Stop by to see my:
indigo-dyed and hand-stitched pillows
shibori-stitched, indigo-dyed cotton napkins
assorted silk and cotton indigo-dyed scarves
indigo dyed baby items
Stop by to see my:
indigo-dyed and hand-stitched pillows
shibori-stitched, indigo-dyed cotton napkins
assorted silk and cotton indigo-dyed scarves
indigo dyed baby items
This small hole in a spot that won’t get too much abrasion seemed a perfect spot to test out a spiderweb stitch in rayon thread. We’ll see how it wears.
Thread is Wonderfil Razzle, 100% Rayon, Col RZM13
“The stereotype of the solitary artist working away in private has dominated the recent history of Western art, but in the end we are social beings. The truth is that artists feed off their relationships with other creative people.”
Jessica Hough, “In The Spirit Of Collaboration”
For most of 2018 I’ve been participating in a group collage exercise. It’s modeled on the Karkhana Project of 2003, where 6 artists worked in discrete succession without preconceived plan.
Karkhana is the Urdu term for the imperial-sponsored workshops that produced manuscripts for Mughal Emperors from the sixteenth until the nineteenth century in what today is India and Pakistan. In these workshops, the production for a single work of art was divided among various collaborating “masters.”
Each artists work experience informs their artistic practice:
Luke Reichle costume designer for film/TV
Chris Russell special education teacher, graphic novel artist
Margaret Lazzari public artist, painter, college professor
S. Portico Bowman novelist, college art professor
Johnny Fox gallery preparator, sculptor
Carlyn Clark textile designer, fiber artist
Nancy Kay Turner mixed media artist, art critic
Caryl St. Ama painter/encaustic, college art professor
Geographically the artists were in London, England; Pittsburg, Kansas; Los Angeles, California; and Alberta, Canada.
As life intervened, some members had to move away from Los Angeles and the works traveled from LA to NY, to Vancouver, to Kansas, to Hawaii, to San Diego and to Alberta, Canada.
Before figuring out the structure of this project, Nancy Kay Turner and Margaret Lazzari collaborated on six works on paper casually mailing each work to each other with no particular timeline. These works went back and forth over a year. There was another Karkhana precursor with Caryl St. Ama, Carlyn Clark, Luke Reichle, S. Portico Bowman and Nancy Kay Turner. In that series (called “K1”), Portico did all the first layers and sent them out: therefore, this particular series had an internal compositional structure that easily became identifiable as landscape.
Nancy Kay Turner describes the unfolding process: “once we had eight artists we had to establish a specific rotation (which later circumstances required that we alter) based on an alphabetical order, a set of monthly deadlines, and a few rules. It was decided by all to keep the boundary sacrosanct at fifteen inches square and to stay two-dimensional - mostly because of concerns that the work would get damaged or prove too expensive to send. For most of the participants the process was surprising and challenging, especially because of the monthly deadline. We tabled concerns over ownership and possible sales to be discussed upon completion of the project.”
“I found the process to be freeing”, concluded Margaret Lazzari. “I was almost never in control of what I received and almost never in control of the final product. Because of the lack of ownership, I took chances that I realize I should take more often with my own work…I found myself thinking more about form than meaning, and was willing to just let the meaning come through once the marks were made”.
For Margaret Lazzari “working on the third to the fifth layers was the best part”. Here is
In January 2018, a group of 8 artists, corralled and inspired by Nancy Kay Turner, began a new permutation of the project. Each artist created the first layer on two surfaces and then sent them on their way. Eventually everyone worked on all 16 pieces (though one went astray and was never found). The artists were asked to participate because they were connected to someone in the group – either as a teacher, mentor, colleague or former student. The artists chosen all have diverse art practices that encompass drawing, mixed -media, digital imagery, painting, and sculpture.
The Karkhana model is particularly exciting in art-making today as artists across divides (gender, age, geography) can collaborate to produce artworks that are at one point in time uniquely theirs, but by the end of the process the works are completely hybrid. What was historically an actual physical workshop with many skilled workers in the same place became instead a loosely defined collaborative network.
Each artist had a different response to the challenges posed with this new way of working.
Johnny Fox noted, “I found the entire concept to be quite intriguing. Responding to the disparate approaches and contradictory styles each artist employed in order to create this body of work was immensely enjoyable and challenging”.
“Karkhana collaboration is a space in which to drop pieces of myself. Traces of what I believed to be essential are covered over, or torn away and I’m forced to reconsider my attachments,” S. Portico Bowman.
Caryl St. Ama related, “I approached the Karkhana project with a bit of hesitation. I spent a long time looking at the work and finally developed a technique that worked for me by photographing each piece before working on it in Procreate on my Ipad”.
