Gifts

Treasure Boxes waxed and closed

Treasure Boxes Cane Toad side view

Marla's Gift Box with fabric scrap

These are three boxes I made for gifts this Christmas. The first one is pig skin over board with an inlay of goanna skin. The one below has an inlay of cane toad skin. And the last one is a box covered with a material that was turned into a book cloth and inlaid with a kantha stitched textile from India. They were treasure boxes filled with smaller wrapped gifts.

The cloth covered one was so much easier than the leather boxes to make. There is much to learn about how to make leather do what it needs to do to be properly fitted to the form. But I am learning.

The wooden spines have to be made first because all other parts must fit to that. Below are some of the stages the treasure boxes went through.

Here are the wooden spines with thick leather straps to give additional shape. The trays are made to fit and the ends covered with thin board to smooth out the join between wood and tray.

Treasure Boxes with trays attached

Next they are covered inside and out.

Treasure Boxes with inside bottom paper placed

The leather is cut to the correct size and pared down on the corners with a leather paring blade. In this case the cover boards will need to be made with windows to show the cane toad and goanna skins that are recessed into the cover.

Treasure Boxes layout for leather measurement

Treasure Boxes front cover window wrapped and weighted

The accent hides are centered onto the inner lid that fits into the box when closed.

Treasure Boxes Cane Toad inside

I used a tai kozo paper that had been contact printed with plants and a rust colored lokta paper on the inside of the boxes. The glue was pure corn starch paste for all except I used a straight PVA to glue the tray pieces together. These boxes were definitely a labor of love and I can easily see where I need to do better on the next ones. But I love how they sound when they close and how they feel in the hand.

Travel Boxes

The Travelers Box lo res
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This past week I have been making very special boxes for gifts as well as finishing the last of my two travel boxes for other countries.  The one pictured above is not of my own travels but of an imaginary wanderer.

This is a box that opens in the middle on one side only. It sold several years ago out of an exhibition. The top left window holds this writing I did that inspired the work.

“Once he returned from his travels there was so much to sort through. Where to put it all – especially the memories. Which ones would they replace. What and who did he have to let go – what forgotten and what not.”

I think I was fascinated with the idea of whether there was a maximum of space to hold memories and did we make somewhat conscious choices to let some go just to hang onto others. How did we say goodbye and close the door on some and open it to others.

Anyway here is the inside of the Traveler’s Box. It is filled with the things placed in his pockets along the way and his journal full of already fading memories.

The Travelers Box open lo res
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The Travelers Journal open lo res
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This is one of those ideas that as an artist is just so rich, so full of potential for expression. It seems to recur over and over in my work.

I am glad that someone bought The Traveler’s Box. It makes an artist pleased that it mattered enough to someone to do that. But I would like go through his journal again and hope that somewhere in my files I have images of everyday he was recording, remembering and then forgetting all that he saw. I’ll have to look.

So back to this week. Since 2010 the mementos of France and Italy have been waiting for their boxes to be made. And here they are.

France.

Travel Box France
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Travel Box France inside
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Some of the shopping bags are folded in the bottom. A book of tied together pages of itinerary, tickets, wrappings and small papers is placed on top. Then a tray made that holds a small translation dictionary, lavender soaps and tea bags, buttons from a potter in Rustrel, a notebook from Sennelier and a baguette bag. The inside lid has another bags paper covering the insert.

All of my sketches from France and Italy are in a separate leather journal I made for the trip so no drawings are in these boxes.

Italy.

Travel Box Italy
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Travel Box Italy inside
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Italy is a much smaller box covered with the shopping bag a book binder used to hold purchases. Another journal of tied pages for tickets, etc. Wine corks and a small bundle of cards the book binder made still in their leather wrapping. In the inside lid is a pocket to hold prints purchased from street vendors and postcards.

These two boxes joined the other five on a shelf of contained memories of places not here.

Travel Boxes on shelf
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Below are pictures of those other boxes that hold Australia, Bali, China, Japan and New Zealand.

Australia is my first and fairly large box of mementos. I like the sketches hidden inside.

australia box sketches lo res
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Bali. I added the lotus from my water garden at home. There were so many of these everywhere in the gardens of Alam Jiwa near Ubud.

bali box open lo res
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China.

china box open
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china box sketchbook lo res
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Japan.

japan box open lo res
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japan box displayed lo res
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New Zealand.

new zealand inside lo res
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It occurred to me that I have been to an eighth country – Canada – and only did sketches while there. Such a close neighbor; I never really saw it as a foreign place. Maybe some other time.

