Showing posts with label creativity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creativity. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

From a little wool ball to Aphrodite

In July 2014 a Lithuanian magazine about Psychology asked for an interview with me. It was one of the most interesting interviews to be part of for me, so now I am sharing the English version of it.

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From a little wool ball to Aphrodite

I have been following the path of a textile artist, felt maker Vilte Kazlauskaite on the social media lately. I must confess that every time I see a new post by Vilte with an artistic photography, I feel joy as it not only gives me an opportunity to see something beautiful and elegant, but also to be transferred to another dimension – sensual and poetic.  Egidija Seputyte-Vaituleviciene

 

Veltinis (felt in Lithuanian), velimas (felting in Lithuanian)- it doesn’t sound poetic in Lithuanian language. Yet when I first visited your website http://vilte.net and read the words “Fiber poetry. Felt in fashion, interior and art”, I had a thought of a double meaning of the word  “felt” in English language – felt as a textile, and felt as feeling. Actually I did read the phrase as textile poetry that has been felt (from feeling). Wool and feeling. This connection is so obvious when looking at your work. How could you describe it in words? How does felting connect with feeling for you?

Yes, in Lithuanian, alas, the poetry vanishes in the same way as we would clean the magic of frost on the window with a damp cloth and start gazing at a dirty glass and cloth, not the hypnotizing, unearthly drawing of frost on the glass… Perhaps the Lithuanian thriftiness is to be blamed… The oldest findings of felt in Altai region from 5 a.b.C. are very artistic and decorative. The oldest felt in Lithuania (and not that old as from Altai) was only functional material – thick, one colour felt that had to protect from snow and cold, perhaps there was no place or wish left for poetry… So the word came out also very direct – “suveltas” (felted), and not felt as in English language.

The English version of the word felt (the second and third form of the verb to feel) is really magic for me, it seems to have the essence of felt encoded in it. I say “veltinis” now and I catch myself scanning all the possible words and their combinations, which I could use instead “veltinis”. I feel like I am talking with double meaning – saying a word which has a completely different sense encoded in it. Perhaps wool textiles? Well, also not the most poetic version, but at least neutral and not so plainspoken.

Wool and feeling… These words are entangled in one another. Feeling, sensing, senses – all is here. We sense the wool by touching – it can be rough, nipping the skin, or soft and gentle as a mist, wrapping you and cocooning you inside. It makes you feel warm, stimulates, maintains the temperature, and protects. And all these simple physical senses talk about much deeper things – it wakens up feelings, memories, not necessarily in a conscious way, and probably different to all of us. Yet most often we perceive wool through cozy, warm, safe senses.

Felting is directly connected to sensing – it is actually caressing the wool with one’s fingertips, hands, sliding its surface and also a rough rumpling of it. Senses concentrate in the finger tips and hands. The whole felting process is also not just a mechanical process: you need to feel what is going on with the wool, how the wool fibers are migrating and shrinking.

Despite all those physical feelings felting is still very sensuous process, because in a creative dimension of this process I am also led by a big sensual charge. I mean that I need to feel my work, thought, and energy that I want to radiate through my work. It seems that summing all this up wool textile really becomes so felt, sensed as the word in English. That means that the way you read the description in my website was correct one.

Talking about feelings and felted items, it is not just physical senses, inspiration and the feeling of the process where the connection of wool and feelings takes us. Felted items also act as sensuous stimulus, that people can not simply ignore. It always give rise to reactions and feelings, it gets somewhere deep, where it is sometimes even hard for a person to perceive consciously, it awakens something from the inside, as if it was hiding some codes that have been encoded in our sub consciousness. This sensuous reaction is one of the most beautiful processes in the whole act of felting.

 

What was your own way to this field of art? How did you understand (feel) that this material can be more than just a cozy craft item? How did it become a tool of self expression?

Getting to know wool was very unplanned thing in my life. It was a result of my usual curiosity and being interested in many things. I had seen and heard of some felt work in Lithuania, and to be frank, it looked terrifying to me. What triggered my curiosity was a simple laconic felted ball of wool that I saw live. It was hard to believe that separate wool fibers could form into something so continuous and dense. How could it form into something whole? So I just bought some wool and scattered it on my kitchen table, wetted and started to rub with my hands. It was that feeling of Eureka and joy that I had when I was convinced that separate wool fibers really come together into continuous fabric. I didn’t discover anything at that moment, it was only a feeling inside as if I had discovered a new star.

Little crafts were never my aim. It would have been too boring for my nature. It was curiosity that took me forward. Perhaps also the intuition was a part of this belief that felting was not just for little hand crafts. And sure, it wasn’t. It was just that in Lithuania during that time felt was just little hand crafts more or less and I hadn’t seen anything else.

The first months of trying to feel the felt were full of manic experiments day or night, not following any traditions of felt. I was just discovering new forms, textures and expressions in felt. The moving force was the versatility, inexhaustibility of the material, new challenges and joy of discovery. During the eight years it stepped out of the limits of self expression, it became one of the ways of being, relating to the world and life; not just expressing myself, but also feeling the life through all I do in life. To give and to take.

