Tuesday is cleaners day, so I spent the time at the library, in the company of this dazzling show of hand quilting, much of it created during lockdown.
Even her set-up table is art!
There's a great sense of calm and optimism in this show. Just right for a foggy damp day with dodgy driving. I don't think I'm up for it again, to retrace my route for the Tuesday Knitting Group.
And here's what I found when I got home to a shining clean house, courtesy of my cleaning family. My poinsettia!
Meanwhile here's the current reading
The heroine's 87. I like this. She's lived, and her past life informs her current actions very handily.
Textiles and Tea featured
A powerful artist using textiles as her medium. She showed some personal art about her outlook and experience
She started as a commercial graphic designer but developed a two sided art practice after she became a textile artist. One is the personal experience side, like the pieces above.
And a vivid artwork, When I'm 64, reference to the Beatles song, about her hysterectomy at the age of 64. It involves crocheted drops of blood, and strings leading to scrunchies entwined with specula. The speculum is the freezing cold often painful tool inserted into the vagina to open it enabling the doctor to see inside.
The two red roses indicate the years she gave birth to her two daughters.
A lot of the time in the episode was spent on her monumental installation work, designed as participatory art for social awareness and justice.
This floor, many square yards, consists of caution tape crocheted into squares with the frail net suspended above it. It addresses homelessness and some of the crochet was done by people who were homeless and living in tents. She paid these participants for their work after they had learned to crochet.
The crocheter on the left created many pieces, and on the right is another worker connecting the squares into strips before they were carried to a big indoor location to be finally attached into the piece you see exhibited.
Other installations address the red/blue political divisions in the US, and were the work of thousands of participants.
Every member of Congress received a box of these squares including work from their own state. Abigail Spanberger, among others, was very supportive and welcomed them. Some members were baffled!
Here's a rendering of the next projected installation, a labyrinth in Arizona consisting of flags, on the subject of the environment, created by many artists, to be set up in early 2025. I tried to sign up today, but I think I missed the window, heard about it a bit late. The deadline is December 31. This is Towards 2050, a twenty-five year period in which climate change must be addressed before it is irreversible.
In these massive, people intense projects, she explains that the art is the intricate organizing and fulfilment of work far beyond the capacity of a single person, the multiplier effect.
So that was another packed Tuesday. There was also free cycling, laundry and cooking.
Happy day everyone, I feel like a pretty tiny cog after seeing all the art today, but I can do my bit. Or bitkin. Nanobit.
There are some great artistic creations. I especially like the 'When I am 64', work. This will feel a little cold seems to be an understatement.
ReplyDeleteIt seems it will be seven weeks before I get a cleaner. I don't think I'll go out while they are here for perhaps an hour.
That's a great piece. One string per year of life, till the ability to transmit life is ended.
DeleteUntil you know and trust your cleaners, it's probably wise to be on hand.
So many exceptional creations today! Ann Morton’s work is powerful and unusual. When I’m 64 is beautiful at a glance, and then to understand the meaning. Wow!
ReplyDeleteYes, that piece goes on like a bell sounding.
DeleteThe quilts are very welcoming. The collective works are incredible. It must feel good to be even a very small part of such projects. It develops a great sense of community.
ReplyDeleteI've taken part in, also run, smaller collective art experiences, for artists and the general public, too. As you say, great sense of community emerges.
DeleteLots of great stuff there, cannot type a lot because hand hurts, have a good day!
ReplyDeleteSo sorry about your hand. Keep it warm!
DeleteThe show has spectacular pieces. Such beautiful work!
ReplyDeleteThere's a lot to see today!
DeleteAll the quilts. Sigh. Fabulous!
ReplyDeleteAren't they lovely? Such a great warm atmosphere in the gallery.
DeleteOh, Ann Morton's installation work is stunning, just stunning! So original. I especially love her "When I'm 64" piece -- powerful!
ReplyDeleteThat piece blew me away! I love her organizing mojo, getting massive projects thought of then created, up and running.
Deletethe quilt display is lovely and Morton's work is impressive. I always wonder what happens to monumental installations after they are taken down.
ReplyDeleteHers are designed to be joined into blankets and given to various groups who need them. Crocheted caution tape makes waterproof underlay for sleeping bags in the street etc.
DeleteThe quilts knock me out. Just amazing works of loving art.
ReplyDeleteWhen I looked first at the pictures of the Textiles and Tea event, enlarging them, when I got to the "When I'm 64" one I thought, "What in hell is this?" And then reading about it, I realized just what that power was all about. Damn.
How can one not love the idea of paying unhoused people to crochet for that project? Wow.
She's a terrific person and a great artist. She paid the crocheters out of grant money for her own support, while writing many more grant applications to keep herself going. I like very much that she invited the subjects of her work to be paid partners in it, and respected their efforts.
DeleteShe does powerful work.
ReplyDeleteDoesn't she? Such strength and focused energy.
DeleteHave to admire the mind that can envision such large art installations and then manage to bring her vision to life. I never would have thought of using caution tape as a 'yarn' (although I did use some as the basis for a border on a landscape not too long ago).
ReplyDeleteHer thinking is huge and her imagination, too.
DeleteWow. Some powerful pieces of art. A great way to help the homeless and bring attention to the problems
ReplyDeleteA wonderful quilt show and a clean house with poinsettia.
ReplyDeleteThe quilts are beautiful, there's a talent I truly admire and one I am completely incapable of. The "craft" gene in my family missed me and skipped to my daughter and grand daughter. I like the circular flag labyrinth.
ReplyDeleteThat's fine -- makers need an appreciative audience!
Delete