Mexico is home to numerous distinct indigenous people each with their own customs and languages. Certainly each of the 29 Mexican states has several native costumes influenced by the mix of Spanish, Mestizo and indigenous people. Moreover,most festivals have roots in the indigenous past. Primarily, these are the roots that I celebrate when I make my fabric collages. Moreover,the desire to create a way to combine by love of sewing with my love of Mexico inspired the start of my art quilt life. Similarly,my Mexican inspired fabric collages evolved from that. Above all,I create the collages with fabric, details and found objects that I identify with the Mexican experience.
Many Ways to make Fabric Collages
First, I start by choosing the fabrics and colors that go together. In addition,my design wall helps me to find their “special” spot. Moreover,it is important to decide what will go on top of the space beforehand. Jewelry or a finished iconic piece of fabric may be highlighted like a bandana or an arpillera. If the piece has many busy objects, then there needs to have an open calm space as the background. Popular trends in handcrafts of past generations in the United States were likewise popular in Mexico. Tatting and doily making were crossborder trends. I sometimes choose these for my pieces.
Sewing the Pieces Together
Next I sew the fabric pieces together. Then I pay attention to the order in which I need to sew the items on. Depending on the embellishment, I may quilt the whole top firstand then hand sew on the embellishments afterwards. Artist made 3D figures, flowers and hair bows add interest. Found objects including antique huipil pieces may be used. Colorful ribbons remind one of the movement and action of folkloric dancing. Sometimes I will fuse fun fabric pieces to the top.The whimsy flows.
In Conclusion
Finally,these fabric collages are fun to sew together and embellish. Furthermore,I hope that you will be inspired to create you own. In addition,please feel free share them with me.
In conclusion,here is a link to some of my favorite blogs. The Thelmdatter posts are historical and informational about the diverse handicrafts made in Mexico. Unfortunately,the blog has been discontinued.
The wisdom of the art world says that an artist should develop one identifiable portfolio of work. The audience should be able to recognize the work as work from the artist. At a later date, the artist may move in a different direction.Yet, isn’t following your heart why artists make art?
Following your Heart
My soul directs me to do something different. I must listen. So I have three portfolios that I take turns making; Mexican Inspired Fabric Collages, Nature Art Quilts and Abstract Art Quilts. Usually I make five or more pieces before moving on to another portfolio. The work remains fresh and new to me in this way.
Mexican Inspired Fabric Collages
Mexican inspired fabric collages drew me to begin my art career. I gather fabric, details and found objects that I identify with the Mexican experience to use. The art pieces are mostly machine pieced together. Some embellishments require hand sewing. Whimsical, unusual effects are fun to include. To not make them would prevent me from following my heart. I draw on my knowledge of Spanish. I learned so much from my experiences dancing with Los Méxicas, the University of California at Santa Cruz’s Mexican folk dance group. Other influences include my travels to Mexico and my thirty six year elementary school teaching career working mainly with children of immigrants from Mexico. Following your heart takes many forms.
Abstract Art Quilts
“Ann Baldwin May’s quilts are like abstract paintings.” Dave de Give “Oh, I didn’t realize that the art was a quilt.” I thought it was a painting. A visitor commented during Open Studios art tour. She had only seen a small photo of the abstract work in a catalogue.
No fabric squares or blocks. No patterns. I create color, texture and movement using tucks, decorative threads and fibers with undulating quilting stitches. I use pieces of mostly redirected fabric to create my abstract art quilts. Art quilts free me to use a wide range of colors. Art quilts free me to experiment with unusual fabrics.
Nature Quilts
My third portfolio is my nature quilts. I make trees, landscapes, seascapes and underwater fantasies. These fabric landscape and seascape collage art quilts use the fabric layering technique. I cover them with tulle and free motion quilted together. The tulle remains to hold the pieces in place but it is often invisible. Sheer fabrics and synthetics add a watery effect to the scenes. The art quilts are often colorful and whimsical. Some pieces I call underwater fantasies .
You may be interested in reading more about the techniques I use to create these art quilts.
Myself, the Artist.I am an artist. The tools I use are fabric, threads, batting and a sewing machine. If you look in my studio, you would see a sewing machine, cutting boards, rotary cutter, scissors and tools generally found in a sewing room or fabric studio. However, the items on the walls are quite foreign to a sewing room. Underwater fantasies, abstract art and maybe a Mexican inspired collage adorn the walls of my studio.
Myself, the Artist
How do you do that?
Sometimes it is hard for people to understand what they are seeing. Perhaps they recognize a fish swimming though kelp. “How did you get it to look like the light is reflecting off of the water? What? It is covered with what? I don’t see it. ” Myself, the artist explains the fabric layering technique. I lay the backing down on a table.Then I lay down the batting (soft center of a quilt). Next, create the scene. Finally, I cover the whole piece with tulle netting. After free motion quilting the layers together the tulle netting disappears. The tulle netting remains on top but it can’t readily be seen. Some nettings have extra sparkles on it that reflects the light like water.This answers the question,what do I do?
Traditional Blocks
Quilt blocks (squares) sewn together to create tradional bed quilts. Those blocks are made from patterns. The patterns may be new or a hundred years old. Myself, the artist comes from that world. I love the charming bed quilts that I have made. I just don’t do that anymore.
No more Patterns
I no longer use commercial patterns. When I buy a pattern, my expectation is that it will be correct. If if is a pattern for clothing, I pay attention to the measurements on the back. I expect the pattern to fit. Since I have been sewing clothes since high school, I have used many patterns for myself and my children. Sadly, more often than not, the clothing made from following these patterns carefully did not always fit.
The last straw for me was when my daughters were 3 and 4 years old. I was working full time. Yet, I wanted to make them each a dress with a pinafore. The pinafores were the same size as the dresses. The pattern had not adjusted them to be bigger to allow them to fit over the dresses. I was so disappointed. The dresses and pinafores were wore separately and loved to death by my daughters. I never bought another pattern after that.
Who created the Fabric Layering Technique?
Laura Fogg created the fabric layering technique. Meri Vahl learned it from her. I learned it from Meri Vahl. We are all art quilters located in Northern California. I create my own landscapes and underwater fantasy scenes from fabric. While the techniques are similar, each art quilt is unique.
Abstract Art Quilts
Abstract art quilts are also visible in my studio. The abstract pieces I make are designed on a design wall. My design wall is a large wall covered with white flannel. The fabric pieces stick to the flannel. I can move the pieces around until they find their spot. High end redirected fabrics from interior designers add a unique quality to my art. I choose solid colors but also fabrics with texture and movement that appeals to me. This answers the question,what do I do?
Mexican inspired Fabric Collages
Mexican inspired fabric collages add whimsy to my studio. They reflect my love and respect for the Mexican culture. I love playing with the bright colors. Three dimensional found objects may also be hand sewn to the finished top.
by Holly Welstein, FabMo’s Board Chairwoman (edited for space)
A Volunteer’s Path to Chairman- How did I start down a volunteer’s path to chairman?
Recently I attended the annual Volunteer Appreciation BBQ. It went along with FabMo’s 11th official birthday! It was a great chance to socialize with a wonderful group of people on a special occasion. Yet my earliest contact with FabMo happened over 15 years ago. It was way before the nonprofit was official.