 

What do you feel when you touch the wool and silk (you also use silk, right?)? Does this feeling change during the process?

It’s a kind of meditation. Falling into another dimension. I think that all ways of creative processes have these rabbit holes of Alice, where the similar feelings arise. In felting it is also stimulated by the sense of touching. It is a very sub conscious connection with all natural materials for me, and I don’t always want to analyze it in a rational way, or name it. I just want to melt in that feeling.

Touching is an intimate sense. It is immediate communication with silk and wool. The whole process is also not monotonous: the beginning is always so fragile and soft when I just start to lay out all the fibers in a certain composition and layers. During the process touching changes from caressing to rumpling, rolling, there is more force, friction. The final touch of playing with textures can be very sculptural process. It becomes soft and sensitive process again. As in every other field there is piano piano and forte, fortissimo stages…

 

I naturally started to talk about the sense of touch. How do other senses are involved in your creative process?

Yes, of course, as we have already talked about it – touch is entangled with felt. Vision is also a very crucial sense here. It matters during the creative process and after – observing all the visual information of the piece and thus giving rise to the whole gamma of feelings, i.e. reactions.

For the last few years I only use natural dyes for my pieces. I dye my wool, silk or felt pieces with plant and other natural matters. It is another one strong stimulus for our perception – a true, live colour that also has hidden codes that we feel, but can hardly name it.

Vision is also what I use to gather a big part of my inspiration. I usually transform visual stimulus through the prism of my sensuous perception. What I felt is never a repetition of what I see. It usually reveals how I feel what I see, hear or perceive in any other way. We can talk about sounds, smells, tastes – when it goes through my sensuous perception, it gets encoded in my pieces in one way or another. Music, colour, taste, and smell are feelings, sometimes even the same feeling that has just been floating in another form, but it is about the same thing… All the seemingly separate particles, impulses of the world merge together in a certain scheme and get a new “body” – felt piece.

 

You give workshops in different parts of the world. For example, for the last few years you have been returning to Cyprus to give workshops. It is a nice place, and a bunch of creatively inspired women. How do such workshops happen? What do those travels mean to you yourself?

It is one way of giving. Giving what I have learnt myself, what I have perceived, felt, what I feel like giving to someone else, believing that it is going to become an important, positive stimulus in another person’s life. Wherever it would take him/her. Such workshops as in Cyprus are special and really felt from my heart. I understand clearly that people who come there have to put a lot of effort to escape their every day obligations, and the processes of learning and transforming start long before they reach the island of Aphrodite. Everything is actually taking place in their inside, in their feelings, and thoughts. They escape their daily routine, get to a special place where everything makes an influence, it doesn’t matter if you want it or not – satin waters of the sea, sun, figs from the garden, blue sky, bright stars at night, the smell of the flowers and songs of cicadas. And the main reason of this escape is creating, not interrupted by any other obligations – like of mother, wife, housewife, or employee…

A person gets a creative stimulus, tasks – sometimes poetic, sometimes very mathematical. Sometimes creativity flows in abundance, sometimes it gets stuck inside. But then the law of withdrawal, relaxation, changing the activity takes the action and you witness a person living through an Eureka moment. Something moves forward inside and a person knows how to express their creative potential, how to put all he wanted to life. It is beautiful to witness such moments.

 

How did it happen that you are more there, in other countries of the world, than here, in Lithuania? I mean the public space, workshops, etc.

Maybe because of the not poetic word “veltinis”? Smile Well, seriously, I am here and I am everywhere. I think we all became modern nomads, and no distinct “here” and “there” exists. I am where I feel free to express myself in a way I feel I have to. I am where I am loved, needed, where I can give and get. I am where I feel I can be accepted and people want to accept me. I am where I feel that what I do reflects the pulse of life.

I love Lithuania and I am here. Though I also have some rational self criticism in me. But I don’t want to analyze some of our national traits that are not all so positive. I would love to give some of my workshops here in Lithuania in a special place for me – in Kursiu Nerija. I work for clients here, especially wedding clients, who find me in one way or another and are looking for something not traditional, who want to create fairy tale images of themselves and have a different feeling of their wedding. But in a broader sense of creativity I live there, where I can have my momentum, where I can breathe free and give.

 

Have there ever been any unexpected discoveries while working with wool, giving workshops? Perhaps something (an event, feeling) has surprised you?

Ability to be surprised and wonder constantly and to value even the smallest things that the life brings to us is one of the most important conditions of life. I feel like referring to the English word “wonder” (as it is more obvious than with the Lithuanian word) which actually means miracle. So to wonder, be surprised really means to fill one’s life with miracles, no matter the size.