The biggest challenge for Nancy Kay Turner was “that I was more ‘product’ oriented than I had imagined. My desire was to fix what I saw as compositional issues, which may be the result of my decades-long career as both a critic and a teacher. I often employed my Iphone as a tool to take pictures of various solutions before committing to one.”
Chris Russell, who has long been engaged with collaborative mail art exchanges, discovered that “the process is always interesting and new and it tends to bring out very different approaches, and even use of different media than any solo art practice. The Karkhana project created by Nancy Turner has developed into something strange and wonderful in these expansive mail exchanges. For me, this was, by far, the most challenging mail art collaboration I’ve been involved with.”
Participants were allowed to erase, remove, or paint over earlier marks if necessary for the composition.
Each mixed-media piece has a diaristic element as every artist was instructed to write on the back and to note the date of arrival, and when they finished it, and of course, to sign the back. Some artists added notes about mood or a particular emotional trial they were going through.
Artists were instructed to take a before and after picture of every work received and send it to S. Portico Bowman who created a website especially for this conceptual project. Please visit www.karkhanaproject.weebly.com to see the evolution and more, detailed images of the project.
Many of the artists discussed how the process shifted considerably depending on which layer they were working on.
Luke Reichle, who moved to Vancouver, Canada for work, noted that the project was “a lesson in collaboration, partnership, and international shipping charges. It turns out that Canada is an actual foreign country!” but concluded,
“Customs, duties and brokerage fees…pricey.
Getting to work with this group of artists…priceless.”
I did the final layer on Money Laundering. I tore the piece in half, taped it back together and added historical references to commerce from around the world.
For me, “in the beginning the process was quick but as the layers built up it became a much more thoughtful and labored undertaking. It was as if I was having a wordless conversation with each of the artists who had worked before me. Sometimes my response was strictly to the composition of the piece, and other times the work evoked a memory that guided what I did. In the end, I found that the process made me think about what I put on the paper in a different way than I have before.”
Just like in real life, some pieces were easy to work on while others were nearly impossible or impassable.
The creation of this conceptual body of work echoed a solo creative practice, which is filled with doubts, anxieties, exhilaration, surprise, fear, and ultimately joy.
In the end, everyone came through.
We already miss the chance to work together and are considering our next Karkhana collaboration.
My scrap pile keeps getting smaller. I keep a jar next to my sewing machine and another one in my handstitching kit. As I clip threads I toss them in the jar. My original intent was just to keep the floor clean, but I became very intrigued with how it looked, so I got a big jar and kept filling it up. Today I was looking around for something to put underneath this sheer layer of fabric and stuffed some of the threads in. After slashing the top layer the threads are revealed and add texture, color and dimension.
Continuing with my daily sketch, today I used random bits and bobs found at hand. Not much to look at, but the concept of making cloth from scraps of cloth is an interesting one. And the idea that the stitches attaching the scraps become the structure of the new cloth bears further exploration. Not sure where to go next with it.
A couple of years ago I was lucky to get a fancy new sewing machine. In the last couple of weeks I sat down and actually tried to learn how to use it! Most of my day-to-day sewing didn’t require any special knowledge. But I’ve been looking at all those stitches it could make and have never used. I had this bit of canvas I’d been using to playing around with painting stripes. Fairly uninteresting. So I picked a stitch and used it to create a little dialog with the stripes. Now I really want to know what all those stitches look like.
I’ve been away from my work for months now. Rebuilding a house, carving out a workroom and figuring out how to effectively and efficiently set up a dye workspace.
But summer is over, the house is mostly habitable (though my workroom is a work in progress) and it’s time to get back to work somehow. I’m so discombobulated that I can’t even figure out where to start, so I decided to just pick up the closest things I found and do something. Anything. Just get the cobwebs loosened up a bit. Staying small. Not giving it any importance or significance. Don’t want to startle myself!
I've been away from my blog for months now as I set up my new workroom. My dye shack is still to come, so in the meantime, I've been trying to use up all my scraps and bits. I found this wooden tissue box cover and had a scrap of arashi (aka pole wrapped) shibori cotton so I used some Modge Podge and attached the fabric to the box. I've made a commitment to work through my art supplies and fabrics before I buy anything new. This got rid of three things, the box, the fabric, and some clumpy old Midge Podge. And it looks pretty great on my countertop on top of my navy blue cabinets.
If you're looking to try this yourself, Amazon has unfinished wooden tissue box covers. I gave this one a coat of gesso so the wood wouldn't bleed through. White primer would work just as well, but I had the gesso handy so I used it. I gave it a light sanding after the gesso and sanded between coats of Modge Podge. I did 4 coats of Gloss ModPodge and a final coat of Matte ModPodge. I find that more than one coat of Matte Modge Podge looks milky and obscures the shibori