Some Musings of an Accidental Board Chair
My first experience was responding to a Freecycle post for promising free designer material. I ended up sitting on Hannah & Jonathan’s living room floor. They encouraged me to dump out textile treasures from large black plastic bags.The bags were piled up on their sofa. I could take what I liked. Everything went back in the bags, when I was done.But oh, be careful and look out for staples.
Needless to say, I was hooked on a volunteer’s path to chairman.
Slowly, the FabMo enterprise grew. My involvement slowly grew along with it. I helped with simple things like setting up tables, sorting fabric and chatting with newcomers. That led to helping plan our first Maker Faire participation. Later I headed a Boutique committee for six years. That helped this volunteer’s path to chairmanThen I received an invitation to join the Board. So for the past three years I serviced as the Board Chair. Whew!!! I really wanted to do was sew purses with some beautiful fabric!
What I know at this point is that the work we do at FabMo and only happens because individuals step up to do it. So I send a big thank you to every volunteer. What I also know is that much of the behind the scenes work is mysterious to many of you.
How the Board Works
The FabMo Board of Directors invites you to consider whether volunteer service on the Board or a Committee is for you. Could your future include a volunteer’s path to chairman?
From chairing the Board meetings to representing FabMo being on the Board has many interesting aspects.
FabMo is an all volunteer organization. There are no paid staff or Executive Director. That means the FabMo Board is a working board that acts as an Executive Director when needed. Te board provides organizational leadership and vision and makes policy. We are responsible for financial oversight and staying true to its mission. We want the group to be financially healthy and stable. So that we can continue to do our important work. That is to divert valuable materials away from the landfill and into the hands of people who will use them.
We meet every 5-6 weeks.At times there is a special extra meetings . In the past year, we have purchased a van. We created a protocol for the van’s use. We adopted a policy for our social media presence.The board worked with the Treasurer to craft a budget. we began to write charters for our committees. A quarterly Committee Chairs meeting encourages communications within FabMo. Most of the work is overseen by committees but the Board has the final say. Could your future include a volunteer’s path to chairman?
In the Coming Year
This upcoming year the Board will be evaluating our current business and operating models to consider changes to support our mission. In particular, our rent continues to rise.It is crucial that we find new sources of revenue.We need to remain financially healthy going forward. Could your future include a volunteer’s path to chairman?
So who Serves on the FabMo Board of Directors?
Well in 2019, our 7 members are: Tina Baumgartner,Estelle Chalfin,Leslie Kern,Zita Macy,Michelle Redel,Ginger Silverman,Holly Welstein. Maybe in 2020, your name will be here!
I welcome the chance to chat with anyone interested in learning more. I can answer any questions you have. If you want to attend a Board meeting, please let me know. Warmly,Holly board@fabmo.org July 29, 2019
It has been great to be part of this all volunteer organization for about 10 years. I source many of the materials there that I use in my art quilts. I feel strongly about their efforts. Ann Baldwin May, art quilter
Most artists will say that inspiration is everywhere. I certainly do agree with that statement. For example,my friend, The Lady Who Loves Birds, https://www.ladywholovesbirds.com/ sent me this photograph of the Splendid Fairy Wren of Australia. Isn’t this an incredible bird? The colors are inspirational. I immediately knew that I had to use the colors in a subsequent abstract art quilt.
First,I gathered by fabrics, medium blue, black and white.
Then, I put the sample fabrics on my design wall.
Next, I sewed some pieces together. I begin to try out locations.
Then, I continue to sew pieces together and find the right spot for them. I look to balance color, shape and details.
Finally,after the top is sewn together, I choose the backing fabric. I place it on a table. Then I cover it with the batting and the finished top. I pin the three layers together. This is called a quilt sandwich. Then I quilted the sandwich together using my scribble quilting technique.
Naming the Piece
I usually don’t do political art work. Yet, as I spoke about the quilt and called it by its colors, “my black and blue piece,” something hit home. During the summer of 2019 when I was working on it, I felt like the American democracy was bruised black and blue. American Democracy, 2019 seemed like a logical title.
A Funny thing Happened on the way to my Next Quilt
After I began gathering medium blue, white and black fabrics for American Democracy, 2019, I neglected to refer back to the fairy wren photo. Only after I had finished the piece and did I take another look at it. Much to my surprise, I realized that the bird actually had a lot of purple on it. I immediately set about creating a second piece incorporating more purple. Here is the result, Splendid Fairy Wren, abstract art quilt.
When trying out fabrics, I always start with larger pieces. Then after cutting or fitting in place, they may be much smaller. The sewing takes up some of the fabric. It is always better to have too much than too little.This is the completed art quilt.
Try these low tech quilting hacks to make to make quilting tasks easier. This post is about my favorite tools that I often use in my studio. Redirecting materials are a major motivating factor in my art. It so happens that it affects my low tech quilting hacks as well.
Threading the Needle
My regular sewing foot has a white plastic piece that holds it together. A bit of the white forms a background that allows for the ease of threading the needle. For years, I sewed clothing. Yet, never noticed this because I had no need to change the foot. As soon as I started quilting and began to use different feet, I noticed that threading the needle became more difficult.
What Had Changed?
I couldn’t figure out what had changed. It took me a while, the small white background was not longer there. So I recreated the white by using a small piece of white paper. I now keep a particularly stiff piece of white paper close at hand. For easy threading of the needle, I slip the paper behind the needle. When I use the walking foot or darning foot for free motion quilting, I can see the needle’s hole much better.
Easing of Fabric through the Feed-A Low Tech Quilting Hack
Many years ago I received a stick that looks like an orange stick used for nail care. Suzanne Cam gave them away as part of a quilting workshop. This tool has now become an indespensible tool. I use it often to grab threads, to gently guide fabric smoothly through the feed when necssary.
Moving Small Pieces- A Low Tech Quilting Hack
I also use the stick to move small pieces of fabric. For the fabric layering technique,I create my art flat on a table. I place the backing fabric down first. Then I lay the batting on top.Finally, I create the scene. At times this requires a gentle movement of small pieces of fabric or yarn. I use the stick for this. Nothing else creates a smooth curve or allows me to control the placement of small items or details.
Tiny Globs of Glue
At times I need to glue items to my fiber pieces. Often I only need the tiniest bit of glue not a glob of glue that might show. When my studio was in my home, I would use a plate from the kitchen to put the glue on. After moving to my studio,no plates were readily available.
Making Do
I flipped over the 3 ” plastic cap from the can of starch to use. To control the smallest bit of glue, I use a large needle or hat pin. When finished I can easily wipe off the residue of white glue . The pin or needle is then ready for its original intended use.
A Design Wall
I use a design wall to create my abstract pieces of art. It is essential for me to have a large space available. I would recommend at least 60″ high and wide. My studio design wall is about 90″ by 90″. I covered the wall with a piece of white flannel fabric. It is held in place by push pins. Portability is not an issue for me. Other quilters will swear by their expensive design walls. Don’t be fooled! Simple can be just as effective!
True Confessions Time!
I am not an early adopter nor a gadget person. Quality standard tools and materials are necessary. These hacks are very low tech. Whatever works! For those still reading this post, I expect to hear a chuckle or two or daresay I, some laughing out loud at their simplicity. What simple hacks do you use? Please share.
