This quilt show is part of the Hartford Public Library’s art walk. The opening reception is Friday, January 10, 2020 at 5:30 p.m. The show itself will be up through the end of February.
The Connecticut region of Studio Art Quilt Associates supports and promotes professional fiber artists and educators as well as quilters developing fine art skills.
Tuesday, December 31, 2019
Wednesday, October 30, 2019
Trove of Twelve - October 2019 update
SAQA
CT: Our Trove of Twelves (2020)
This
is a companion exhibit to our signature exhibition Local Color: 3Rs which will
begin traveling in 2020. Submissions are
accepted at the January 11, 2020 and March 7, 2020 SAQA CT membership meetings.
For
“Our Trove of Twelves”, members of
SAQA CT are encouraged to dig into their trove of 12 x 12’s or create new pieces
and submit for showing.
Purpose: Educate the public on the variety of techniques used by fiber artists.
Theme: No specific theme requested.
Venue: The Slater Memorial Museum, and other venues
to be determined.
Requirements:
·
12 x 12s should
be on stretcher bars/canvas, be wired, and be ready for hanging
·
Works must be in
good showing condition and submitted in a cover/bag labeled with the artist’s
name.
·
Each piece should
be submitted with a brief (20 word) description of the technique(s) used
·
Members may
submit up to 3 entries
·
Non-juried
showcase
Entry Fee: $10
for up to three (3) entries
Entry Dates:
January 11 and March 7, 2020 at SAQA CT membership meetings
Exhibition
Committee Contact:
If you
have any questions about “Our Trove of
Twelves”, please contact:
Maureen
Lopes at mlopes@snet.net
***Based
on available wall space and entries received, the exhibition committee reserves
the right to further curate submissions to fit into the show. Additional venues
to Slater Memorial Museum may become available.
Updated
October 18, 2019
Sunday, September 22, 2019
SAQA-CT Retreat - Sign Up
There is still room available at the SAQA-CT Annual Art Quilting Retreat at the Incarnation Center.
Contact Christine Blais with any questions.
Register at SAQA website.
Contact Christine Blais with any questions.
Register at SAQA website.
American Barns and Farms - Catherine Whall Smith
American Barns and Farms - September 7-28, 2019
Catherine Whall Smith and Jane Collins
ARTS OF TOLLAND
22 Tolland Green
Tolland, CT
Catherine Whall Smith and Jane Collins
ARTS OF TOLLAND
22 Tolland Green
Tolland, CT
Tuesday, July 30, 2019
Tuesday, July 9, 2019
West Hartford Art League - Call for Entry
Do you live in West Hartford? Even if you don't live there, do you love West Hartford? Have you created art the showcases the city? If so you might be interested in these CALLS FOR ARTISTS. See link below.
West Hartford in pictures
West Hartford in pictures
Sunday, June 30, 2019
Visionary - Regional Call for Entry
see happening in the years 2020 and 2021 or what might happen in the future. Or think
about other ways that we "see.” Some examples might include "seeing" from a distant
vantage point or a close-up view, "seeing" through play or discovery, "seeing" through
color or light and shadow.
Consider adding text to your piece so that viewers can see your idea in another way.
|
Also consider that negative space in artwork can be described as the space we don't
|
see. You could incorporate thoughtful use of negative space as part of your design.
Negative space is not the same as negative concepts--but you could explore negative
concepts if you wish as well.
concepts if you wish as well.
Quilts for this exhibit must be 20” x 20”, wall-hung, with a standard 4” rod pocket.