When I just started dating felting, my life was full of wooly “miracles” and being surprised with all little discoveries. The further I go, the more my life is filled with miracles that are connected with people I meet on my wool and silk path, with people who go through the most beautiful human transformations, for seemingly so little things – for just giving them something in the workshops, for touching something deep inside them. It feels like just pulling a little ribbon – something inside a person starts moving, some spiritual transformations, changes in feelings occur, the relationships change, new resolutions are made, dreams and new paths follow. And it seems that you only pulled a very common “ribbon” – just something about wool and silk… Everything is much deeper… We are felt of thoughts and feelings ourselves. Sometimes it is even hard to understand what it is about – silk fiber, rough wool that might rub your skin to the blood, or on the contrary – so soft and caressing – here, on the table, or all of this – in our minds…

So I really treasure all such human moments when such a simple act of teaching felt makes the sensuous stories of people flow out. It happened during one of my first workshops I had in Italy. I guess it really surprised me most, when one of my students whose work we were  just analyzing, and the things she said about it herself, started thanking me for something I just said, something having a great importance in her life, something she had just perceived about herself and accepted. And it changed her attitude to life. All was said with the tears in her eyes.

These are very fragile but very treasured gifts of life. The human factor.

 

You have a degree in Psychology, you have also danced a lot, and now – creating with wool. How do those three things come together?

All the human paths in life are entangled. And from a distant point of view all of it is about the same thing. I love psychological subjects till now, and I continue to deepen my knowledge in some of the subjects when I feel a need for. Right now I am into psychology of creativity which will be the basis of my new workshop program. I also still dance – just for my own pleasure. If I start to analyze these three fields, I am not sure which of them is more sunken into the other one or two. Everything overlaps. One part of psychology field analyzes creative processes. There is also art therapy. Dance also exists in psychology as a form of therapy and a form of non verbal expression. Creating with wool also has so much movement and psychology. We have already talked about the thoughts, feelings, fields of sub consciousness, connections… Human relationships as well. The felting process itself – it is movement of the hands of a felter, and movements of the wool fibers that migrate, entangle, shrink, and always move – as if it was a dance.

So…perhaps it really is about the same thing…

Actually I believe in the human potential to become almost anyone and to do almost anything if there is enough of curiosity, stubbornness, and a wish to learn, get deeper and better. A decade ago we had TV series on called “The Pretender”, where actor Michael T.Weiss played a genius who could master the profession of anyone. Perhaps it was an exaggerated version of what I believe in, i.e. the potential of a man, but on the other hand it also talked about importance of feeling life through the being of anyone you choose to be.

 

How do you see your future path (also the creative one)? Do you have new plans?

I will answer with the quote of the same “Pretender”. In the beginning of every series, the character of M.T.Weiss is being asked: “Are you a doctor?” And he replies: “I am today”.

Today my path is covered with silk, wool, and natural dyes. I don’t ask myself what I am going to be tomorrow and I don’t build plans. People say God laughs at those plans. Wool came into my life in an unexpected way, and I let it in. Besides, I love surprises. Usually even more than carefully thought over plans being put to action. So I chose to be whoever or whatever I am today, I dream about tomorrow just a little and with open arms I meet what I am to become tomorrow. It maybe the same path of wool and silk, getting just deeper and broader. It maybe dance again, psychology, or literature or photography, or some other unexpected yet to me activity. I only know that it is never going to be sliding the surface, I will be diving deep. Curiosity, sensitivity to the world is the feeling of the pulse of life. Whatever is going to be, will be my way…

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Confession

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nuno felted dress: eco print and natural dyeing design by Irit Dulman, nuno felt, natural dyeing, garment design by Vilte Kazlauskaite. Fairy tale in Amsterdam

The “school year” has been quite rich with experiences, workshops Irit and I gave in different countries of this world. We just returned recently from our workshops in the Netherlands…

Through all last 4 years of teaching workshop organizers were interested in different things – some just inviting and enjoying the programs we offered and taught many times before, some interested in some modifications, and some sometimes pushing for focusing how to make an advanced program for the same students.

I remember one conversation with one workshop organizer discussing the particular matter when I just had to say that I am not interested in making students dependable on their teachers in their creative growth and just offering new and new programs every year for the same students. I believe a good teacher is the one who stimulates the student, “opens” some kind of section in their brain, and after this revelation for the students, they can do oh so much in their creative felting just from taking that one workshop with the right teacher. Don’t get me wrong, I have students who come to be taught by me or by me and Irit once again or even the third time, but on different subjects or completely different concept, they are not the dependable type. They work on their own a lot and from the time we met they have made very big progress. I had in mind the kind of teaching when organizers make level 1, level 2, level 3 every year or every half year and make the students believe they must take it.

The other thing that amazed me all the time was the fast food attitude towards learning things in felt making workshops…. It really doesn’t matter who taught and what was taught – some people just come and learn the very surface of it, just because it is fashionable, and then they throw it away from their heads the next morning, and jump into something else. Never going deeper, never finding and refining themselves in what new they have just learnt.

I have been teaching fabric manipulation for 4 years now. One may ask when enough is enough? If the thing is really yours and until you haven’t explored all the depths and transformations of it, it is never enough, else it is just sliding the surface.

