I could say pfoof, pftt, woosh- and what would you imagine happening? Where does art begin and where does it end? Is nature art or does it need to be applied by imperfect interpretations that can become perfect in their own right? How is art made and what fires the imagination to try to make art? There are as many answers to these questions as there are questions to ask.
People often ask what inspires me and it is a difficult question to answer- no one particular thing inspires me, but things that I love often arrive at a confluence where things can be made or where process is explored in order to begin to make things. Sometimes it takes years to evolve other times it arrives quickly- and that brings me to Jumiege- the ruin called "perfect" by Flaubert and admired by George Sand.
Confluence.A number of unrelated threads coming together;
NOUN
Jumiege- I stumbled upon Jumiege some years ago- we were looking for a camping and happened to find one at Jumiege- the ruin there of the abbaye was love at first sight. The intention had been to go to Rouen the next day but instead we explored the ruin- took many photos and were interested that this abbaye was apparently the starting point for William the Conquerors journey of war and capture of England( every child in Australia learns about this at school- William the Conqueror that is)
Just the last few days I have spent at Jumiege again with my aunt. It's a lovely part of Normandy sprinkled with apple trees and cows, colombage houses and churches and great food and great sweeps of the Seine.In a way I was researching, I can feel that this ruin will one day be part of something I make, and I must admit to a fascination with the middle ages. Imagine my delight that 2 people whose writing I admire felt the same way about this ruin.....to me that was a confluence, that two such unconnected strains of enjoyment could come together in one place. So here is some of Jumiege... I think it's attraction is that it leaves "open" space for the imagination....
I said this would be a ramble- I don't think I have answered any questions except to share some of the things I enjoy and I don't know whether I will ever make anything to do with Jumiege, but it is bubbling away in the background somewhere as are the stories associated with it... William the Conqueror ( though to be truthful I am more interested by his wife Mathilde)... Bayeaux tapestry, Lady and the Unicorn.......
This is said to be a sculpture/bust of William the Conqueror... I have not found any representation of Mathilde
Some lovely carved imagery...
And some lovely sculpted bestiary...
And I have not been idle- I have been working on something weird which is related to travellers blankets ( there is still time to join the on-line Travellers' Blanket class if you are interested - it has started but it's such a long slow process that few days don't matter) and another love- fabric steels/fabric sample books, which money can't buy these days unless you have a lot of money. So meanwhile I mooch around on the internet, dream and think how can I combine my love of books and fabric and stitch, and illuminated texts of the medieval kind? I know I have shown images of stitching on khadi paper before, but I did not take khadi paper with me in my suitcase, that contains my life at present.
What i did find was some brown wrapping paper when I was at Palaiseau- now brown paper is an attraction in its own right as well- don't I neatly fold it and put it away from some thing or another? So whilst at Palaiseau I started with some random thoughts about Books of Hours ( because I was whiling away hours and I had been to see the Lady and the Unicorn tapestries at the Cluny Museum and seen some illuminated texts)
and this is what emerged...
But the fabric " sample" squares weren't quite right, the messiness of it somehow, and I do subscribe to the theory of not making just one, sometimes the wonder is in whole collections of things, so this idea has morphed into these following pages that keep my hands busy, that make me realise that stitching on brown paper is difficult even on one page let alone a concertina of pages, it's a record of days somehow, of travels and wanderings , of musings and stitches, of small repetitions and nuances
The backs of the pages are as interesting to me as the front, a kind of writing in dashes and dots and threads
Hardly perfect, somehow flawed, somehow silly stitching on brown paper ( I can't tell you how many times I was asked why was I stitching on brown paper at Quilts en Beaujolais- and the reply of I am just playing seemed to be odd to some people) and somehow bookish- which you can't see in the photos but which you can see when you hold the pages.
Oh my goodness what a ramble this has turned into but one last thing- I drove through the Picardie/Somme countryside at a time of remembrance for Australian and New Zealand soldiers , thousands of whom died in the fields coloured with poppies in World War I. I had thought of perhaps going to one of the ceremonies to remember all those young men and to think of those left behind, but because there are are many ceremonies to do with 100 years since the commencement of World War I an especially big one had been planned for Anzac day- 25 April at Amiens and at the many cemeteries that spot the countryside around there, I didn't. I found this grave- lone and forgotten at Jumiege- the young man it had belonged died, at age 17 in 1916- I have no idea whether the war was the cause of his death, but for me he was a tangible remembrance for all those doomed youths who lost their lives- 5000 Anzac lives were lost in the Battle of the Somme alone.
A collection of memories surround his head stone. And so I cannot say better than what Wilfred Owen said:
Anthem for Doomed Youth
What passing-bells for these who die as cattle?
Only the monstrous anger of the guns.
Only the stuttering rifles' rapid rattle
Can patter out their hasty orisons.
No mockeries now for them; no prayers nor bells,
Nor any voice of mourning save the choirs,—
The shrill, demented choirs of wailing shells;
And bugles calling for them from sad shires.
What candles may be held to speed them all?
Not in the hands of boys, but in their eyes
Shall shine the holy glimmers of good-byes.
The pallor of girls' brows shall be their pall;
Their flowers the tenderness of patient minds,
And each slow dusk a drawing-down of blinds.
Source: The Complete Poems and Fragments of Wilfred Owen (1984)