Color is probably the art element that attracts and motivates most artists to begin work. For most people it is the most engaging aspect. For my take on this subject, I am going to focus on how I choose to adding color to my abstract art quilts. In general, I chooose 3-4 colors to work with. Then I find the range of hues from light to dark to add for balance and interest. I often use bright colors while I find a pale palette of beiges and whites to be very calming. I work on a large white flannel design wall.
To begin, Where do I get my ideas? How do I decide on which colors I want to work with? Most of my materials are from FABMO, a non profit that gets castoff materials from designers. Swatches of a wide range of colors with slight variations provide a lot of choices. Here are some ideas I have inspired me to get started.
A Photograph
A friend sent me this photograph of a colorful bird from Australia. Rarely do I work from photographs. I will not be using the bird however, the hues of purple,blue and black will be in an abstract art quilt in the near future.
Look Down
While working on a piece,I tossed the extra fabric in a box on the floor next to me. I did this repeated. At the end of the day, I looked down and saw these wonderful grey and lime green colors together. I gathered them up and put the in a special place to work on later. This was the piece inspired by leftovers. May I note that I usually don’t use these colors.
Using Up Materials
Sometimes I just start a project with materials or colors that I want to use up. I might have too big a piece of fabric or too much of one color. Some artists might find this idea very unorthodox or even unsettling. When I started City Lights, I had a pile of blue fabric that I wanted to diminish. Sand Between My Toes allowed me to make use of whites and beiges. Sea Turtles is not an abstract art quilts but I had a large piece of blue synthetic fabric that I used for the background. The turquoise plants are also created from fabric I wanted to use up.
Use the Palette of a Commercial Piece of Fabric
A fabric friend suggested this to me several years ago. I have to admit I couldn’t wrap my mind around this idea for a long time. Go to a fabric store. Look at the colors on the commercial fabrics. Very experienced designers work to create these prints. Choose a palette that you would like to use. You don’t need to use the fabric just let the colors inspire you.
In my abstract art quilt, Spring Break I did use some of the fabric. However, the process of chosing the materials was driven by the colors of the original piece of redirected linen. I looked for complementary colors from the fabrics I already had.
In conclusion, inspiration for art can be found in many unusual places. Inspiration comes from spending time in your studio. Keep your mind open and inspiration will appear.
Techniques for creating texture on a flat piece objects are subtle. In other posts, I addressed other aspects of my mantra, Color!Texture!Movement! Moreover, adding color or movement creates a bolder statement. Above all,color impacts the viewer first and then movement next. But texture may even go unnoticed. However, now I will share my ideas for creating texture in my art quilts.
Tucks Create Texture
For instance, tucks are small seams sewn on the edge of a fold. Yet, a series of 3-5 tucks create texture. For example, in Upwelling they represent the layers of earth movement. Furthermore,this technique is also helpful to reduce the size of a piece of fabric by just a small amount.
Naturally Thick Fabrics
On the other hand,corduroy or other thick fabrics add texture by their nature. Look for fabrics that naturally have an interesting texture like dupioni silk. Unfortunately, these fabrics are often challenging to work with. Most importantly,develop your skills so that you will be able to work with them more easily.
Couching Decorative Threads
In addition,couching (zigzaging)different threads on fabric adds texture. First,I couch threads on long strips. Then I cut the pieces apart to use as fabric. In addition,this is a good way to utilize small pieces of yarn or decorative threads. At the same time,use the same color of thread to emphasize the line aspect of art. in this way,the focus will be on the color of the yarn not the color of stitching thread.
Three Dimensional Objects
Furthermore,add texture with 3D objects. In addition,artistic people may create their own 3D object using fibers. Here I included two fabric figures that I had previously made. Similarly,on the male figure, I added a serape for the Mexican theme. Likewise,embroidery thread hair,jewelry and lace completed the female’s figure.Finally,I added found plastic objects.
True Confessions Time
Ultimately,sometimes I am motivated by just using up materials. What items can I add to my art to finish it up? As a result, this random technique led me to a positive ending. I had about 8 designer samples of short threads in different colors wrapped together. Spontaneously I decided to add them to the foot of a tree. Don’t they look like grass? Boy! did this work!
Start with Fiber
Start with fiber. Here I used a redirected folded fiber piece. I added a found Mexican(Aztec inspired) clay head and redirected fabrics. Then I attached it to a highly textured piece of burlap.
In conclusion, the techniques to add texture include tucks, thicker fabrics, couching decorative threads, and adding three dimensional objects. There must be other ways to add texture. Do you know of any? Please respond with your suggestions. I am open to new ideas.
Ann Baldwin May Art Quilts proudly announces that the following abstract art quilts are now on display on the website of New York Art; Beach Umbrellas, Sand Between My Toes, and Sunlit Boulders. They will be displayed in the future in the New York Art Gallery, 7 Franklin Place , TriBeCa, New York,10013.
How to make an Abstract Art Quilt with Sunset Through the Forest as as an example.
How to Get Started
choose Your colors
First, I prefer to choose a few contrasting colors. Then I search through my materials for fabrics, decorative yarns and threads in those colors. Sometimes I also choose lighter and darker hues of the same colors.
Make details with decorative threads.
Next, it is fun to make patterns with the decorative threads. For this piece I used the decorative threads to make several parallel lines on the fabric. I cut long strips and sewed the decorative threads in long lines.Then I randomly cut the long strips into 3 or other odd number of pieces. Creating texture- done!
On the Design Wall
Next, I display the potential finalist fabrics on my design wall. My favorite choices are fabrics with movement and interest. Then, I also make sure that they are places for eyes to rest by including solid colors.
Balancing Colors
Next, balance out the colors and textured pieces so that they are not all on one side of the piece. Don’t be afraid to take a break to come back to view the work with fresh eyes. A fresh look is always helpful in looking for ways to improve a piece. How will one’s eyes move around the art work? Elimination of fabrics can still take place.
Sewing Smaller Pieces Together
Continue to sew small pieces of fabrics together. Then remember to balance colors and fabrics so that they are equally spaced about the piece. Use this advantage of a design wall to view your whole piece.
Sewing More Pieces Together
Continue sewing pieces together and checking for balance.
Finishing
Lastly,I scribble quilt the three layers together to create an added level of movement. Scribble quilting is a technique I named using a flowing quilting line created by moving the quilt side to side while quilting with a walking foot.
Sea Dragons Exhibit at Aquarium,Birch Aquarium,San Diego.
TRADEMARK AND COPYRIGHT 2019 THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. By Julie Watson
All things considered Seadragons & Seahorses, Birch Aquarium’s new permanent exhibition that brings seadragon conservation to the forefront. Above all,the exhibition is home to Weedy Seadragons and several species of seahorses and pipefish.
For the first time ever, Birch Aquarium has successful bred Weedy Seadragons behind the scenes of this exhibit. In short,only a handful of aquariums around the world have bred these unusual fish. The babies are not on display, but you can learn more about their exciting birth on our Seadragon Breeding Program page.
Why Seadragons and Seahorses?
The husbandry of seadragons is increasingly vital due to the impacts of climate change, warming oceans, and illegal collection of wild populations, whose numbers are still widely unknown.