So we never let us be pushed by demand of workshop organizers about developing commercial workshops just because they needed it. We took the whole circle of changing seasons – we sowed an idea, which was growing slowly, sometimes with hardships, sometimes with impossible lightness, until we reached the time of the harvest! Naturally, by ourselves. And just because we went down into the depths of what we were doing already.

Irit and I developed a new direction, concept that we are now putting into our new work and that we put into our Cyprus workshop program. We were analyzing carefully our own work and botanical printing, natural color in general a lot, trying to answer questions like theoretically it is perfect, but why not in real? We noticed what was lacking and what had to be the concept point actually. We got connected with natural color so much. And fused it with felting, looked for more advanced and sophisticated ways for the eco print color language and felting language to go hand in hand.

Every time the wave of creative joy catches you, you are full of desire not only to use it yourself, but also share with others, who, you hope, will also understand and go deeper and deeper with you to all the explorations – first together in the workshop, and then separately, everyone on their own.

I remember our first time Cyprus workshop participants were feeling so high during the workshop and after and were asking us, please make it happen the next year. We said we will think about it. And after returning home we have been discussing with Irit the subject through millions of letters between us. Something was not going right. And the answer was – there was inner pressure, feeling of obligation to the students to offer something new to them, so they could come. Once we revealed it to ourselves, we could get rid of this idea and say to ourselves, no, we don’t have to. We can offer the same program to new students if we just want it to happen again, but we will not force a new program. That was a moment of lightness. But we didn’t go with a stream, we became a stream. Because the minute we set ourselves free from making something for others, we got much deeper into what we were doing for ourselves. Our work, things that interest us, the directions we want to go next. And that created a stream. It was the moment of Eureka Smile Thus, naturally and without any force the Cyprus program was born too. Not because someone asked (and little of last year participants could really stick to their dream to come again with us to Cyprus..), but because we found our way, we did it our way.

So here we are, offering to give out to others something that is dear to us like our own child Smile RECONSTRUCTION. I believe in our minds too Smile

Someone asked me once why you are putting so much effort that doesn’t really pay off that well to this Cyprus workshop, when you can go and teach where other organizers invite you, not care about anything and simply work and earn for what you work. And I answered. Because I love it. I love creating the program, surrounding, atmosphere from the beginning with Irit, to put our visions and love of the subject as well as teaching without any regulations of the strangers, to a material world and to give to those who come. And those who come are also special, they are making effort to get there and they come because they want to go deeper and not slide the surface. For sliding the surface it would take too much effort, not worth it Smile And because teaching and learning in some remote environment from your home is so so different and much more enriching than when you bound physically or mentally to your home and people around. Mrs. X from country Y is not the same Mrs. X in Cyprus as she is in her country Y Winking smile Something in the air opens her up and makes it a much significant learning experience than anywhere near home.

So we do it because our Cyprus workshop is the most honest act of teaching, sharing and giving that we can offer from all the other things. We make it special, like nowhere else, and we and the students feel it like that. At least that’s what we want to believe in…

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Animism. Design with the soul.

“The animal world will keep invading and transforming the life of humans represented in a more abstract and less narrative manner.
Fibre and plant are becoming dominant materials animated by organic form and skeleton structures”.

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“Primitive matter and organic shapes will embody a need of man longing for a more meaningful and ritualistic relationship with earth and the elements.
Resulting in a revival of animism.
Therefore designers create brut and raw shapes that resemble totemic termite mounds, honeycomb shape, spider web laces and timber structures”.

“Can design have a soul and therefore be animated?”

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I have mentioned Li Edelkoort some years ago in one of my posts here and now came across her words again when Irit shared it. There’s so much of the truth and purity in her words about trends (that we already see today!) which echo so well with my own inner feelings and believes.

And the whole trend report of her is so well worth reading:

“Post Fossil - excavating 21st century creation by Lee Edelkoort 2011
Time has come for extreme change
Society is ready to break away from last century for good.
To break with creative conventions, theoretic rules and stigmas that now are questioned, challenged and broken.
To break with a materialistic mentality replacing it with the crafted materialization of modest earth-bound and recomposed matter.
In the aftermath of the worst financial crisis in decades, a period of glamorous and streamlined design for design's sake come to an end.
A new generation of designers retrace their roots, refine their earth and research their history, sometimes going back to the beginning of time.
In this process, they form and formulate design around natural and sustainable materials, favoring timber, hide, pulp, fibre, earth and fire.
Like contemporary cavemen, they reinvent shelter, redesign tools and manmade machines, and conceptualize archaic rituals for a more modest, content and contained lifestyle.
Like a Fred Flintstone of the future.
The animal world will keep invading and transforming the life of humans represented in a more abstract and less narrative manner.
fibre and plant are becoming dominant materials animated by organic form and skeleton structures.
Our relationship with all living organisms is at stake. Therefore humans will share and care for each other.
Soon the world will discover that we are all family.
Ecology and sustainability will no longer be enough.
Primitive matter and organic shapes will embody a need of man longing for a more meaningful and ritualistic relationship with earth and the elements.
Resulting in a revival of animism.
Therefore designers create brut and raw shapes that resemble totemic termite mounds, honeycomb shape, spider web laces and timber structures; at times incorporating biotechnology into the making process to inspire design systems for the future.
Nature is a dominant ingredient in this movement, although no longer used in a naive and aspiring ecological language, but as a mature philosophy fit for newer age. Raising the questions that need to be raised.
Can we do with less to become more?
Can design have a soul and therefore be animated?
Can man find a more meaningful way to consume?
Can we break with the past and reinvent the future?
In general, materials will be matte and humble, however the earth and its hidden riches also invites this generation to employ minerals, alloys and crystals; adding lustre and sometimes even sheen to fossil-like concepts and constructions.
Laquered and polished surfaces are enhancing vegabond finds, unveiling their raw beauty while questioning the survival of the world's economy.
At times these designs will echo the essence of the arte povera movement which is bound to make a revival – soon”