Next year back to Australia and maybe someplace new.

 

Interesting Story of “Gone Away”

Christmas cards 2015
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I just finished pulling close to thirty wood cut prints to use as this years Christmas card. About two years ago I carved this block, made a good print that I scanned into the computer and then sized it into a card. This year I wanted to hand print the polymer plate I made from that image but just did not like how it was working. So I pulled out the block and had the best time inking it up, registering the papers and running them through my etching press.

This morning it was time to get down to addressing the cards, signing them and writing a note where needed. Going through my address book from over many years I noticed that when someone moves on, one way or another, I do not cross their name out. I don’t erase it. They are all there as reminders as to who mattered enough to send a hand made Christmas card to. And regardless of that fact, the number still hovers around thirty.

I think of those not here as “gone away”.

And how I came by that phrase is interesting.

Kit Williams, an amazing artist and illustrator wrote a book titled, Masquerade back in the 70’s. I bought my daughter a copy as soon as I saw it. The book was a puzzle on the whereabouts of a luscious golden rabbit that he (Kit Williams) had created and then buried somewhere in the English countryside. Of course it led to so many people searching and digging that it became a much bigger story. The outcome was also very interesting as it was ethically questionable on how that transpired.

But back to the “gone away” bit.  Later, and due to the success of Masquerade, Kit Williams did another puzzle book. It had no title because the one who could solve the puzzle could then name the book. It was about a beekeeper.

Bee book cover
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I borrowed  the book in 1993 after moving to North Carolina. When I came to the following page, I saw this small painting that Mr. Williams had placed over the beekeeper’s mantle.

Bee book fireplace
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And here is a close up.

bee book mantle
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I remembered that my mother had that picture in her house and wondered about its importance to be showing up in a Kit Williams book. So I wrote to him back in the 90’s when I saw it. I wrote the letter in care of his publisher. Months later it came back with of the many selections to be checked that were stamped on the envelope as to why it was returned, “Gone Away” was marked. Isn’t that a wonderful option? Not, “No Longer at this Address”, or “Not Deliverable” but “Gone Away”.

So earlier this year I was wondering about that painting that I found in a borrowed and returned Kit Williams book and was thinking I perhaps imagined it all. So going on Amazon, I ordered my own copy. Then I called my daughter because I thought she might know what my mother did with her little framed piece. I still was not sure if I was even remembering my mother’s picture correctly.

My daughter has the painting because it was where my mother wanted it to go and she sent me a couple of photos of it front and back.

Bee book painting
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Here is the interesting thing about this picture. It was painted in 1915 and is titled, “The Piper of Dreams”. It was painted by Estella Canziani, an English artist of some renown who also was accomplished in egg tempera works. This particular copy that my daughter has was a wedding gift in 1923 to a young bride in England.

Because it was 1915, one year into WWI, this painting was reproduced and over 250,000 were sold, quite a large number for that time. And most of those were sent to young men serving on the fields of war by loved ones who wanted them to remember a gentler time in the English countryside.

A nice story. An interesting story. I love the small details of English illustrations and where this one led me. But most of all I think I like “Gone Away” and how easily it applies to those no longer receiving a card at Christmas.

*Note: Kit Williams the last I checked is not totally gone away and his very interesting work and story can be easily found on the web.

Speaking of Fibers Exhibition – Juror’s Statement

Speaking of Fibers 8
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Speaking of Fibers – MoFA Exhibit 2015 written by Sandy Webster

It is difficult to jury a fiber exhibit. There are so many variables of the word “Fiber”. And so many ways they are put together.

One of the things that are most difficult in jurying a fiber exhibition is “mixed media”. It has become almost the norm in art materials and where is the line drawn in mixed media or mixed fibers?

Does the glue show? Wait, maybe the glue is supposed to show. Maybe that is part of the statement and intention of the artist. No, not always…..the piece the juror is looking at might just not be a commentary on the haphazardness of attachments, the visible form of connections, holding relationships together…..maybe it is simply sloppy workmanship.