Birch Aquarium has been successfully rearing seahorses in captivity for nearly 25 years. Similarly, that makes us a leader in the field. Furthermore,we hope this new exhibit will result in our first successful seadragon breeding.
Weedy Seadragons
Surprisingly,these seahorse cousins use their bright coloration and seaweed-like appendages to hide among the kelp-covered rocky reefs of temperate southern Australian waters.
Monterey Bay Aquarium
From the first time I saw sea dragons at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, I was fascinated. Was it a plant? Was it an animal? Seadragons and sea horses are surprisingly cousins. Unfortunately, for the interested public the Monterey Bay Aquarium exhibit is no longer. The sea dragons returned to the wild as the Aquarium often does.
I have created several art quilts inspired by the sea dragons. However, nothing is quite like seeing the real animal. That is why I was so excited to hear of this new exhibit and the excitement that it is generating.
Announcing my participation in the juried Juried Open Studios 2019. Sponsered by the Arts Council of Santa Cruz County. Saturday and Sunday, October 5-6 , October 19-20. Moreover,my venue is at the Santa Cruz Art Center, 1001 Center St. located in the Historic Downtown Santa Cruz. Above all, I fill the lobby with Color! Texture! Movement! from11 to 5 pm each weekend. In addition,free motion quilting and curved line piecing demonstrations take place throughout the day.
County Wide Event
Similarly,artists from all over the county open up their studios for three weekends in October. As a result of so many artists residing in the county, the group is divided in half. One part participates on the first weekend of the month. The second part participates on the second weekend of the month. After that,any artist can open their studios for the third weekend called the encore weekend.
This will be my fourth year of participation in the Open Studios Tour featuring over 300 artists. Although my studio is small for Open Studios and First Fridays, I hang my art quilts in the lobby of Santa Cruz Art Center. I fill the artium or lobby with Color! Texture and Movement! There is room for from 10-20 large art quilts.
I find Cheddar and Triscuits a perfect name for this art quilt.Cheddar is the name of the color used in. The cheddar and white traditional quilting blocks contrast with several types of redirected high end fabric from the San Francisco Design Center. Fiberous netting and decorative threads and synthetic raffia add texture. I couched other decorative threads and rickrack on a strip of fabric. Then I cut them into smaller pieces to add where needed.
When I first saw the fabric with the dashes on it, I immediately thought of a computer circuit board. I added many redirected fabrics in this piece. Decorative threads couched on a long strip of fabric and then sliced into pieces add interest. Pulling in colors similar to the fabric with dashes was fun. It was done without much thought but with much necessity.
The Quarry uses found materials,beads and the color,brown that I usually avoid. Someone created fabric with a process of marbling paper in several colors, black, blue and reflective blue and pink. The stratification formed by these fabrics was a new idea to me. Bone beads added a 3D effect as if they were layered under the ground and just peeking out of a cliff.
In Conclusion
Playing with the contrast of fabrics or your chosen materials lets you create something unexpected. An outlier can suggest a new direction or technique to follow in the future. It is up to the artist to make that decision. Or maybe the success of the project that will make the decision for the artist. Make your art like your life depended on it! Because it does!
Use redirected fabric in art quilts to design something new and inspire yourself to create. I find unique fabrics not like those sold in a regular quilt store among redirected materials.
Discontinued fabric from a decorator’s studio
A sample of linen fabric from a decorator’s studio becomes the main design element with the addition of zigzagged or couched yarn. The colors; black, white,, and grey attracted me before I saw that this linen actually had greyhound dogs printed on it. My fondness for dogs aside, I didn’t want the dogs to stand out. I accomplished this by rotating the fabric and couching yarn to it. Next, I cut the fabric into twigs and branches to suggest tree tops. Then, I placed the branches on a sky blue indigo fabric background to complete the art quilt.
Friends’ Suggestions
Although dyeing fabric is a great way to redirect materials, it is a bit too messy for my situation. But many of my fabric friends have done it. The sheet that the dyed fabrics are wrapped in to carry home often is colored in an interesting way . Thanks to that warning, I was prepared when I recently took an indigo dyeing workshop. The background fabric for the sky was indeed the bedsheet that had used to carry my other dyed pieces home.
The Process-
First,I choose the fabric. I liked the way the curved lines of the dogs’s backs created movement on the fabric.
Next,I choose the yarn colors that I wanted to use, grey, green, and black yarn. I couched the yarns with matching threads so that the sewing threads wouldn’t stand out.
Next,I continued adding yarn curving it as I zigzagged(couched) it onto the linen.
Then,with more yarn, it is more difficult to identify the dogs.
Continuing,I kept adding more yarn and zigzagging it down. For thicker lines, I wrapped 3 pieces of yarn together.
Ready to cut the Fabric into Branches
Finally, with this fabric, I cut out the tree branches,twigs and sticks. I put the backing fabric flat on the table. Then I added the batting on top. Then I added indigo dyed fabric for the background. Next, I basted them with a touch of glue. I assembled the tree on top and basted it.
Lastly,I covered the finished top with tulle and free motion quilted the layers together. I finished the edges by adding a 2″ facing folding it to the back and hand stitching it. Finally, I sew a fabric sleeve or tube onto the top back for hanging with a dowel and fishing line.
The completed piece of art is totally made from redirected materials; linen and backing material from the San Francisco Design Center, redirected yarn from my sister-in-law, redirected tulle from a wedding, and redirected background indigo fabric from a bedsheet. My heart’s desire is complete;making beautiful art from repurposed materials.
We all make mistakes but then learn from them. I Love Mistakes-Learn from them. I would like to share some mistakes that I have learned from. All mistakes are not bad. Errors are often touted as being something to avoid. Keeping one’s mind open can lead to embrasing errors as a good discovery. Postits and the microwave oven, for example, were originally mistakes.
A Fabric Layering Technique Example
While working on a wetlands fabric layering piece, some fabric turned under at the top. This unexpectedly added movement and added interest to the marsh. I continued doing it and added it to my toolbox. I Love Mistakes. Learn from them.
An Abstract Example
One example is how I discovered a signature detail of mine by mistake. When working on abstract pieces, I generally first pull out all of the possible fabrics within my chosen range of colors. A particular color was missing. Not finding a bigger amount, I solved my problem by sewing some small pieces together at odd angles to make a large enough piece of material. It pleased me,I liked the way it looked.
I Love Mistakes-Learn from them.
This example is how I discovered a signature detail of mine by mistake. I started to do it more. sewing small pieces of fabric together (about 1-1 1/2″ long) that had been trimmed off other pieces. Not wanting to waste any fabric anyway, I now often include some small pieces sewn together to each of my abstracts. I is now my signature detail.
Tension Takes Over
Another example is the day the tension on my machine seemed to have a mind of its own. The sewing machine started to pull the bobbin thread from the bottom up to the top of the fabric. Stitches looked like dots. I liked the effect. I tried it using different colored threads. Using a cream colored fabric,I preferred a black thread on the bobbin(bottom) and a cream colored thread for the top. I adjusted the tension so that the bottom thread would pull up and create dots .
In Conclusion
Keep an open mind towards mistakes. Are they interesting? Do they make your piece more interesting? Then accept your mistake. Learn to love and accept mistakes.Learn from them. Add the technique to your toolkit and use it. Embrace new discoveries.
