Friday, September 28, 2012

Featured Artist: Linda Laird


During the six weeks of 'Black White Red' we'll focus on individual artists here on our blog. Every week, several artists will be featured. Today, we're pleased to introduce to you: Linda Laird

And While We Sleep
Commercial cottons,
linen, and synthetics;
machine applique and
embroidery
35" x 29"

Piece Statement:
This quotation is from the ancient Greek playwright Aeschylus.  Robert Kennedy recited it from memory while speaking to a group of African-Americans on the night in 1968 that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was killed.  Kennedy himself would be killed about 2 months later.  This quotation becomes more meaningful with every passing day.

And While We Sleep
Commercial cottons,
linen, and synthetics;
machine applique and
embroidery
35" x 29"

Artist Statement:
I make art to express emotions, and to tell stories.  I use fibers and fabrics because of their wonderful flexibility and infinite variety of color, pattern, and texture.  If I could figure how to put scent, flavor, and sound into my work, I’d have all the senses covered.  I’m working on it.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Featured Artists: Donna Kjonaas and Vicki Kessler

During the six weeks of 'Black White Red' we'll focus on individual artists here on our blog. Every week, several artists will be featured. Today, we're pleased to introduce to you: Donna Kjonaas and Vicki Kessler



Read Between the Lines

Contemporary fiber collage,
embroidery, quilting
25" x 17"
“Read Between the Lines”


What’s black, white and read all over?  News about the “Oil Patch” in North Dakota!  These newly recoverable underground resources are predicted to last at least a generation.  The talk about this resource tends to fall into “black” and “white” categories.  “NO WAY!”  or  “FAST FORWARD!” summarizes much of contemporary opinion. Meanwhile, the land bleeds red.  People in North Dakota have deep roots.  Their ancestors (often Norwegian) settled here long ago. They worked hard and built fortunes in terms of human values. “Mineral Rights” trumps many of these values.  How does this conflict unfold now in North Dakota?  “Read Between the Lines” suggests we ought to listen with our heart to discern the direction.


Read Between the Lines, detail
Contemporary fiber collage,
embroidery, quilting
25" x 17"

Artists Statement:
   
What sustains us?  What nurtures us?  What holds us in connection?  What is satisfying?  What is enough? What challenges turn us toward awareness?  Collaborative, contemporary fiber artists Donna Kjonaas and Vicki Kessler explore these fundamental questions in their artwork. They reclaim historic, vintage and practical fiber through a variety of processes including discharge, painting, monoprinting and overdyeing.  Rich embellishment with stitch, beads, buttons or felting completes each piece.  What was once old or useless emerges as an energetic and unexpected creation. Tactile and interactive, the art invites viewers to move to the inside of each piece.  Their abstract compositions focus on color, connection and imaginative use of commonplace materials.

Donna Kjonaas and Vicki Kessler began their work as collaborative artists in the mid-1980’s with liturgical installation art.  In the last three years, their combined efforts have produced a body of work that varies broadly in scale while honing specific techniques.  Each one’s hands engage each piece of art, and the exchange of individual pieces provides reincarnation at multiple layers.   Vicki and Donna have a long, rich history in fiber handwork, from sewing to needlepoint to quilting to contemporary fiber art compositions.


Biographies:

Vicki Kessler

     My first stitches, uneven and unsteady, were fashioned with bits of yarn on left-over scraps of fabric.  Sneaking into my mother’s sewing basket for small treasures, I sought to repeat the image of beauty everywhere around me in my homeland of southwest Wisconsin.  The wide and turbulent Mississippi River taught me about the subtleties of color shading.  Muddy, brown shore waters gradually shifted toward blue until they reached the islands, where greenish hues took center stage.  Tall, verdant hills with rocky outcrops demonstrated the power of texture and contrast.  Wild, dappled valleys revealed their secrets in undulating rhythms and surprising bursts of color.  These true delights of earth became my first teachers.

    Color, rhythm and shape are key components in my art.  As in nature, the whole is more than the sum of parts.  The hideous stands beside the beautiful, the predictable companions the surprise, the exotic and the mundane are born in the same ground. The ancient, seasoned and well-worn offers perspective.  Newly emerging patterns bring a leap of inspiration.

      Working with old fabric, linens, quilts, yarn, sweaters and clothing provides a balance to consumptive patterns and habits that threaten us. It offers an opportunity to reflect on values of connection and relationship, and helps me feel that with each stitch, I am mending a little portion of the world. 

