Wednesday, November 25, 2009


"Tis the season for art, continued....PJ's latest

I will be participating again in the 4th annual Denver (NC!) Art Trail on Dec 5 and 6. Forty-three Denver - area artists and guest artists are opening their studios or displaying their works in local businesses so that you can enjoy their latest creations. For more info see http://denverarttrail.shutterfly.com/

Please come to see my mixed media pins, wall hangings, and journal covers at the Blue Heron B&B. -PJ-

Sunday, November 15, 2009

House Rules 2


I am in the middle of teaching an online course on how to make this little art quilt (“House Rules 2” on joggles.com. It features my whole family, pets included. (Yes, I made myself skinnier and with fewer wrinkles!) The figures are drawn on white fabric with pencil, then colored in with watercolor pencils, and moistened with a wet paintbrush before drawing the outlines with a Micron Pigma pen. The amount of water in the paintbrush determines how much the color bleeds out. You can see this in the difference between the eye and the cheeks in my sun, below:



There is a ton of handwork in this piece. The figures are done with needleturn applique, and all the “chicken scratch” quilting in the background took about six hours to complete.


I framed this piece in an inexpensive frame purchased at Ikea, after stitching it to the mat:


I really like the way it looks in the frame. Now to find the perfect spot to hang it!

– Susan Brubaker Knapp

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

A post from Debbie:

As Nancy's last post indicates...'tis the season for exhibits and shows of all types.

This Saturday, November 14th, the Charlotte Art Collective will be having its fall/holiday show. I'll be there with fabric art: quilts and wearables (including the scarf on the left in the middle).

Barking Dog Chocolatiers will be represented by hubby Joal Fischer. (the 3 marbleized hemispheres in the upper left hand corner are actually chocolates).

If you're a local or just passing through the Charlotte area, do plan to join us from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m at Avondale Presbyterian Church (2821 Park Road about a mile north of the Park Road Shopping Center in Charlotte).

With 18 other artists - showing everything from jewelry to turned wood to pottery - it promises to be an exciting opportunity for holiday shopping or just to sample the chocolate and enjoy the rest of the "eye candy" on display.

I hope to see you there....

Debbie Langsam

Thursday, November 5, 2009

The Ups and Downs of Entries



This has been been a wild couple of weeks. I have entered a number of juried exhibitions; both art shows and art quilt shows. The results are win some, lose some. I did not get into Elements, while not unexpected, it was still a real disappointment.

I recently joined the Charlotte Art League and had one piece accepted for their Fall into Art juried show. The photo below shows a detail of the accepted piece.

Winter Fruit detail

Three of my winter pieces will be in an international juried art exhibition, Winter Whites, at the Ciel Gallery here in Charlotte, NC.

Here are details of two of the pieces in that show.
Reclamation, detail

Winter Confection III detail

Photos of the full size quilts are on my website: http://nancygcook.com .

Below is the e-invitation to the show. Reclamation is the lower right detail in the collage. Ciel Gallery (1519 Camden Road) is next door to CAL (1517 Camden Road) and the openings are both this Friday from 6-9. I will be skipping back and forth between the two venues. At least they are not across town from each other.

If you are in the area, I hope to see you at the openings.




Observation: The major difference in the jurying process for these art exhibitions and the art quilt exhibitions has been the length of time that submitted work is tied up waiting on jury results. The art shows let the artists know the results within a week; the art quilt shows take months to let the artist know, thereby tying up entered works for months even for work that is rejected.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Pink Petal Party wins Best of Show



My quilt “Pink Petal Party,” which is the focus of my new book, Appliqué Petal Party, just won Best of Show at the Lake Norman Quilters’ 2009 show. Wish I'd worn a different shirt tonight; it is hard to tell where the quilt stops and I start in this photo. :-)

We hung the show tonight and it is going to be fabulous. (Please see my previous post for more information on the show.)

– Susan Brubaker Knapp

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Lake Norman Quilters’ show is this weekend

The Lake Norman Quilters’ show is this Friday and Saturday in Mooresville, NC. Grace Howes and I are both members of this group. It is going to be a beautiful show, with more than 230 quilts. If you are in the area, I do hope you’ll come!



Friday, Oct. 30 and Saturday, Oct. 31
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
East Mooresville Intermediate School
1711 Landis Highway, Mooresville NC 28115


For directions to the show or more information, please go to the Lake Norman Quilters’ webpage. It contains a downloadable PDF with a map and general information.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

October is "Barnful of Quilts" Time....

a post from Debbie...