Lidewij Edelkoort

Monday, April 30, 2012

EXPLORING NUNO FELT and ECO PRINT with Vilte Kazlauskaite & Irit Dulman


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BIG ANNOUNCEMENT! and more details coming your way! But...if you are interested in exploring nuno felt textures and natural eco print with me and Irit Dulman in the island of Aphrodite - Cyprus (can you believe it??? :) reserve the dates this July!

Course I
Beyond the surface. Fabric manipulation in nuno felt dresses + Eco print.
July 17-20

Course II
Wild fibers. Fiber manipulation and raw fleeces in nuno felt accessories + Eco print.
July 21-23
 
 
 
P.S.

Based on inquiries we get, I have outlined main differences between 2 courses to make it easier for you to choose or just take both:

Beyond the surface - focuses on creating textures using fabric manipulation. We will also go deep into how to construct a garment, different wool lay out techniques, shrinkage, constructing of the pattern. Irit will teach eco printing and dyeing, and she will focus more on dyeing fabrics and nuno felt.
Second workshop - Wild fibers - focuses on creating textures using raw fleeces + fiber manipulation, which is different than fabric manipulation in the first course. We will create our own fabric from raw fibers and will learn how to give it dimension and combine with all texture from fleece. I will show how to make very light felt with fleeces, but will also cover how to make it thick if preferred. We will not go deep into pattern making and construction in this workshop, it's just for an accessory but completely different materials and techniques than the first one. Irit will also teach eco print and dyeing, but here she will also focus on dyeing raw fleece and fibers (fabrics and felt as well).

 

You can read some information about these courses in Russian here

Or take a peek to a space the workshop will be held at here

Sunday, March 18, 2012

A view from above

 

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my landscape

 

“I still can’t find any better definition for the word Art, than this. Nature, Reality, Truth, but with a significance, a conception, and a character which the artist brings out in it and to which he gives expression, which he disentangles and makes free”. (Vincent van Gogh)

 

P.S. I found this quotation in a book “Abstract Earth. A View from Above” by Richard Woldendorp – a collection of photographs of Australian landscapes. The book was a gift from a wonderful feltmakers’ group FeltWest in Perth where I was giving workshops. I was doing a slide show on the first night there and shared my passion for landscapes that I create in felt, and they were good listeners – gave me a most wonderful book of landscapes that will be my big inspiration when I return.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Project: Repurpose

Almost two years ago one of my clients was so excited contacting me, and she had an idea… She wanted me to repurpose her wedding dress that was sitting in the box for years. I think her excitement simply infected me and I said yes to her, let’s try this.

So the dress made its way to me over Atlantic. When I opened the big box, I had ambiguous feelings – fear to take the dress apart, excitement to repurpose it and…worry when I saw it was all synthetic and not silk as my client thought of it.

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I don’t usually use anything synthetic in my pieces or projects, I don’t feel connected with the synthetics. And especially having to combine it with the natural materials… The other problem was that most of the fabric of the dress was not suitable for felting at all.

As the excitement and enthusiasm of the first moments faded away, I understood I could do nothing unless I build a connection with this fabric. I needed it to speak to me. There were dozen of times when I took it to my hands and then put it away. I took it apart, carded some fabric into fibers, and removed the embellishments to be felted on something I still didn’t know what. I was lucky to have such a wonderful client who understood my creative process and was ready to wait even for a year or more.

Concentrating my thoughts on my client, opened up my mind. Though the fabric was synthetic, it was a part of my clients image some years ago – I was sure this dress was soaking in most positive feelings, love and adoration during those times when my client was marrying a man she loved. It wasn’t just a piece of polyester to her. This was the point where the fabric could speak to me and I could listen. My work began.

It wasn’t all about felting, just a few pieces, it was more of interpretation in textiles. I applied several techniques and thought a lot about colors. I was sure the colors should be softening the feeling of synthetics and should be something that would look worth of a woman whatever her age would be. As the woman who decided to repurpose her wedding dress wants to cherish the things made of it for years or maybe a lifetime.