Juror: Carol Larson, http://www.live2dye.com/about.php?ID=2
Accepted Artwork Delivery Date: March 16, 2020 (or later) Preview of the Exhibit: Vermont Quilt Festival, June 24-27, 2020 Maine Premiere: Maine Fiberarts, July 1 – August 29, 2020
Venue Info: Maine Fiberarts
13 Main Street, Topsham, ME 04086www.mainefiberarts.org
Juror: Carol Larson, http://www.live2dye.com/about.php?ID=2
Accepted Artwork Delivery Date: March 16, 2020 (or later) Preview of the Exhibit: Vermont Quilt Festival, June 24-27, 2020 Maine Premiere: Maine Fiberarts, July 1 – August 29, 2020
13 Main Street, Topsham, ME 04086www.mainefiberarts.org
Thursday, June 27, 2019
News from Carol Vinick
Carol Vinick had her very first art quilt, Amnesty, was juried into Forced to Flee, a global exhibition sponsored by the Studio Art Quilt Associates.
“Bubbie Gross, a quilt of my great grandmother, will be part of a show called The Immigrant at the Mandell Jewish Community Center this summer."
The opening is Sunday, June 30th, from 2-4 pm. The address is 335 Bloomfield Ave, in West Hartford.
Carol will also be “Artisan of the Month” at the Norfolk Artisans Guild for the Month of July. The address is 10 Station Place, off of route 44.
Minutes from June 15th Meeting
Thanks to Kelly Lorraine for the minutes of the June meeting!
On Saturday, June 15, 2019, we met at Close to Home in Orange. We had 18 members in attendance. It was a small but boisterous group. We are so grateful to Close to Home for hosting us!
We started off strong, going straight to our speaker, Martha Sielman. In addition to being SAQA’s executive director since 2004, she is also a professional artist, author, lecturer, curator, juror, and art administrator - all while raising five children!
Recognizing that art quilts were a predecessor to the Modern Quilt Movement, the Modern Quilt Guild requested that Martha write a history of the art quilt. As the art quilt is not a “dead” history but an ongoing movement and story, she co-wrote and recently published Arts Quilts Unfolding. This talk, “Layered & Stitched: The Art Quilt Movement”, was a brief overview of that unfolding.
The end of the 1950s was likely when the first quilt was created for the purpose of making art (rather than an artwork that was created as a decorative bed covering).
Examples from this time were: Two Pods by Jean Ray Laury which was very indicative of the style of this era; Girl Combing Her Hair by Leslie Gabrielse; Bridget Quilt by Therese May.
Most of these pieces are large, as these early works were typically made by people who were used to constructing bedquilts.
In 1971, the Whitney Museum of American Art held “Abstract Design in American Quilts” featuring primarily Amish quilts. This was the first time the quilts were taken off the bed and hung on the walls, and the designs very much echoed what was happening in contemporary painting. This event was extremely influential in opening people’s eyes to what art quilts could be and how they could be elevated.
Examples from this time include: Watchtower by Molly Upton; Sailing by Ulva Ugerup; Where Dreams are Born by Joan Schulze; Nude on a Chair by Deborah Ann; Red Rain #2 by Nancy Erickson.
At the time, pieces utilized very basic quilting, such as grids and fill patterns. What has changed over time is what standards are for appropriate quilting.
In 1979, the first Quilt National exhibition was held. (It is worth noting that the 2019 Quilt National exhibition was very heavily abstract.) Over time, we have evolved to primarily three big art quilt competitions: Quilt National, Quilt Visions, and Art Quilt Elements. All three run every other year.
Examples of this time: Cherokee Trail of Tears by Chris Wolf Edmonds; Steens’ Quilt by Charlotte Yde; March Study by Nancy Crow. Nancy was pivotal to the art quilt movement, both because she is so prolific, but in fact, truly because she has taught and influenced so many other art quilters. Another artist of similar note is Michael James (with a piece from this era, Moonshadow).
In the 80s, we start seeing optical illusions. Quilts at this time were still very large.
