When I'm blocked, I go back to nature and study. Sometimes, I take a detour, studying new artists or learning new techniques, then try to use that knowledge and skill to another project.
7. Do you teach? No.
8. Are there artistic endeavors that you have yet to do? Always. One goal I have is to meld my study of painting with my fiber art. The painting experience does inform my art, especially in the use of color, but I'd like to see the two be incorporated somehow.
9. How do you balance your family life and art? Since we have no children, balancing my family life is easier than for most artists. My husband and I are retired, pursuing our passions. I do tend to be obsessive and work very long hours and that does create some tension. My husband has grown to understand that part of my personality. But I tend to lose track of time, or try to squeeze in too much in too little time, and I'm learning to monitor that better.
10. What is the best part about what you do? The best part of creating art is the planning--that big moment when you have an inspiration. Then the process of making that inspiration into something tangible. As humans, we are always trying to escape. When we're creating, we get lost in the moment, where nothing else exists. The creating is what all artists live for, to be in that timeless euphoria.
visit Paula's website in the right column
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Terry Waldron - Anaheim, CA
2. What is your creative process? planning, drawing, notes, etc. My creative process is all internal. I don't draw or make a plan that anyone else can see. I'm ready to go when I see it inside my head. I freely cut the fabrics impromptu. The fabrics seem to choose themselves. I guess that's the value of having much too much cloth in my studio!
3. What's your style? I'm a pictorial artist, but my pictures are the way I see the world, not necessarily the way the world really looks. Many times, my work is the way I WISH the world was...
4. How long have you been a quilt maker/fiber artist? I started making fiber art in 1994, so it's been 16 years now.
5. Do you listen to music when you make art? what kind? Jazz has always been my music since high school, but my best work is done when there is a Cary Grant or an Audrey Hepburn movie on TCM television. It puts me "in the zone!"
6. What do you do when you are blocked creatively? I don't get blocked! I actually have so many ideas that carving out enough time to do each piece as carefully as I like to do my work has been my problem.
7. Do you teach? What's your favorite part about teaching? When I was 4 1/2 years old I decided I wanted to be a teacher, and it happened! Now that I've retired from teaching school, I am as busy as ever showing my work and teaching my art techniques at guilds and conferences all over the country. Again, how lucky can I be!
8. Are there artistic endeavors that you have yet to do? Oh so many... But every day, it seems, there are wonderful opportunities coming my way, sometimes very small ones and occasionally big ones. It started when I sold 2 pieces to the new St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica where my brother was born so many years ago. Who would have thought that would happen? I will tell you about my other secret ambitions if and when they come true!
9. How do you balance your family life and art? If you know how to do that, PULEEZ tell me how it can possibly be done! Everyday one or the other has to be sacrificed to some degree.
10. What is the best part about what you do? For me the best part is the people that I get to meet on this journey. When I teach and see people find out that they are much more talented and able than they ever thought, that makes me glow. But that glow is simply the reflection from THEIR faces.
visit Terry's website in the right column under BTS Artists
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Jane LaFazio - San Diego, CA
2. What is your creative process? planning, drawing, notes, etc. Just start making, working intuitively, then assemble smaller pieces into a large piece.
3. What's your style? Abstract, pictorial, surface design, whole cloth, etc. Given those choices I guess surface design.
4. How long have you been a quilt maker/fiber artist? About 7 years (I’ve been a full time artist for 12 years)
5. Do you listen to music when you make art? what kind? No. TV’s on.
6. What do you do when you are blocked creatively? That just doesn’t seem to happen. I have a zillion ideas and directions I’d like to try.
7. Do you teach? What's your favorite part about teaching? Yes, I teach a lot. I love hearing the students share their work and processes with the others, and the support and feedback in a class setting.
8. Are there artistic endeavors that you have yet to do? I just wove my first scarf (in a workshop), so I can check that off the list. I’d like to do more felting.