    Vicki Kessler, an ordained minister in the United Church of Christ, was born and raised in southwest Wisconsin.  She currently resides in Fargo, North Dakota.  She is a self-taught fiber artist who has been experimenting with cloth and stitch since childhood.  Vicki is a founding member of The Women’s Fiber Art Collective in Madison, Wisconsin.  Her work is permanently installed in the Wisconsin Conference of the United Church of Christ in DeForest, Wisconsin; Pilgrim Heights Retreat Center in Green Lake, Wisconsin; First Congregational United Church of Christ and Community of Hope United Church of Christ, both in Madison, Wisconsin.
   

Donna Kjonaas

    The abundant, wide-open plains of North Dakota stretched into endless horizon under the dome of blue sky; this became first home to my imagination.  Grain fields waving in the wind marked time through seasons of planting, growth, harvest and rest. In life on the land, invention is the mother of necessity. Leftover utensils and farm tools made toys.  Hand-made clothing became a treasure, passed-down, taken-in, let out and refashioned for the next child in line.  Food from large gardens, preserved for the coming season, created an exhibit of form, color and texture.  Nothing ever wasted; potential found and cultivated beyond the present purpose.

    Reclaimed and repuposed materials such as linens, clothing, sweaters and quilts are transfomed into compositions that hone principles of color, scale and texture, rich as the land of my birth. Seasonal palettes of prairie landscape dance through my work, varying from the intense green of spring to the golden-yellow hues of fall.  Dakota’s characteristic expansive swaths of land find reflection in techniques of collage, piecing and stitching.   Buttons, beads, thread and yarns are found objects that become embellishments building layers of texture.  Raw materials, old and worn with accumulated history, evolve expressively into art that honors the continuity of life made fresh for a new day and time.

    Donna Kjonaas, a retired United Methodist minister, was born and raised in North Dakota.  She currently divides her time between residences in Sioux Falls, South Dakota and Sanibel, Florida.  Interested in fiber and beauty from childhood, she has a background in clothing construction and quilting.  Her creative impulse along with her affinity for innovation soon led to exploration of non-conventional methods and materials in her artistic compositions.  She has taken several classes in paper-making, painting and book arts.  

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Featured Artist: Marlene Gruetter

During the six weeks of 'Black White Red' we'll focus on individual artists here on our blog. Every week, several artists will be featured. Today, we're pleased to introduce to you: Marlene Gruetter

Wounded (front): wool/recycled, silk, felting, 25"x25"



Piece Statement:

At some point in our lives we all experience emotions which inflict wounds in both our hearts and in our minds.  This piece is a wearable interpretation of how these life experiences can permanently wound our harmonious outlook on life.  Black represents the darkness or evil which lurks within each of us and white symbolizes the purity or innocence each of us is graced with at birth.  When these conflicting human forces collide with one another inside each of us, we become wounded forever.

Wounded (back):Wool/recycled, silk,felting25" x 25" 

Artist Statement:

In creating my Shambolic fiber art, I use a combination of contemporary and traditional feltmaking techniques in a unique way to form pieces with exceptional movement through texture and color.  Composition of color is fashioned using pieces of silk ripped from recycled silk garments.  Fine merino wool is used to fiberseam the composed silk pieces together.   During the fiberseaming and final felting process, the wool and silks move according to their own natural flow miraculously providing exceptional texture and movement.   This captivating combination allows creation of various forms of wearable art that evoke deep feelings and strong emotions.





Monday, September 24, 2012

Featured Artist: Dianne Vottero Dockery

During the six weeks of 'Black White Red' we'll focus on individual artists here on our blog. Every week, several artists will be featured. Today, we're pleased to introduce to you: Dianne Vottero Dockery

Hide and Seek
Silk, cotton, screen-printed,
collaged, machine stiched
12" x 12"
Hide and Seek

As this collage’s design unfolded, it took on its own personality.  It makes no difference if we are playing a childhood game or experiencing our everyday life:  the world is full of hiding places.  You can seek and find a hiding place in these fields of red, white, and black.

London Bridge
Silk, cotton, screen-printed,
collaged, machine stitched
12" x 12" 

London Bridge

Watch out below!  The bridge is falling!  London Bridge is falling down!  This collage is the third in a series of red, white, and black compositions depicting some of my favorite games and pastimes from childhood.  London Bridge is falling down… falling down… my fair lady!

Pocket Full Of Posies
Silk, cotton, screen-printed,
collaged, machine stiched
12" x 12"


Pocket Full of Posies

This piece began as a non-subjective composition in red, white, and black, but as it came together, it began to express itself.  I soon found myself singing a familiar song from the playgrounds of my childhood:  “Ring around the roses… pocket full of posies….”  This collage takes us back to a time when life was as simple and as delightful as a “pocket full of posies”.