The art conversation must start wherever the art viewer is. Everyone is certainly familiar with the materials I use to make my art, fabric. When the art viewing public has a personal experience with your artistic materials does this have a positive or negative effect on how they view your art? Does it make the art seem less worthy of their attention or somehow less valued? Or just the opposite?
The Fabric of our Lives
I create art quilts, wall art from fabric,the material that literally the whole world has a relationship with. Many times I repurpose the fabric of my own clothing into my art.When we go shopping for clothes, touching the fabric is part of our decision making process. What will it feel like against the skin? The Do Not Touch signs in my studio does not always deter everyone. We are used to touching fabric.
Start with Gramma’s quilt and move on
Often we share a common experience about a grandmother’s handmade quilt. Creating bridges in communication is helpful.This beginning must move on to a discussion of the actual art or the process to make the piece. No matter the artistic form, the conversation begins where the studio visitors are. Then it can move forward to explain the different processes.
I explain that I often use redirected materials from the San Francisco Design Center. This affords me interesting fabrics that are unique and definately not available at a quilt shop. Quilt shops cater to traditional quilters who must use 100% cotton because their quilts need to be washed. My wall art does not need to be washed.I am free to use unusual fabrics.
Remarks from Visitors to my studio Worth Repeating
“Oh, I didn’t realize that it was fabric! “
“Looking at your art is like taking a mini vacation!”
“You are taking an old art and making it new.”
From the comments I have heard, it is easy to believe that people recognize art when they see it no matter the materials.
The newest art genre-art quilts are one of the newest genres to enter the field of art. Back in 1989 The Studio Art Quilt Associates(SAQA)https://www.saqa.com/ began in Northern California by a group of about 50 artists. As a result,it has now spread across the globe and grown into a membership of over 4000. Yet,not all quilt artists use the same techniques nor materials. After that,there is a wide variation. Fabric is the medium. Likewise,two or three layers of fabric may be used for the final product.
Studio Art Quilt Associates(SAQA)
Since their start,SAQA promotes art quilts as fine art. From SAQA’s website, Studio Art Quilt Associates, Inc. (SAQA) is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to promote the art quilt: “a creative visual work that is layered and stitched or that references this form of stitched layered structure.” Over the past 30 years, SAQA has grown into a dynamic and active community of nearly 4,000 artists, curators, collectors, and art professionals located around the world. Our vision is that the art quilt is universally respected as a fine art medium.
In addition,SAQA offers a wide range of resources for its members. Consequently,the entries in their shows are of the highest quality and expression.
The Fabric of our Lives
First of all,clothing or fabric is near and dear to our hearts. We all wear clothes for our whole lives, sometimes twenty four hours a day. Furthermore,we wrap ourselves in extra layers to stay warm. That is to say that quilts represent home, love and well being especially at night. Moreover, idioms in various languages attest to the depth of fabric’s affect. In the same vein,the texture of its weave reaches deep into cultures, past and present.
A Family Member’s Quilts
To begin,many conversations that I have had about art quilts start with a reference to a family member’s hand made quilts. This bothers some artists who want to distance themselves from seamstresses and the bed quilters. Not me though, I started out making bed quilts. In other words,I know the pull and charm of them, notwithstanding the love they embody. Abstract art or fabric collages use similar techniques as traditional quilts. Yet their function is quite different. They are not diminished by the quilts people wrap themselves in.
Shared Experiences
Furthermore,creating bridges in communication is more helpful than not. We have a possible entry to conversation through our shared experience with fabric. Yet, for the artist,this beginning must move on to a discussion of the actual art or the process to make the piece.
Museums
Above all,top notch museums have shed light on quilt artists with their gallery shows. This has helped to elevate the interest and value of all art quilters. Only then can the art viewing public begin to understand fabric as part of the artist’s palette of materials.
Long may this newest art genre-art quilts prosper and grow! Feel free to ask questions to further your own knowledge.
Most importantly,the City of Fremont’s Olive Hyde Art Gallery offers a glimpse into the textile world with textile creations.The show is the 50th Annual Textile Exhibition. Furthermore,it runs from August 3 – September 5, 2018. This annual exhibit began in 1968. It started in recognition of the Art Center’s original benefactor and Textile Art enthusiast, Olive Hyde. In its early years it was primarily a quilt show. However,this annual exhibition features works of both traditional and contemporary quilt artists. In short,these artists use textiles and fibers to create unique artworks and designs.
Most Popular Exhibition
Above all, this is one of Olive Hyde Art Gallery’s most popular exhibitions. Therefore, the show includes a diverse group of Northern California’s best and often most recognized textile artists.
Participating artists include: Adriane Dedic, Alice Beasley, Ann Baldwin May, Catherine Kelly, Denise Oyama Miller, Dolores Miller, Drew Matott, Emelie Rogers, Gail Sims, Ginger Summit, Giny Dixon, Ileana Soto, Jennifer Landau, Karen Balos, Kris Sazaki, Lin Schiffner, Linda Waddle, Martha Wolfe, Maureen Langenbach, Melba Vincent, Patricia Porter, P. Kay Hille-Hatten, Rashna Sutaria, Susan Helmer, and Zona Sage.
Local Wonders
Alice Beasley
Above all,Alice Beasley has been making portraits of people and objects since 1988. In short,fabric is her chosen medium of expression. However,she incorporates the same light, shadow and realistic perspective used by artists in other media. Like the classical painter, her art is absorbed by an interest in the human figure and in our objects as they are presented in still life.
Dolores Miller
Above all, Dolores Miller supposes that her love of textiles is in her blood. In short,both of her grandmothers were seamstresses. For example,she threaded needles for her paternal grandmother for her job as a fine hand finisher. Furthermore,as a young adult, she made most of her clothes. Hence,Dolores dabbled in most of the textile arts over the years.
Denise Oyama Miller
Certainly, Denise Oyama Miller is a frequent and respected exhibitor at the Olive Hyde Art Gallery. As a result,she shows her unique, contemporary take on quilt-making using strong forms and contrasting colors. Moreover,Miller works in a variety of styles from representational scenes to intense abstractions.
Karen Balos
Karen Balos shows her mastery of creating visual explosions of color, patterns, and movements with textiles.
Ileana Soto
Ileana Soto looks into the history of human culture. She sees herself reflected by the complexities of life with her mixed media creations. She adds alternating layers of dye, paint, and fabrics.
Martha Wolfe
Inspired by the natural world, Martha Wolfe gathers photographs. She uses them as a guide to create finely-detailed works. She often recreates the images of everyday life with colorful patterns.
Zona Sage
Pushing the boundaries of textile sculptures,Zona Sage
assembles different found items and fabrics.
Adriane Dedic
Adriane Dedic highlights the art of the figure. Inspirations from both Eastern and Western art have led her to create a wide variety of stylized figures, from traditional Japanese Geishas to figures painted by Klimt.
Opening Reception
Furthermore,the opening reception will be held on Friday, August 3,2018 from 7:00 – 9:00 p.m. at the Olive Hyde Art Center, 123 Washington Blvd. (at Mission Blvd.) In addition,parking is available at the municipal parking lot ½ block north of the Olive Hyde Art Center on Mission Blvd. The exhibition runs through Saturday, September 5th,2018. Gallery Hours: Thursday through Sunday, 12noon to 5pm.
