I had fully intended to write a post about the Norfolk coast. It’s wild beauty…
The majestic skies…
..the loneliness…
But instead it just seems to be…
About cute puppies…
Sorry…
I had fully intended to write a post about the Norfolk coast. It’s wild beauty…
The majestic skies…
..the loneliness…
But instead it just seems to be…
About cute puppies…
Sorry…
Spending the weekend with Ewa and the rest of the Felt Hat Gang has made me think afresh about my whole love affair with woolliness and how it evolved. You can see that living on Planet Penny with a Pink Sheep has made me pretty woollyminded!
When I started at Norwich School of Art and Design (as it was called then) back in 2001 I had had a long history of dabbling in textiles under one guise or another. I went on to the Visual Studies Degree Course determined to find out what else there was out there. Visual Studies was a unique course in that it gave you the opportunity to explore every medium to find out exactly how you want to express your ideas. In the first year we had workshops in photography, welding, Photoshop and web design, textiles, etching, silkscreen printing, woodwork, blacksmithing, casting, machine embroidery, creative writing…At the end of that, if you realised that your raison d’etre was to create a wonderful three dimentional steel, patchwork edifice on a wrought iron base etched with embroidered poetry you knew it would be possible.
To begin with I struggled with the fact that despite trying all of that with varying degrees of success, in the end my heart was still firmly textile bound. I struggled because it felt like laziness. But I realised after a while that I now had a whole new perspective on making, and materials and what they could do.
I also rebelled against the expectation that to be Art it must be uncomfortable, even unpleasant. Ever since Duchamp shocked society with his urinal ‘Fountain’, it seems to be obligatory to be outrageous, to the point of tedium. It doesn’t matter if the message is lost, create your piece with pigs blood and elephant poo and it must be good. I was even told that I would ‘get over’ my desire to make things which would make people happy!!
So my little corner of the communal studio became a little oasis of comfiness. Because of the M.E. I had to have a comfortable chair to retreat to, and there I sat, and I knitted. I knitted tiny tiny things, a huge sock you could use as a sleeping bag, a cocoon into which you could retreat while you worked on becoming a butterfly. I wound a huge ball of wool using all the oddments of wool that Norwich’s charity shops could supply which prompted endless debates around ‘what would happen if ‘ scenarios.. Once I started deconstructing wool, discovering the sacks of Merino rovings in the college supplies shop, the rainbow of dyes in the textile workshop…
I’m not going to write a dissertation of how amazing wool is, or the history of felt or any of the things I found out about it, and myself on the ‘journey’ (popular buzzword) that was my degree. However, my theme for the degree show, which had hovered scarily in the the background all through the preceeding years, became obvious to me as I explored the protective qualities of felt.
Hence my attempts to stem the coastal erosion at Happisburgh with a cosy wrapping of red felt…
and needle felted cocoons for the safe transportation of glass.
A late discovery of needle felting led to the arrival of Tallulah, a slightly raddled old stripper who has seen better days,
… and to continue the cosiness, a nice pot of tea.
Absolute bliss this weekend to creep off and leave the boys and spend two days having fun! Ewa always turns up with yet another cunning plan to make felt making slightly less hard work and I’m all for that. I’ve always felt slightly scared about making a felt hat because of hat blocks and steaming and all the things you see in the more intimidating manuals. It’s a big outlay if you turn out to be rubbish or you only have one hat in you.
By the end of the first day of measuring and drawing, deciding on the colour schemes and laying out the fleece, we ended the day with each studio table holding a large amorphous shape of soggy wool, covered in plastic. It was hard to imagine that any of them could posibly be transformed into any sort of head wear.
That’s what I love about felt making though, the magical transformation from a wet sheep to something with form and structure, colour and substance. Wool absorbs dye so well, the colours are intense and saturated, a visual feast.
I was pretty pleased with my felt hat, just the thing to wear on Planet Penny…
…now… a hat block…I’m just off to Ebay!
Doing my research for ‘All Booked Up’ I came across the idea of a Mailing Journal in the book ‘Making Books and Journals’ by Constance E Richards. I do try to put my own spin on the ideas I get from other sources, but I lifted this idea straight off the page just to see how well it works. It makes me feel I’ll never buy another pack of ‘notelets’ again! It can be as lengthy or as succinct as you make it, as colourful or simple as you like, and designed especially for the recipient. I do have a tendency to buy beautiful wrapping paper which I then can’t bear to see torn off and discarded so this was a good use for this fabulous double sided piece.
I’m still digging round in the button box…
…and finding more in my wrapping paper stash.
Today I must remove my book hat, replace it with a felt one and get ready for a weekend of making…Felt Hats! I’m off to Broadland Art Centre, as a student this time, for two days with Ewa Kuniczak, felt maker extraordinaire.
I’ve just remembered I intended to blog about creativity, not puppies! I haven’t had a lot of time for that recently, but it’s now the first of October, and at the end of the month I am teaching at Broadland Art Centre. We are very lucky to have such a unique venue so close to home. BAC is housed in an old school in a pretty little village on the river and the classroom is the perfect place for a small gathering of students. I feel very privileged to be numbered among those teaching there, as the calibre of past and present tutors is so high. Among them the textile artists Jan Beaney and Jean Littlejohn, the main features of last year’s Knit and Stitch Show at Alexandra Palace, the internationally renowned marine artist, William Calladine, and, AND… ( I speak his name in reverential tones), the one, the only Kaffe Fassett! Oh yes, I did go on his courses.
Attending a few courses at the Broadland Art Centre was one of the contributing factors to my eventual decision to become a mature Student at Norwich University College of Art in 2000 so it’s nice to have the association with it now.
This year I, and my partner in crime, Kit, am running a course called ‘All Booked Up!’ (yes it was my idea to call it that, and yes, it has caused no end of confusion to people reading the brochure, and yes, I’m really, really sorry!) and we are making books. Not formal bookbinding books, because that’s an amazing and exacting craft requiring great skill, accuracy and training. We’re making pretty books, jolly books, books for people who have a vast collection of lovely little bits of fabrics and papers, buttons and beads, and piles of gorgeous bits of textile art left over from experimenting…that they don’t know what to do with and can’t possibly throw away. Well, we’re going to make them into little books.
Over the next couple of weeks I will be flexing my making muscles to get them in trim for two days of demonstrating and teaching, and posting the results so you can see if I’m slacking.
I will regain my focus on artistry and creativity, I will aspire to a state of Zen like concentration, I will reach the end of each day uplifted by what I have achieved, I will… excuse me, I just have to go and mop up that puddle…
Nearly a month has elapsed since the black and tan bundle of trouble we know as Higgins burst into our lives and changed them completely. He has galloped frenetically through, pursued by cries of ‘Aaaaah, cute’ by all who have seen him and by me with a mop and bucket… But the time had come to introduce our pampered pooch to the big wide world…
So we went to the seaside.
It’s not easy when you are very small…
..but I think we’re getting the hang of it!