Examples include: Boxed Illusion by Jean Ray Laury; Robe of the Dragon Rider by Yvonne Porcella, who transitioned from wearables to art; Flowerseed Farm by Holley Junker, the first piece purchased by Marvin Fletcher for his wife, initiating an important art quilt collection, now containing close to 100 pieces; Angel by Deidre Scherer is layered and stitched (but without batting); Framed Improvisational Block by Rosie Lee Tompkins is an example of improvisational piecing, which influenced Nancy Crow at this time; Swimmers by Tim Harding uses layering and slashing silk; Red Zinger by Michael James shows how quilts start breaking out of the rectangular shape; Clear Palisades by Linda MacDonald and Vision of the World by Irene MacWilliam; 7-up Quilt by Ross Palmer Beecher shows a new use of unusual materials;
Stairway to the Stars by Sonya Lee Barrington; Poppies by Ruth McDowell; Corona #2: Solar Eclipse by Caryl Bryer Fallert-Gentry is the first time that a machine quilted art piece won a major award (previously only hand quilted!).
1989 was the FOUNDING OF SAQA! Yvonne Porcella was showing at a gallery who told her that she needed a professional organization, to help buoy her work and to help them be able to explain it.
Examples from this era: High Tech Tucks #35 by Caryl Bryer Fallert-Gentry uses two different colors, seamed and pieced together like piping, then twisted, so that it shows different colors from different viewing directions. The artist frequently explores different ideas and techniques like this, and then teaches it to others; Rio Hondo by Katie Pasquini Masopust. Similarly, Katie develops something, makes several pieces, writes a book, teaches it until she gets bored, then tries something new and repeats the process.
Amigos Muertos by Jonathan Shannon - this piece was banned from AQS in Paducah bc people might be upset by skeletons and death and AIDS, starting great conversation about censorship and opening up what an art quilt can be about; Aged: Covered by WIsdom by Kyoung Ae Cho, made with thin pieces of wood; Willow by Jane Sassaman was called one of the hundred best quilts of the previous century; An Orange for Lunch by Barbara Barrick McKie shows early work using photo transfer and applique; Dashboard Saints: In Memory of St. Christopher by Terrie Hancock Mangat; Alphabet by M Joan Lintault; Money for Nothing by John Lefelholcz is made out of sugar packets sandwiched between netting, with flies on the surface, then painted; Hall of Memory #10: Guard Bear by Nancy Erickson.
Recent works to note: Constructions #45 by Nancy Crow uses improvisational cutting; Triptych: A Hill, A Lake; An Island, A Pond; A Lake, A Bowl by Dorothy Caldwell shows the start of the movement toward Slow Quilting; Precious Water by Hollis Chatelain is the first time a painted quilt won a major award in Houston. As a painted whole cloth - not pieced or appliqued! - it caused enough controversy that the Houston Chronicle printed its picture above the fold; Theatre by Izabella Baykova; Angels of Wrath by Ulva Ugerup is whole cloth, featuring all embroidery and embellishments; Slave Ship Henrietta Marie by Michael Cummings explores his heritage; Ice Crack 2 by Clare Plug was born of a residency in Antarctica; A Time to Dance, September 9, 2008 by Karin Franzen features multiple layers that wave in the wind;
Light and Dark, 1-6 by Chiaki Dosho; Mohammed Sa’ad by Jennifer Bowker; No Room at the Table by Annie Helmericks-Louder; Bridge Motel by Lisa Kijak uses raw edge applique only. Now we are seeing many smaller works; Geometric by Fumiko Nakayama uses reverse applique; Box of Delights by Kate Crossley shows how artists are now exploring how to take the quilt off the wall and into sculpture; American Still Life: Weight of the Nation by the Pixeladies uses headlines from newspapers and other media; March by Eszter Bornemisza exemplifies a newer trend of doing installation work; Wyest (Volcano IV) by Jenny Hearn and 20 and Odd by Carolyn Crump also show the rise of three-dimensional works; Round and Round It Goes by Paula Kovarik; American Pie: 6 of Potholders (coins) in the Kitchen Tarot by Susan Shie shows how art quilts are now social, political, and environmental commentary; When Ponies Dream by Susan Else; Double-Edge Love by Victoria Findlay Wolfe is an example of how modern quilting has exploded in the last decade; disruption by Deidre Adams is experimenting with printed paper instead of batting, then cutting part of the top layers; Regeneration by Betty Busby, who is one of the big art quilt influencers right now; Cherry Blossoms and Moon by Noriko Endo;
Color Story: Roofline by Erin Wilson is completely abstract; Home is Where the Army Sends Us by Kristen LaFlamme; Urban Cathedral by Hope Wilmarth uses gradation to create movement;
Indigo Ice by Judith Content; Leonard by Mary Pal uses layers of cheesecloth; A is for Art by Shannon Conley.