"Barnful of Quilts" is becoming a lovely October tradition for quilters in this part of the world and I was delighted to be asked to participate for a second year...





























"Barnful..." is the brai
nchild of Valerie Fox who raises El Escondito Paso Fino horses on her farm in Waxhaw, NC. (a decidedly "exotic" locale for a city born and bred northerner). Once a year, Valerie organizes friends and members of her church and the neighboring community to clean out her beautiful barn for this fundraising event.

Quilt artists (traditional and contemporary) are invited to display their work -- on walls, in stalls, in the exercise ring
...basically any available surface or space. And along with vendors, a silent auction, a bake sale, and horses looking on from nearby pastures -- it adds up to a festive day-long treat for all.

My work was in a perfect spot -- the front entrance wall; ideal, because folks entering the show can see my photomosaic pieces from a distance and then come close to see the details




Here's Valerie taking a (very rare) break to view my pieces....

For this show, I displayed some framed mini-quilts from a new series of "urban silhouettes." The silhouettes are not specific to any particular city --- but, barn locale or not, I guess my New York roots peek out in the two below.

These are both from the "winter series:"



Winter Dawn
























and


Winter Night


For more pictures of "Barnful of Quilts," check out the images at
Valerie's website, the ones taken by her daughter, very talented photographer Whitney Gray and those by Ellen Guerrant (last year's feature artist), whose "stall" of fabulous quilts and hand-dyes were once again hard to resist..

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Susan’s space featured in Studios magazine


by Susan Brubaker Knapp

My studio is featured in the Fall 2009 issue of Cloth Paper Scissors’ Studios magazine!

There’s lots to love about this issue:
  • a feature about a converted factory that is now an artists’ enclave in Pennsylvania
  • tips on hosting an Open Studios event
  • photos of more than 20 artists’ studios to inspire your own space
  • fun projects, tips, tricks, and storage solutions
Get your copy at a local newsstand, or order one at the Interweave online store. The price is $7.99.

Monday, September 28, 2009

New Work

A few weeks ago I joined the SAQA Visioning project. This is a step by step, year long project that participating SAQA members will use to define one long term goal to help them move forward in their art careers.

My goal is to to define my artistic voice, to work towards narrowing down a couple of processes/techniques I want to use consistently in my work. From time to time I will report my progress.

This week I finished quilting 2 new pieces. The small red work below has been sitting waiting for some quilting. I find I enjoy the linear look of evenly spaced quilting lines and, of course, these colours always intrigue me.

The 2nd quilt is a definitely a departure from the warm colours I usually gravitate towards. For this piece I did a little experimentation with discharge paste. I cut circles in a freezer paper stencil and ironed it on to the quilt top, making sure the inner edges of the circles were completely sealed.


I find this is a much easier way to discharge fabric than using liquid or gel bleach. The paste (from Dharma Trading Co) is a gel medium consistency that I brushed over the stencil with a foam brush, waited for it to dry, gave it a good steaming then washed it out.

I will experiment with this some more to see if I get any different results that would vary the amount of discharge. Even though I prefer not to use the noxious bleach I will still do more comparisons with that tool as well.

~ Grace ~

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Indian Corn


Indian Corn (2009) 14 x 11.5"

This is a small piece I just completed this weekend. Earlier this week, I created a stamp of the corn pattern using Fun Foam mounted on a cylinder. I made stamps using both the positive parts (kernels) and negative parts (spaces between the kernels) of the design. You can read more about the techniques and materials I used for this piece on my blog post here.

Friday, September 11, 2009


Yes, Virginia, PJ does still make stuff!

Last week, I enjoyed 3 days of workshops with Barbara Olson. I have not yet finished my straight-lined spiral from her cosmic spirals workshops, but here's my finished "organic" spiral. I really simplified her pattern by removing half of the seam lines and piecing the background far more simply than she does.


I've also jumped out of the box with some odd wire figures. That's Virginia in the middle (so named because of the state map I used for her hat and body); Scarlet on the left (for her color, of course); and Winka on the right (there's a small W on her hat). Yes, the wire is leftover from when our house was built; and, those are recycled CDs as stands.

Friday, September 4, 2009

On the set at Quilting Arts TV

by Susan Brubaker Knapp


Pokey Bolton, editor of Quilting Arts magazine, and me, getting ready to shoot my first segment.

I just returned from Cleveland, where I was shooting two segments for Quilting Arts TV, and a Quilting Arts Workshop DVD. What a wonderful, nerve-wracking, exhilarating couple of days! You can read more about my adventures and see lots more photos of the amazing artists I met there on my blog.