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And…the best reward for this “communication” with the dress was my clients reaction – she loved every single piece. And I hope she is going to cherish it for years.

Monday, October 31, 2011

Furry trends in couture and feltmaking

It seems that furry looks have never been that much in fashion as this Fall. I’ve already talked about this trend last year, mentioning collection of Chanel. But it seems that the furry trend reached its peak just this Fall – when you look at the styles showed in so many fashion magazines, when you look at what many shops have to offer this Fall – there’s so much of furry looks. And when you look at the runway for this Fall, for example Sarah Burton for Alexander McQueen, you see very soft furry collections. Just one idea keeps turning on my mind when looking at it – she could have that much successfully used felt from alpaca rather than fur and would have got very similar looks, just more eco-friendly and cruelty free. And that’s why I feel even more proud for Josephus Thimister, who let this furry trend appear on the runway using the craft of felt making (my felt pieces for Josephus Thimister Fall/Winter 2011-2012 collection could be seen here).

DSC_8435-my nuno felt coat with alpaca fleece

 

DSC_8313- alpaca fleece in nuno felt

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Becoming a character

I like to intimate the stories with my felt and the way I take photos with it. And I liked the idea of someone else continuing these stories from my photos when Lyse whom I met on Etsy asked me if she could use some of my photos for her creative works in her Imaginary World – ImagineStudio.
That’s how me with my felts became a character – Girl with the Golden Earing
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Homage to Claudel
 EtsyHomage to Camille Claudel

The Wave
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Thursday, September 29, 2011

taught by vilte

Well…many of you asked for it. It took me quite a lot of time, but…here it is – taught by vilte

 

taught

Some of my students from various countries have talked a lot how great it would be to see a set of images from various workshops held in different countries and compare what people make. I decided it would be even more interesting to see how people apply my techniques later in their own designs, that’s why I have included some of the images of felt designs by my students using the techniques taught by me. I want to thank everyone who emailed me letters with warmest wishes and words, and the links to their websites, and the photos. It takes me quite a long time to reply to everyone, so please be patient…But know, I appreciate your words and always answer you in my mind. There’s a connection, remember? :)

Enjoy my new tumblr site devoted just for the workshops I give – taught by vilte (I am sorry for not listing every workshop I gave there, but I don’t have any photos from some of them).

Monday, May 30, 2011

Why do you do it?

Almost in every workshop I give I get this question. Why do you do it or don’t you feel sorry you are giving your techniques to the world for anyone to use and get more rivals? No, I don’t. No, I don’t – for the creative and growing spirits who are just getting a stimulus, an inspiration for their own work and who are going to develop their own signature with time. And the others – I don’t think about them, because if they only follow and not create themselves, thus I will always be at least one step ahead, so why bother? No, I don’t, because I just have 2 arms and a small place for felting – no studio, no staff, no felting machines, and no plans to conquer the world just by myself.

But what I really care about is that the students who come to my workshops would be open minded and have the right motivation to work more and concentrate on the concept of the workshop and not the techniques, it is the process that is important, I am not just teaching how to do it, I am talking how to think about it, I am encouraging the students to feel it. If someone comes and asks just to look at the way I apply some techniques in felting, I am saying – no, I don’t teach like that. If you are not interested to actually live it through, feel it, experience and listen to what I have to say, don’t come to my workshop.

Of course I don’t like it when people you teach later on try to hide that they were taught by me and present the techniques as an invention of their own. I don’t like when people don’t give credits. I don’t like when people become dependant and don’t want to continue on their own – when they take the same principles, inspirations, goals, approach, even ideas they heard me discussing with someone else and don’t think of anything on their own.

For a long time I was just a self taught felter, but that’s how I developed my signature in felting, later my first and only teacher was Claudy Jongstra who literally set me free from my own brakes. And since then I happily and always give credit to her teaching and recommend her workshops. And I think that’s the way it should be.

There are hundreds of feltmakers with really excellent felting skills, but there are so little who reveal their uniqueness in their felting. My workshops focus more on the latter. I believe a key to uniqueness can be discovered in encouraging creativity, in adding a feeling to the process, in developing a communication with the materials and a piece. I often call my fiber work – poetry of fibers. That’s what I expect from my students. It might be blank verses – a stream of subconsciousness, very intuitive poetry of fibers, a haiku or a poetry with complicated rhyme scheme, it doesn’t matter, it’s just a different approach to the felting process, not just a demonstration of perfect felting skills.

 

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New techniques that I am teaching during the workshop is just the language that we are going to use for the particular subject of the workshop, it’s not the focus. I believe that creativity training and ability to connect with yourself (thus developing your own unique signature) is the most essential of all.

I have just returned from my workshop in UK with which I was really happy and enjoyed a really creative company of English feltmakers (as well as some who came from the Netherlands and Canada, and of Russian origin too). And I also had such well known students as Sheila Smith, Liz Clay, Lizzie Houghton, Chrissie Day, who have long ago developed their own signatures and taught others and I am sure they just came to try to speak “in my language” and will tell their own in felt if they do like it. It’s that other approach that I was talking about – when people don’t really need the techniques “step 1, step 2, step 3- bye bye”, they just learn your language to speak their own stories.