The quilters of Gee’s Bend, Alabama lives have been transformed by worldwide acclaim for their artistry By Amei Wallach
SMITHSONIAN MAGAZINE OCTOBER 2006
This article from 2006 is still a great resource.
Recollectin’
Annie Mae Young of Gee’s Bend is looking at a photograph of a quilt she pieced together out of strips torn from well-worn cotton shirts and polyester pants. “I was doing this quilt at the time of the civil rights movement,” she says, contemplating its jazzy, free-form squares. Martin Luther King Jr. came to Young’s hometown of Gee’s Bend, Alabama, around that time. “I came over here to Gee’s Bend to tell you, You are somebody,” he shouted over a heavy rain late one winter night in 1965. A few days later, Young and many of her friends took off their aprons, laid down their hoes and rode over to the county seat of Camden, where they gathered outside the old jailhouse.
Martin Luther King Jr., his visit
“We were waiting for Martin Luther King, and when he drove up, we were all slappin’ and singin’,” Young, 78, tells me. I visited Gee’s Bend, a small rural community on a peninsula at a deep bend in the Alabama River. Wearing a red turban and an apron bright with pink peaches and yellow grapes, she stands in the doorway of her brick bungalow at the end of a dirt road. Swaying to a rhythm that nearly everyone in town knows from a lifetime of churchgoing, she breaks into song: “We shall overcome, we shall overcome….”
His Words
“We were all just happy to see him coming,” she says. “Then he stood out there on the ground. He was talking about how we should wait on a bus to come. We were all going to march. We got loaded on the bus. But we didn’t get a chance to do it, ’cause we got put in jail,” she says.
Many who marched or registered to vote in rural Alabama in the 1960s lost their jobs. Some even lost their homes. The residents of Gee’s Bend, 60 miles southwest of Montgomery, lost the ferry that connected them to Camden and a direct route to the outside world. “We didn’t close the ferry because they were black,” Sheriff Lummie Jenkins reportedly said at the time. “We closed it because they forgot they were black.”
Most Miraculous Works
Six of Young’s quilts, together with 64 by other Gee’s Bend residents, have been traveling around the United States. The exhibition that has transformed the way many people think about art. Gee’s Bend’s “eye-poppingly gorgeous” quilts, wrote New York Times art critic Michael Kimmelman, “turn out to be some of the most miraculous works of modern art America has produced. Imagine Matisse and Klee arising not from rarefied Europe, but from the caramel soil of the rural South.”
From the South
If you think I’m wildly exaggerating, then you must see the show. Curator Jane Livingston helped organize the exhibition with collector William Arnett and art historians John Beardsley and Alvia Wardlaw. Livingston said the quilts “rank with the finest abstract art of any tradition.” After stops in such cities as New York, Washington, D.C., Cleveland, Boston and Atlanta, “The Quilts of Gee’s Bend” will end its tour at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco’s de Young Museum December 31.
Young’s Work
The bold drama of the quilt Young was working on in 1965 is also found in a quilt she made out of work clothes 11 years later. The central design of red and orange corduroy in that quilt suggests prison bars. The faded denim that surrounds it could be a comment on the American dream. But Young had more practical considerations. “When I put the quilt together,” she says, “it wasn’t big enough, and I had to get some more material and make it bigger, so I had these old jeans to make it bigger.”
Good Money for Raggedy Old Quilts
Collector William Arnett was working on a history of African American vernacular art in 1998. At that time, he came across a photograph of Young’s work-clothes quilt draped over a woodpile. He was so knocked out by its originality, he set out to find it. A couple of phone calls and some creative research later, he and his son Matt tracked Young down to Gee’s Bend. They then showed up unannounced at her door late one evening.
A Quilt for Free?
Young had burned some quilts the week before (smoke from burning cotton drives off mosquitoes). At first she thought the quilt in the photograph had been among them. But the next day, after scouring closets and searching under beds, she found it and offered it to Arnett for free. Arnett, however, insisted on writing her a check for a few thousand dollars for that quilt and several others. (Young took the check straight to the bank.) Soon the word spread through Gee’s Bend that there was a unbelievable white man in town paying good money for raggedy old quilts.
The First Show
When Arnett showed photos of the quilts made by Young and other Gee’s Benders to Peter Marzio, of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH), he was so impressed that he agreed to put on an exhibition. “The Quilts of Gee’s Bend” opened there in September 2002.
Reviving a Dying Art
The exhibition revived what had been a dying art in Gee’s Bend. Some of the quilters, who had given in to age and arthritis, are now back quilting again. Many of their children and grandchildren, some of whom had moved away from Gee’s Bend, have taken up quilting themselves. With the help of Arnett and his nonprofit, Tinwood Alliance, fifty local women founded the Gee’s Bend Quilters Collective in 2003. Their mission to market their quilts. Some of which now sell for more than $20,000. Part of the money goes directly to the maker. The rest goes to the collective for expenses and to share with the other members.
A Second Exhibition
Now a second exhibition, “Gee’s Bend: The Architecture of the Quilt,” has been organized by the MFAH and the Tinwood Alliance. The show features newly discovered quilts from the 1930s to the 1980s.It also includes more recent works by established quilters and the younger generation they inspired. The exhibition will travel to seven other venues, including the Indianapolis Museum of Art (October 8-December 31) and the Orlando Museum of Art (January 27-May 13, 2007).
Arlonzia Pettway
Arlonzia Pettway lives in a neat, recently renovated house off a road plagued with potholes. The road passes by cows and goats grazing outside robin’s-egg blue and brown bungalows. “I remember some things, honey,” Pettway, 83, told me. “I came through a hard life. We weren’t bought and sold. But we were still slaves until 20, 30 years ago. The white man would go to everybody’s field and say, ‘Why you not at work?” She paused. “What do you think a slave is?”
Her Family Quilted
As a girl, Pettway would watch her grandmother, Sally, and her mother, Missouri, piecing quilts. She would listen to their stories. Many of the stories were about Dinah Miller. She had been brought to the United States in a slave ship in 1859. “My great-grandmother Dinah was sold for a dime,” Pettway said. “Her dad, brother and mother were sold to different people. She didn’t see them no more. My great-grandfather was a Cherokee Indian. Dinah was made to sleep with this big Indian like you stud your cow…. You couldn’t have no skinny children working on your slave master’s farm.” In addition to Pettway, some 20 other Gee’s Bend quiltmakers are Dinah’s descendants.
A Long Quilting Tradition
The quilting tradition in Gee’s Bend may go back as far as the early 1800s. At that time, the community was the site of a cotton plantation owned by a Joseph Gee. Influenced by the patterned textiles of Africa, the women slaves began piecing strips of cloth together to make bedcovers. Throughout the post-bellum years of tenant farming and well into the 20th century, Gee’s Bend women made quilts.They were needed to keep themselves and their children warm in unheated shacks. The shacks also lacked running water, telephones and electricity. Along the way they developed a distinctive style, noted for its lively improvisations and geometric simplicity.