Susan and Janet to speak at The Mint Museum


On December 1, Janet A. Lasher and Susan Brubaker Knapp will be guest speakers at The Mint Museum’s Artists’ Forum. These events are designed to give area artists a platform to discuss their work as well as current issues and activities in their artistic fields.

The forum is being held in conjunction with American Quilt Classics, 1800-1980: The Bresler Collection, showing at the Mint Museum of Craft + Design now through February 6, 2010. The collection includes spectacular examples of Baltimore Album quilts, crazy quilts, Chintz pictorial quilts, Amish quilts and log cabin quilts.

DETAILS:

Tuesday, Dec. 1

7 to 8:30 p.m.

Mint Museum of Art

2730 Randolph Road

Cost: free


(You can click on the image above to see an enlargement of the flyer.)

Friday, August 28, 2009


An Update from Linda

The Kerr Grabowski workshop in Fall River Mass. was wonderful - I had a great time and learned a lot. The facility is an old
manufacturing building but was roomy, very bright due to large windows and air conditioned!



Kerr is an excellent teacher and I would recommend her classes to anyone interested in deconstructed screen printing.

After returning, I have been working on
"Blue Orchid" and am almost finished except for adding the aerial roots and labellum, without having it look too "Georgia O'Keefesh".


-Linda-

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Another solo show....

An update from Debbie

Last Friday was definitely "Davidson Day." Nancy was in Davidson, NC being feted at a reception for her show at the Wooden Stone Gallery. And I was on North Davidson Street in Charlotte (also known as "NoDa") enjoying the mid-August gallery crawl that included my solo show at Beet Contemporary Craft and Functional Art Gallery.

Beet is a lovely space featuring an eclectic and a wonderfully beautiful mix of jewelry, glass, ceramics, wood, metal, and fiber arts.

And owner Nancy Neely is incredibly generous in inviting artists to mount month-long shows in the middle room of the gallery.

There was a good crowd on Friday night -- with folks wandering in and out of the galleries, munching on snacks and relaxing with a little wine.

The show's title, "Stitched: An Artquilt Journey," probably says it all. It's a sampling of quilts (and styles) that I've been doing over the past few years.

There's a wall (and then some) of abstracts:





(I've got some new abstracts as part of the show...I'll plan to report on them in another post....)

There's also a wall of "urban images:"

These fiber pieces feature photos of some iconic Charlotte (NC) hangouts.

The hangouts are gathering places that cross color and class lines -- where bankers mix with bikers and lawyers share a beer with construction workers.

The images that have been transferred to fabric and made up into quilts (either free hanging, or framed)

And finally, there's a wall of photomosaic quilts (I'm "posing" in this one -- hot, sweaty and a bit pooped after helping to hang the show):




The newest photomosaics are the first two in the picture -- They're titled "Out of the Mouths of Babes." (one is "Tomato Lips" and the other is "Grape Lips" --- guess which one is which....)

I've been thinking about these quilts for a while (and probably working on them even longer).

As you can see... from a distance, the image is of a pair of lips


























A close-up view shows that the quilt is actually made up of small 1/2 x 1/2" photos of women...from Jane Austen to Miss Piggy to Benazir Bhutto to Babe Zacharias (one of the first female golf pros).

(This photo shows a section of the unquilted surface)

















On the back of the quilt is a photo key/index that shows each woman, some information about her, and a quote attributed to her.

Because I got to be "Queen of the World" (or at least "Queen Quiltmaker") while making the quilt, I picked the women and quotes that appealed to me -- because they were poignant, thought-provoking, inspiring, or just plain funny. It's been an interesting journey.

I'll end this entry with a small sampling of some of my favorites:

"When I sing, I don't want them to see that my face is black. I don't want them to see that my face is white. I want them to see my soul. And that is colorless."
Marian Anderson - 1st African American Metropolitan Opera singer and star.

"A woman is like a tea bag; you never know how strong she is until she gets into hot water."
Eleanor Roosevelt - Humanitarian, American 1st Lady

"I would be the most content if my children grew up to the be kind of people who think decorating consists mostly of building enough bookshelves."
Anna Quindlen - Writer, Journalist

"My doctors told me I would never walk again. My mother told me I would. I believed my mother."
Althea Gibson - Athlete (track)

"It's not enough just to swing at the ball. You've got to loosen your girdle and let 'er fly."
Babe Zacharias - Athlete (golf)

Cheers to all,

Debbie

Thursday, August 20, 2009

A stretch to realism - from janet's studio



The Fiber Art Options group meet today, and I had to miss the meeting. It made me sad that I didn't have a chance to visit with the group and share about all of our new work. So here is my August update.