I remember writing a letter to Handwoven magazine in the early nineties saying I did not want to be labeled a weaver, but a fiber artist. One of the responses was written by a purist that said there was nothing wrong with being called a weaver and likely I just wanted to dabble in doing poor work with even poorer materials. He might have been right. Maybe I was just tired of having my weavings judged by the standards of quality craftsmanship. When told I made a pretty sorry looking basket, I said maybe it wasn’t about function but about “containment of space.” And maybe she was right. I just made bad baskets. When Lillian Elliot did not accept one of my baskets into an exhibit on the basis that “it simply did not fit the show”, I was actually grateful she made that choice when I saw what she did accept.

Then again if we limit ourselves with the traditional craft of fibers, we might as well be just looking at a textbook of techniques and materials for functional cloth and containers. This is not necessarily what brings the general public into an exhibit. The expectation when we see the words, “Exhibition” and “Gallery” is that here is going to be something new, something innovative, something not seen before.

And most importantly make the viewer look at textiles in a whole new way. Not only that, but a good exhibit of any kind, should drive all of us makers back into our own studios with new vigor. We will look at the work displayed and say things like, “I didn’t think of using those colors to talk about grief”, “It did not occur to me that something so small could say so much and so clearly”, “I had no idea that a simple woven dish towel could be so lovely”.

And of course the problem we all can suffer from in the world of making things is, when is too much too much. When do we stop looking at everyone’s work, take every offered workshop, view every “you-tube” tutorial and tell ourselves, “I can do that.” And then proceed to do just that. Put everything we know into everything we do. In the process we can easily lose our own voice, lose track of our intention.

Surely our intention is not to show how much we know but to share an idea fixed in a visual form. That to me is what art is, an idea fixed in a visual form. The intention of an artist is to do exactly that. The intention of a craftsman is show a quality made piece of workmanship that takes knowledge of materials and technique to execute. One is not superior to the other. They are simply different and therefore pull the viewer in different directions of appreciation.

The problem in jurying a fibers exhibition is just that – fiber! It is cloth, paper, thread, felt, basket materials either harvested or purchased in coils and bundles. It is easily layered, woven, stitched and bound.

It is enormous like the installation works of Magdalena Abakanowicz,  Sheila Hicks, or the small and intricate embroideries of Rene Adams or Ray Materson.

Fiber is the perfect medium for statements on the human condition because it can be cloth, clothing, filled with the meaning of those who wore it. I am thinking of the paper made by John Risseuew from the collected clothing of ravaged women in Bosnia and once formed into sheets used to make a statement on war and consequences.

Or it is the bedspread of your youth that you turn into a covered box in which to present your much despised and freshly shorn dreadlocks to your mother. A young student I had at Arrowmont did this.

And now there are books – the artist book. It attracts fibers like a magnet. Here is a perfect venue for the page, the illustration, the text and form to house it all in. And the viewer is hopelessly caught within the pages…..they have to touch it to see it in its entirety. And there is something very unique in that experience. Those critiquing my graduate work about the men in my community had to touch their clothes, their handkerchiefs, their rags, their very essence used in fragments across the pages of who we were to each other and how they mattered to me. Cloth is powerful stuff!

There are just so many ways to use fiber.  Aside from fixing ideas in form, there is the very function of what it can do – linens, baskets, journals waiting for entries; not to mention the pieces made with the intention of just being beautiful and decorative, such as art to wear clothing, jewelry, rugs, and wall hangings.

It is simply too much at times. I can’t think of another medium that spreads itself so far across function, decoration and art.

Fiber.

And then we have to jury an exhibition…a fiber exhibition. We have to look at what is there to jury. Then we have to see how well it is done. Does it follow the maker’s intention? Does it say too much? Is the maker appearing to be enamored with the material more than what they want it to say to the viewer? And on and on and on.

And unfortunately it is all subjectively up to the juror. One person’s viewpoint. One person who may or may not have totally missed the point.

My suggestion would be to limit fiber exhibitions to themes, size, materials, etc…..anything to make the final show more comprehensive to the viewer, less about what fibers are capable of and more about what fibers can be specific to. And then of course have more exhibits based on those chosen themes.

Below is the Best of Show titled, 1951 by Janet Wade.

Speaking of Fibers top award
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