Hard Laborers
Gee’s Bend individuals grew and picked cotton, peanuts, okra, corn, peas and potatoes. When there was no money to buy seed or fertilizer, they borrowed one or both from Camden businessman E. O. Rentz. The interest rates were such that only those without any other choice would pay. Then came the Depression. In 1931 the price of cotton plummeted. Cotton went from about 40 cents a pound in the early 1920s, to about a nickel. When Rentz died in 1932, his widow foreclosed on some 60 Gee’s Bend families. It was late fall, and winter was coming.
The Depression
“They took everything and left people to die,” Pettway said. Her mother was making a quilt out of old clothes when she heard the cries outside. She sewed four wide shirttails into a sack. The men in the family filled the sack with corn and sweet potatoes and hid in a ditch. When the agent for Rentz’s widow came around to seize the family’s hens, Pettway’s mother threatened him with a hoe. “I’m a good Christian, but I’ll chop his damn brains out,” she said. The man got in his wagon and left. “He didn’t get to my mama that day,” Pettway told me.
Problems Continued
Pettway remembered that her friends and neighbors foraged for berries, hunted possum and squirrels. But mostly went hungry that winter. Then a boat with flour and meal sent by the Red Cross arrived in early 1933. The following year, the Federal Emergency Relief Administration provided small loans for seed, fertilizer, tools and livestock. Then, in 1937, the government’s Resettlement Administration (later the Farm Security Administration) bought up 10,000 Gee’s Bend acres. The land sold them as tiny farms to local families.
A Memory Quilt
In 1941, when Pettway was in her late teens, her father died. “Mama said, ‘I’m going to take his work clothes, shape them into a quilt to remember him, and cover up under it for love.’” There were hardly enough pants legs and shirttails to make up a quilt. But she managed. That quilt made of rectangles of faded gray, white, blue and red is included in the first exhibition. A year later, Arlonzia married Bizzell Pettway. They moved into one of the new houses built by the government. They had 12 children. But no electricity until 1964 and no running water until 1974.
In the Same House
A widow for more than 30 years, Arlonzia still lives in that same house. Her mother, Missouri made a quilt she called “Path Through the Woods.” The quilt was inspired after the 1960s freedom marches. A quilt that Pettway pieced together during that period, “Chinese Coins”, is a medley of pinks and purples. A friend had given her purple scraps from a clothing factory in a nearby town.
Better Times
“At the time I was making that quilt, I was feeling something was going to happen better, and it did,” Pettway says. “Last time I counted I had 32 grandchildren and I think between 13 and 14 great-grands. I’m blessed now more than many. I have my home and land. I have a deepfreeze five feet long with chicken wings, neck bones and pork chops.”
Lots of Pettways
The first exhibition featured seven quilts by Loretta Pettway, Arlonzia Pettway’s first cousin. (One in three of Gee’s Bend’s 700 residents is named Pettway, after slave owner Mark H. Pettway.) Loretta, 64, says she made her early quilts out of work clothes. “I was about 16 when I learned to quilt from my grandmama,” she says. “I just loved it. That’s all I wanted to do, quilt. But I had to work farming cotton, corn, peas and potatoes, making syrup, putting up soup in jars. I was working other people’s fields too. Saturdays I would hire out. Sometimes I would hire out Sundays, too. I needed to give my kids some food.
After Work
When I finished my chores, I’d sit down and do like I’m doing nowI would get the clothes together and tear them and piece. Then in summer, I would quilt outside under the big oak.” She fingers the fabric pieces in her lap. “I thank God that people want me to make quilts,” she says. “I feel proud. The Lord lead me and guide me. He give me strength to make this quilt with love and peace and happiness so somebody would enjoy it. That makes me feel happy. I’m doing something with my life.”
A Dam and Lock
In 1962 the U.S. Congress ordered the construction of a dam and lock on the Alabama River at Miller’s Ferry, just south of Gee’s Bend. The 17,200-acre reservoir created by the dam in the late 1960s flooded much of Gee’s Bend’s best farming land, forcing many residents to give up farming. “And thank God for that,” says Loretta. “Farming wasn’t nothing but hard work. And at the end of the year you couldn’t get nothing. The little you got went for cottonseed.”
Quilts all the Time
Around that time, a number of Gee’s Bend women began making quilts for the Freedom Quilting Bee,. This organization was founded in 1966 by civil rights worker and Episcopalian priest Francis X. Walter. He wanted to provide a source of income for the local community. For a while, the bee (which operated for about three decades) sold quilts to such stores as Bloomingdale’s, Sears, Saks and Bonwit Teller. But the stores wanted assembly-line quilts. They had to be orderly with familiar patterns and precise stitching. A far cry from the individual improvised and unexpected patterns and color combinations that characterized the Gee’s Bend quilts.
Personal Quilts
“My quilts looked beautiful to me, because I made what I could make from my head,” Loretta told me. “When I start I don’t want to stop until I finish. If I stop, the ideas are going to go one way and my mind another way. So I just try to do it while I have ideas in my mind.”
Loretta’s Work
Loretta had been too ill to attend the opening of the first exhibition in Houston. But she wore a bright red jacket and a wrist corsage of roses to the opening of the second show last spring. Going there on the bus, “I didn’t close my eyes the whole way,” she says. “I was so happy, I had to sightsee.”
In the New Show
In the new show was her 2003 take on the popular “Housetop” pattern. It is a variant of the traditional “Log Cabin” design. Her piece is an explosion of red polka dots, zany stripes and crooked frames within frames. It is a dramatic change from the faded colors and somber patterns of her early work-clothes quilts. Two other quilts made by Loretta are among those represented on a series of Gee’s Bend stamps issued this past August by the U.S. Postal Service. “I just had scraps of what I could find,” she says about her early work. “Now I see my quilts hanging in a museum. Thank God I see my quilts on the wall. I found my way.”
Mary Lee Bendolph
Mary Lee Bendolph, 71, speaks in a husky voice and has a hearty, throaty laugh. At the opening of the new exhibition in Houston, she sported large rhinestone earrings and a chic black dress. For some years, kidney disease had slowed her quiltmaking. But the first exhibition, she says, “spunked me to go a little further, to try and make my quilts a little more updated.” Her latest quilts fracture her backyard views and other local scenes. They are fractured in the way Cubism fragmented the cafés and countryside of France. Her quilts share a gallery with those of her daughter-in-law, Louisiana Pettway Bendolph.
Mary Lee Bendolph
Louisiana now lives in Mobile, Alabama. But she remembers hot, endless days picking cotton as a child in the fields around Gee’s Bend. From age 6 to 16, she says, the only time she could go to school was when it rained. The only play was softball and quiltmaking. Her mother, Rita Mae Pettway, invited her to the opening in Houston of the first quilt show. On the bus ride home, she says, she “had a kind of vision of quilts.” She made drawings of what would become the quilts in the new exhibition. The shapes seem to float and recede as if in three dimensions.
Quilting helped redirect my life
“Quilting helped redirect my life and put it back together,” Louisiana says. “I worked at a fast-food place and a sewing factory. When the sewing factory closed, I stayed home to be a housewife. You just want your kids to see you in a different light.You want them to see you as someone they can admire. Well, my children came into this museum. I saw their faces.”