A friend once said that I went to food markets like other people went to museums - it is true. Whenever I go to a new city I have to scope out the food markets, of course in Seattle and all over the US but also in France, Italy, Mexico, Spain, and Japan. Sometimes this makes the people I travel with crazy - why spend a half day looking at lettuce, cheese, and olives, why in deed, but we always have a great time and learn about new foods and customs.

Last week I went to the farmer's market near my house with the camera and took a bunch of photos and brought back a few bags full of avocados, tomatoes, carrots, radishes, mushrooms etc. I love to arrange still life compositions on the wooden cutting boards and bowls that live on my kitchen island - these give me inspiration to chop, saute, and cook - but these images rarely find their way into my fiber art.

The past few months I have been sewing almost exclusively on paper. Most recently, I have been playing around quite a bit with sewn paper collages using handmade papers that I stain with watercolors and dyes. The paper gets torn up, arranged, repainted, and then machine sewn to a heavy paper foundation. Quick and fun to do. I had planned to spend some time in the studio working on collages when I decided to use one of the still life photos from the farmers market as inspiration. Here is the first veggie still life.

Feed back anyone?? (be kind - I don't do art that are supposed to look "like" things as a rule)

Monday, August 17, 2009

Fall classes

Susan and Janet are teaching online classes on Joggles.com in November. For details, click on the red “Classes” button in the sidebar on the right-hand side of this blog, or click here to go directly to that post.


House Rules by Susan Brubaker Knapp


Embellished Travel Journal by Janet A. Lasher
PJ's Latest Orchid Piece

I chose this yellow orchid from my array of orchid photos primarily because I knew I had several yellow and green fabrics in the stash to use in Ruth McDowell style piecing. Here's the photo with pattern lines added (using Quilt Assistant software ... see http://www.cosman.nl/software_en.html).







And here is my progress so far. The piecing is more tedious that I had hoped, so this may be my last piece in this style!

-PJ-

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Soy Wax Fabrics

A few weeks ago I had another go at soy wax (1st foray was in Janet's workshop). This time though I decided to play with layers.

I had some dye left over from a recent dye day and needed to use them up. After soaking the PDF in soda ash and letting it dry I stamped my first layer of soy wax with a foam leaf stamp and painted the fabric with chartreuse dye.


After 2 more layers of soy wax and dye painting I ended up with the dark green layer at right.

The last thing I wanted to do was to create a crackle effect. I did this by painting the whole piece of fabric with soy wax, letting it set up, scrunched the whole thing into a ball (see below),

then painted with Havana Brown dye and left it to dry.


I like the effect the crackle produced and will definitely try that process again.


The extra crackling you see was due to not believing the dye would reach the fabric under the thick layer of soy wax and scrunching the fabric a second time. Still, a great piece that I definitely will be using soon.

Here are 2 more fabrics from that soy wax layers session....




~ K. Grace Howes

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Nancy’s work installed at Wooden Stone Gallery

from Nancy G. Cook

Don and I spent Thursday morning at Wooden Stone Gallery in Davidson NC installing my work as their Featured Artist for August. Wooden Stone is one of my favorite galleries featuring usable art. We have been shopping at the gallery for years and have found lots of work that we loved and brought home. It is a real thrill to be their featured artist for August.

Here are some photos from the installation. I Love the warm gold walls and how well all the art looks on them.


This photo shows two of my pieces, Mimosa Dancing and Sourwood Festoons, over some really interesting hand crafted furniture.


The photo above gives the display of five of my wall pieces and shows some of the smaller pieces available as well. Two of my newest pieces are on the wall here. The upper right piece was Best of Show – Small at the Charlotte Quilters’ Guild Show in 2009 which was another first and a great honor.


I love the combination of wall pieces with the pottery in this display. It really shows how well different art mediums work together.

There is a Meet and Greet the Artist scheduled for Friday, Aug. 21, 2009 from 6-9 p.m. If you are close by, I hope to meet you there.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009


An Update from Linda

Have been working on the blue orchid quilt for our orchid project. Still have a long way to go but colors have been chosen. Orchids and leaves will be very three dimensional (hopefully).



I decided to take a break from orchids and play with my felting machine to create "Undercurrents". I used my soy wax batik fabric from Janet's class, enhanced with silk and wool roving and highlighted with Shiva oil paint sticks and heavy quilting.


I am very excited for I leave tomorrow morning for Fall River, Massachusetts to take a Kerr Grabowski Screen Printing class. Will post details later. -Linda-