 

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Photos – kimono coat – an example of wild fibers and manipulation to be taught in my workshop in the Netherlands

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

People and wisdom

One aspect of travelling that I appreciate and adore now is meeting people. When I was younger I was so much taken by places I got to visit, the surroundings that people always went to the second plan. Now it’s the other way around. If I had ever developed a talent of a writer I would now have hundreds of characters and their stories to put into ink and paper.

image Piet Mondriaan – Passie Bloem. One of my students Bertken gave me a postcard with P.Mondriaan painting “Witte rozen” and told me the story about Piet and how she wanted to give me another postcard - “Passie Bloem”, but couldn’t find it. Touched by the attention of my student I just had to find that painting myself.

 

Besides all the enriching and inspiring communication I get from the people I meet during my trips, I also sometimes hear the special words of wisdom they share.

When I was having dinner with my colleague friend Eveline van der Pas (into whom I just bumped into on my stay in the Netherlands without knowing where exactly she lived) her young daughter musician said that we always admire someone who’s potential we have ourselves, just haven’t developed it yet. And I found it so true and encouraging in everyone’s way of creativity.

On a short visit to Elis Vermeulen and discussing all the impressions from my workshop life and travelling, she said that you always have to get back to yourself and understand what it is that YOU want after hearing what others say you should/could do. And that’s exactly what I am doing now. I am getting back to myself and what I myself want out of my felt.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Workshops

When I came back from the Netherlands I found a CD waiting for me in the post. Agostina’s (Italian Felt Academy) husband Gosta Zwilling was taking photos during the workshop and sent them to me as well. It was really interesting to see these photos after some time has passed after the workshop in Italy ended. There is always something you see and realize in the moment it is happening, and always something else that comes to your perception when the time passes.

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I pay a lot of attention to working on samples during my workshops. And here are some of the samples the participants made in Italy. Their concept for the workshop was combining archaic spirit of the woman using raw fleece with modern, subtle femininity using tactile surfaces from various fabrics.

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The workshop in the Netherlands was taking place in a perfect studio of Truus Huijbregts. It is always more inspiring to work in the surroundings like these and create a healthy environment for creativity in a relaxed way without the stress  that is no good at all during such workshops.

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The students made lot’s of beautiful and promising samples, as well as dresses, but I didn’t take any more descent photos to be posted. One of the reasons is that after the workshop the dresses are still quite wet and the process of working with textures is not finally finished, thus I never get to see them in a full beauty, but knowing the technique and what it gives, I always know, what the students will discover when they go home with their dresses and finish them 100%.
Workshop in Belgium gave me an opportunity to meet one Lithuanian woman living in Belgium and also making felt. We had quite a lot of conversations about creativity and felt making during the workshop and the time after as Sigita accompanied me on the trips to Antwerpen where we also visited MOMU – Mode Museum with an exhibition on knitwear in fashion “Unravel”.  And I felt really happy when she sent me a photo of a dress she made straight after returning from my workshop, inspired by what we did and talked during the workshop and the knitting exhibition we saw. When I see something like that, I understand that my student got the point (which is not always easy, especially for people who are used to working just inside the box), and that my teaching is not just a mere play of techniques, it makes people create using the language I teach. And that is my goal as a teacher.


P.S. You can always check my schedule of workshops on my blog which should be updated soon with more workshops in Autumn, 2011.

Meeting and teaching

When I started something like a workshop tour in Europe this March (which started in Italy at Italian Felt Academy), I never imagined what it would bring to myself. Except of the joy or elation that one feels when the students are capable of opening up, setting themselves free and letting the creativity flow; and when the students are advanced and you don’t have to explain ordinary technical things too much, then something special starts in the class, which I could call a play of higher substances.

After returning from a very special trip to the Netherlands and then Belgium, I’ve been thinking a lot of how much this traveling has given to me. Special people, meetings, lot’s of conversations, places, mysterious coincidences, deja-vu, all the feelings that help you to understand where and why you are and where you are going or why you are doing the things that you do.

 

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 a card that one of my students gave to me after the workshop: “a whole new world has opened up”. I could say the same about me…

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Self taught has got a teacher

When I was caught by felt few years ago, I started studying and experimenting with it on my own, going deeper and deeper into this archaic textile from point 0. Joy of discovery has been one of the greatest stimulus for experiments (even if it was the same as inventing a bicycle :) ). I think from one point I might be even proud that I am a self taught, that I managed to “domesticate” this technique by myself and little by little learnt to express myself through it.

But like in every other field, at some points of development a human needs a teacher (directly and literally). And it’s not actually about techniques and skills, I know that, it’s about personal development of your creativity, expression, relating, growing, moving forward, getting feedback, or even hearing your own thought aloud, tracing your artistic self and identity… And if I said I “might” be proud that I am a self taught, then I can definitely say that I AM for sure proud that my one and only teacher was Claudy Jongstra.