Quiltmaking is History and Family
To Louisiana, 46, quiltmaking is history and family. “Generally,we think of inheriting as land or something, not things that people teach you,” she says. “We came from cotton fields. We came through hard times. Now we look back and see what all these people before us have done. They brought us here, and to say thank you is not enough.” Now her 11-year-old granddaughter has taken up quiltmaking. She, however, does her drawings on a computer.
Well Deserved Fame
In Gee’s Bend not long ago, her great-grandmother Mary Lee Bendolph picked some pecans to make into candy. She had to have candy on hand for the children. The only store in town is often closed. Then she soaked her feet. Sitting on her screened-in porch, she smiled. “I’m famous,” she said. “And look how old I am.” She laughed. “I enjoy it.”
Currently,(2018)a World of Fiber Art at the Santa Cruz County Building is on view at the Santa Cruz County Building on Ocean St. Above all, fifteen art quilts by Santa Cruz artist, Ann Baldwin May are currently on exhibit at the Santa Cruz County Building. In addition,the exhibit is at the 701 Ocean St. facility in Santa Cruz. Furthermore, the show runs through July 27, 2018.
A World of Fiber Art at the Santa Cruz County Building
From Bed quilts to Art Quilts
Fabmo Materials
Firstly, May gets her material from the non profit group known as FabMo.http://fabmo.org It is an all volunteer run organization. Moreover,the group provides high-end materials to artists, teachers and others for creative reuse. A statement of the website, FabMo.org, reads: “These exquisite textiles, wallpapers, and tiles are from the design world.They are usually only available to you through a designer. FabMo makes them available on a donation basis. Our work keeps about 70 tons a year of them from the landfill.” PreCOVID FabMo also typically came Harvey West Clubhouse about four or five times a year. In addition, special selection dates occur in Sunnyvale, California.
Award Winning Artist
In 2019,She entered her first art piece in Pajaro Valley Arts exhibit titled “Los Pájaros.” Her work was titled, “Great Blue Heron at Dusk.”
The following year it won a merit award at the Olive Hyde Gallery in Fremont,California. https://olivehydeartguild.org/
As a result, Ms. May was encouraged to continue her art quilt adventure.
Color! Texture! Movement!
Overall,May has completed about 350 art quilts and counting.. Furthermore, her work has also been shown at the R. Blitzer Gallery in Santa Cruz, in Chicago, San Francisco, and at New York Arts.
“Above all,I’m all color, texture and movement; that’s what I have to do,” Baldwin May said. “Furthermore,it takes me to another place. In other words, it feels very comfortable to build on skills that I already know, that I am confident in doing.”
Once more, May will take part in the annual Open Studio Art Tour in October,2018. Meanwhile, she does most of her work at her studio in the Santa Cruz Art Center. In other words,for Open Studios her art fills the lobby at the Santa Cruz Art Center at 1001 Center St. She also participates in First Friday Art Walk.Similarly,this is an informal, monthly art tour where artists and galleries open their doors to the public.
Ann Baldwin May was born and raised in Palo Alto, California. Moreover,she began sewing in junior high. Later,she received her education from University of California, Irvine (History, BA Elementary Teaching Credential, Masters in Teaching Spanish) Meanwhile, her first quilting class was in 1975. After that,she basically never stopped making quilts.After she retired in 2012 After working 36 years as a bilingual teacher and Bilingual Resource Teacher, she retired. As a result, in 2012,she turned her attention to making art fulltime.
Purchased art
Over the years,Kaiser Permanente bought five art quilts.for their facilities in Scotts Valley and Watsonville, California. Again she participates in the juried Santa Cruz County Open Studios Art Tour. Furthermore,her work is currently being shown at New York Arts in TRIBECA, New York City. https://newyorkart.com/
Contact info
Ann Baldwin May Santa Cruz Art Center, 1001 Center St.#4 Santa Cruz, CA 95060 baldwinmay49@yahoo.com 831.345.1466 annbaldwinmayartquilts.com Facebook- AnnBaldwinMayArtQuilts@annbaldwinmay Instagram-annbaldwinmay
Finally,Some of Ann Baldwin May’s favorite artists.
Marion Coleman Art Quilter receives an impressive award! Today the National Endowment for the Arts is announcing the newest recipients of the NEA National Heritage Fellowships. Moreover,they range from an old-time fiddler to a Day of the Dead altar maker to an R&B musician. The NEA National Heritage Fellowships are awarded annually by the National Endowment for the Arts. Certainly,they highlight the breadth and excellence of the artistic traditions found in communities across the United States. As a result,the 2018 recipients will receive a $25,000 award. Furthermore they are honored in Washington, DC at an awards ceremony. In addition they are presented at a free concert on September 28, 2018. The concert will be streamed live at arts.gov.
Ethel Raim(New York, NY)—traditional music and dance advocate In addition,Raim is the recipient of the 2018 Bess Lomax Hawes NEA National Heritage Fellowship. It is in recognition of an individual who has made a significant contribution to the preservation and awareness of cultural heritage. 2018 NEA National Heritage Fellows
“The 2018 NEA National Heritage Fellows have dedicated their lives to mastering these distinctive art forms. As well as sharing them with new audiences both within their communities and nationwide,” said Mary Anne Carter, acting chairman for the National Endowment for the Arts. “We look forward to celebrating them and their incredible artistic accomplishments this fall.”
About the NEA National Heritage Fellowships
The National Heritage Fellowships is the nation’s highest honor in the folk and traditional arts. It recognizes the recipients’ artistic excellence. Furthermore it supports their continuing contributions to our nation’s traditional arts heritage. Over the years including the 2018 class, the NEA has awarded 431 NEA National Heritage Fellowships.
200 Distinct Art Forms
Recognizing artists in More than 200 distinct art forms. Former winners included bluesman B.B. King, Cajun fiddler and composer Michael Doucet, sweetgrass basketweaver Mary Jackson, cowboy poet Wally McRae, Kathak dancer and choreographer Chitresh Das, and gospel and soul singer Mavis Staples. More information about the NEA National Heritage Fellows is available on the NEA’s website. https://www.arts.gov/honors/heritage
Nominated by the Public
Initially,the public nominates the Fellowship recipients. The recommendation is often by members of their own communities. Then a panel of experts in the folk and traditional arts judges the work. After that,the panel’s recommendations are reviewed by the National Council on the Arts. Afterwards they sends the recommendations to the NEA chairman. Finally,the chairman who makes the final decision.
Class of 2019
In addition,the NEA is currently accepting nominations for the 2019 class of NEA National Heritage Fellowships. The deadline is July 30, 2018. Finally,visit the NEA’s website for more information and to submit a nomination.
First of all, I am delighted and excited to announce that I am the recipient of a 2018 NEA National Heritage Fellowship. Certainly,many thanks to the National Endowment for the Arts for this tremendous honor. Above all,I remain grateful to the African American Quilt Guild of Oakland, the Women of Color Quilters Network, family and friends for your support through the years.
Thank you Congressman Eric Swalwell
In addition,thank you Congressman Eric Swalwell for your visit. It was a delight to share my quilts with you. Moreover, thank you Ora Clay for your encouragement and support. In addition,thanks to the Alliance for California Traditional Arts (ACTA) for helping me and others reach and teach community members to enjoy quilting. Certainly,congratulations to the other NEA fellows. #NEAHeritage18