Thank you, Martha, for an insightful talk, as well as your excellent work with SAQA.
------------------------------
Fairfield County Local Connection: Just had a fantastic show at the Easton Public Library. Their next meeting is July 10 at Christina Blais’ house.
Lynne Allen and Christina Blais are looking to have a SAQA-CT Open Studios Tour! If you have questions/ideas/want to help, contact Christina.
Jan Doyle is happy to announce that she just signed a contract to rent a studio space in Branford!
Lisa Walton (SAQA’s current president) will be visiting CT! There will be a potluck open reception at Lynne Allen’s house in Durham on Saturday, July 13. If interested, please RSVP to Lynne (lynne.esq@gmail.com).
September’s meeting date and location are still to be determined.
The main exhibition will be Rail, Roads, and Rivers and the prospectus can be found on the blog. Information about the non-juried portion of the exhibition, Trove of Twelves, can be found on the blog, as well.
Show and Tell:
Margaret Phillips got into Quilt National this year! Then she broke her leg and couldn’t work on her sewing machine so she hand-carved a small printing block and made an abundance of smaller versions of her airplane quilt, which she showed to us.
Mayann Weinberg made a kitchen chair “seatbelt”. She also took her “dream class” w Anne Hesse last year - and made terrific fiber dolls she showed to us.
Carol Vinick got into the SAQA show, Forced to Flee and traveled to the opening in Florida. As one of the artists in attendance, she (and Martha) were interviewed for the video - keep an eye out for it! Also, Carol sold NINE pieces this year! She showed off one of her 12x12 birds, she was an Artisan of the Month in July, and she showed us her portrait of Bubbie Gross (Rebecca Feldman Gross) and portrait of 98yo Margaret Day, who lives in Ireland.
Christina Blais showed us her van Gogh dog, which was a finalist in the Cherrywood fabric challenge. After it came back from touring the world in that exhibition, she entered it in New Canaan - and it won Best in Show!!
Kathy Bagioni showed us her piece, “Gyre” that was juried into the SAQA show, Upcycle!. She utilized paper, plastics, Ikea curtain, and other materials - paper was ironed onto lightweight interfacing and the entire piece was sealed with gel medium over top. She is now working on a series of 12x12s using similar methods.
Lin Olmo showed us a piece “Table for Three” that was in the Fairfield Fiber exhibition, “Garden Party”, and then a work in progress of the same three ladies at the beach.
Laura Lugo showed us her piece from the same “Garden Party” show - the fun is in the embellishment!
Susan Ober showed off her octopus and mermaid piece, “Come Swim with Us” that started with some batik bits at last year’s retreat. She also presented some butterflies she had hand-painted.
Eileen is a first timer to our SAQA regional meeting! She showed us a piece with a series of her initials from “No Rules, No Rulers” group, and a sample of the lingerie bag that she makes for anyone who gets married. She also showed a piece she made that functions as a sampler of a variety of embellishments she uses, and a teaching sampler.
Barbara Dieroff showed us her Garden Party submission, which utilized free motion quilting and template quilting over her own ice-dyed fabric. (She mounted and backed it with foamcore and then signed it on the back.) She is currently working on a new series, “Mother of Pearl”, and showed us some pieces using ruler quilting templates, that are building up to this new series.
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