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Thank You, Claudy, for all you gave to me. And You gave a lot!

 

I won’t show you everything I made during the workshop yet, just a glimpse, hope you enjoy.

 

myfelt copy

 

 

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Nuo pat to momento, kai susidūriau su veltiniu, atradinėjau, eksperimentavau, gilinausi, grimzdau į jį pati, niekieno nemokoma. Atradimo džiaugsmas visuomet būdavo vienas iš stipriausių stimulų suvokti šią archaišką tekstilę giliau ir giliau. (Net jei tai buvo dviračio išradinėjimas :) ) Galbūt galėčiau pasakyti, jog galėčiau didžiuotis, jog prisijaukinau šią techniką pati, po truputį mokydamasi ja išreikšti save.

Visgi kaip ir visur kitur gyvenime, augant ir vystantis, žmogus atsiduria tokiuose etapuose, kuomet jam reikalingas mokytojas (tiesiogine ir perkeltine prasmėmis). Ir tai nėra susiję su technikomis, įgūdžiais, juos galima perkąsti patiems. Tai susiję su asmeninio kūrybingumo ugdymu, išraiška, augimu, atspindėjimu, judėjimu pirmyn, atgalinio ryšio gavimu ar net savo paties minčių klausymu garsiai kažkieno kito lūpose, savo kūrybinio “aš” ir identiteto apčiuopimu.

Rašiau, jog “galbūt” galėčiau didžiuotis, jog viską išmokau pati, bet aš TIKRAI galiu pasakyti, jog didžiuojuosi, jog mano viena ir vienintelė mokytoja tapo Claudy Jongstra.

Ačiū, Claudy, už viską, ką man davei. O davei tikrai labai daug!

 

Dar neparodysiu visų darbų, kuriuos dariau studijoje su Claudy Jongstra, bet tikiuosi, jog šis mažas žvilgtelėjimas pro rakto skylutę jums patiks.

Monday, June 7, 2010

Roots

There are many things that are being born through the hands of the maker. One of the underlying things are the roots of the maker… I’d like to quote prof. Viktorija Daujotyte here: “Ethnic culture acts like tradition inside us, like blood that circulates inside us without our knowledge, perhaps even if we don’t want that. … We can not separate ourselves from it, it’s not the culture among all other cultures, it’s the underlying culture”.

 

r3 Pixie’s strips (Laumės juostos)

Recently I had to create some nuno felted clothes with ethnic inspiration. This top above was one of them. I took a modern approach to it, but I definetly drew inspsiration from Lithuanian national costume by imitating woven webbing used to tie around the waist by men, green color and fabric with linen. Sometimes the smallest details hide much bigger meanings…

 

Just trying to feel Lithuania… Can you?

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Kūrėjo rankose gimsta daugybė iš gelmių ateinančių dalykų. Vienas iš pagrindinių dalykų yra šaknys. Norėčiau pacituoti prof. Viktoriją Daujotytę: “Etninė kultūra veikia mumyse kaip tradicija, kaip kraujas, kuris teka mums nežinant, gal net nenorint. (...) Atsiskirti nuo jos neturime galimybių, ji nėra tik kultūra tarp kitų kultūrų, ji yra pamatinė”.

Neseniai kūriau keletą veltų rūbų, ieškodama įkvėpimo etninėje plotmėje. Vienas iš jų – aukščiau pateikta palaidinė. Moderni išraiška, forma, tačiau detalėse glūdi ir etninės prasmės – austų juostų, aprišamų ant baltinių, imitacija, žalia spalva ir medžiaga iš mum taip artimo lino. Mažose detalėse kartais glūdi daug gilesnės prasmės…

Friday, May 15, 2009

Archeology of the Future: 20 Years of Trend Forecasting

I really get astonished at the creative souls and outstanding trends in design of one particular nation in this world. DUTCH! I am interested in modern design and architecture, and when something catches my eyes, it is usually created by a Dutch! No exception was this find of an exhibition with a very intriguing name - Archeology of the Future- 20 years of trend forecasting with Li Edelkoort.
Edelkoort is one of the world’s most renowned trend forecasters and she was born in the Netherlands!




 

Archeology of the Future is a seven part exhibition, simple labels with accompanying visuals
BODY & SOUL / GLOBAL & LOCAL / FLORA & FAUNA / URBAN & RURAL / ARMOUR & AMOUR / ABSTRACTION & NARRATION / NIHILISM & HEDONISM.




Fourteen trends reflecting key lifestyle movements of the last twenty years, from 1990 to 2010. The exhibiton also includes a variety of design, fashion and photography from around the world and other treasures from Edelkoort's personal archive.


27th March - 31st May '09

Designhuis Eindhoven
Stadhuisplein 3, Eindhoven, NL
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Olandai – išskirtinė tauta, kuri visuomet stebina savo kūrybiškumu ir originalumu.
“Archeology of the Future” – 20 metų dizaino, mados tendencijų paroda Eindhoven’e, Nyderlanduose.

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