9. How do you balance your family life and art? I have a very supportive husband and a not so clean house.
10. What is the best part about what you do? Makin’ art!!! I love love love the creative process and making things.
visit Jane's website and blog - right column
Monday, April 19, 2010
Wen Redmond - Strafford, NH
2. What is your creative process? planning, drawing, notes, etc. I am a process person. My process is fed by my love of being outdoors. I’m passionate about coming up with ideas and working out the kinks. It speaks to me. Part of that process is photography. I can see the most exquisite scenes or combinations of patterns and want to share that beauty. My art represents these moments. They are what lie beneath. I bring them back to share, to remember, to remind. These moments become my source, my well. This is when inspiration strikes, allowing thoughts percolate up from the unconscious and become my art, or poetry or prayers.
3. What's your style? Abstract, pictorial, surface design, whole cloth, etc. I do all of these. My main works are digital, collage, and surface design; sometimes works will feature one of these styles but often they blend together.
4. How long have you been a quilt maker/fiber artist? I took to fiber in High School- making my own clothes and prom dresses, graduating with a BS in Home Economics from collage. I started the artistic part of my fiber-oriented career with batik soft sculpture in the late 1970’s. When I moved to NH and joined a quilt guild I mastered hand piecing, and quilting, slowing processing back into doing whatever I chose to do. I embrace the pioneering fiber art movement of today.
5. Do you listen to music when you make art? what kind? Music comes and goes. Sometimes, I need it to provide distraction from outside sounds, other times I need the meditative, joyous, blues, even rock music to bring in certain flow. It all depends on my state of mind and where I am in the creative process. Often I work in complete silence because my inner muse is whispering.
6. What do you do when you are blocked creatively? I haven’t been blocked in years, especially now- I almost feel like I’m bent over backwards on top of a rocket, watching the inspirations wash over me as I fly skyward. However, that is not to say I haven’t been blocked. I find that is time to step back and feed the soul by walking on a beach, in the woods or sitting by a lake; or taking myself to museums or galleries. I journal; I make hand bound books where drawings are kept, inspirational quotes and clippings. I can be inspired by a well put phrase or poem in addition to the visual.
7. Do you teach? What's your favorite part about teaching? I have taught for at least 20 years at a very easy pace. I kept this slow allowing plenty of studio time. I have ‘put myself out there’ this year and will do so for a while until I need to retreat. I love interacting with fellow fiber fellows. The energy is greater than the whole and I always learn from my students.
Current Workshops
Holographic Memories Fabric * Transformations Workshop Series; Fab Fabric Painting Techniques, Stupendous Fabric Stamping, Irresistible! Resists and Masks, Make your Mark! Mono Printing, Gelatin Printing, Easy Image Transfer, Journal Creations, The Thermal Facts, Digging into Digital Fabric Printing, Mixed Media Collage Workshop, Piecing in the Flow, an intuitive curved piecing technique, Petite Collage "Inspiration=Art Pieces
8. Are there artistic endeavors that you have yet to do? Yes, I am by no means without plans. This is such a vibrant green growing thing.
9. How do you balance your family life and art? That is a challenge that many female artists face. I chose to have a family and for many years worked in bits and pieces snatching time here and there. After the children left home, I had a difficult time adjusting to longer working hours. Now I can work and not know the passage of time. This is a gift I honor.
10. What is the best part about what you do? I love what I do! I love the processes, the places I go when I see color or get inspirations, and the connections with artists. Artists tend to be a little left of center. They see more, feel deeply; they are kindred spirits on so many levels. I must do my art.“
“Art enables us to find ourselves and lose ourselves at the same time.” Thomas Merton
Beneath the Surface - Artists
Top 10 Questions
1. How do you describe yourself?
2. What is your creative process? planning, drawing, notes, etc.
3. What's your style? Abstract, pictorial, surface design, whole cloth, etc.
4. How long have you been a quilt maker/fiber artist?
5. Do you listen to music when you make art? what kind?
6. What do you do when you are blocked creatively?
7. Do you teach? What's your favorite part about teaching?
8. Are there artistic endeavors that you have yet to do?
9. How do you balance your family life and art?
10. What is the best part about what you do?