Gallery: from left to right,
Doerte Weber, WSJ: Sweet & Sticky
Marlene Gruetter, Wounded
Dianne Vottero Dockery, Hide and Seek, Pocket Full of Posies, London Bridge
Artist’s Statement

     My life as an artist began early.  My tools: a box of contè crayons inherited from my artist uncle and recycled butcher’s paper from my grandmother’s kitchen.  At age three, I rose early and claimed the vacant kitchen table where I drew to my heart’s content. 

     Decades later, fibers have replaced the crayons.  Using fibers as a medium challenges me to step away from the photo-realism I find myself striving for with paint or pastels.  My goal with fibers:  portray reality with graphic interpretation.  I often approach the medium much like a painter who chooses and arranges colors on a palette, preparing for the marriage of color, form, and texture to surface. 

     I am fortunate to have acute sensitivity to the beauty in shapes, textures, and colors that can often go unnoticed by others.    If the art I make stirs the viewer to a higher awareness and appreciation of the world around them, then I humbly consider myself a successful artist.


Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Featured Artist: Janna Carrozza


During the six weeks of 'Black White Red' we'll focus on individual artists here on our blog. Every week, several artists will be featured. Today, we're pleased to introduce to you:
Janna Carrozza


Artist Bio

Janna Carrozza began her studies at Philadelphia University, where she studied Fashion Design. She received a Bachelors Degree in Fine Arts and Art Education from Kutztown University.  Janna also completed a Masters degree in Education.  Janna is involved with community mural projects in the city of Reading. She works full time as an art teacher for the past twelve years as well as a keeping a working studio at The Goggle Works Center for the Arts since 2005.





Piece Statement:


Weaving with respect for the environment is my passion. The fibers used are environmentally friendly, and pesticide free. The natural dyes used in my weaving are harvested from my garden using carefully chosen and blended colors. The colors and patterns are uniquely woven together like paint on a canvas. As all organic things in nature are one of a kind with each one being unique, I never repeat a design pattern in my weavings. The best part of the whole process is cutting off the fibers and admiring the texture and drape of a finished weaving that did not deplete, or harm the earth to create.






Monday, September 17, 2012

Featured Artist: Marie Bergstedt

During the six weeks of 'Black White Red' we'll focus on individual artists here on our blog. Every week, several artists will be featured. Today, we're pleased to introduce to you: Marie Bergstedt

Dressing For A Delicate Condition
reconstructed antique tablecloth
28" x 18" x 9"  Wall Hanging

Dressing For A Delicate Condition, detail
reconstructed antique tablecloth
28" x 18" x 9"  Wall Hanging
 Dressing for a Delicate Condition

"Dressing for a Delicate Condition" came to mind when a crocheted tablecloth I washed fell into pieces.  The work recalls my birth mother, who was pregnant twice during my teens.  Her "delicate" emotions frequently broke down, much like the cloth from which this piece has been reconstructed.




Girl
Crochet, buttonwork, Applique, embroidery
35" x 16" x 21" 



Girl, detail
Crochet, buttonwork, Applique, embroidery
35" x 16" x 21"
Girl, detail
Crochet, buttonwork, Applique, embroidery
35" x 16" x 21"
 Girl

Traveling back in time, I cannot separate myself from the photographic images where I emerge… alone among the dairy cows, as a white figure etched into the shadows and lines of a snowy barnyard, or swathed in the cowgirl finery my foster father always bought for me.

Ripples
Crochet, knitting, buttonwork
25" x 14" x 23"

Ripples
Crochet, knitting, buttonwork
25" x 14" x 23"

 Ripples 

"Ripples" represents a source of personal power and affirmation, available to me during my pre-school years.  At that time I was especially vulnerable and had no control over decisions about my life.  Conversations with Ripples were safe, appreciated and private.

   




   

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Featured Artist: Kristi Baca

During the six weeks of 'Black White Red' we'll focus on individual artists here on our blog. Every week, several artists will be featured. Today, we're pleased to introduce to you: Kristi Baca

Hierarchy
Mixed media: beads, fiber, plastic, metal
20" x 11" x 4"  Wall Hanging

 Work Statement
     
Hierarchy is a new piece and not much is yet known about its people.  It is a symbol of power and may have been worn as a crown or simply used as a symbol of that office.  It is fairly small in stature and its size and ornate curvilinear elements indicate that it belonged to a female of power.  Perhaps a queen, as it seems too commanding to belong to a lower rank.  Judging by the colors and design it would appear that the leader it represents is strong and powerful, yet there is a malevolent feel to the piece.

Artist Statement

I am a mixed media artist working primarily in fiber, acrylic, clay, metal, plastic and wood.  I create artifacts from an undiscovered culture.  My work combines structural complexity and ornamental surface with conceptual ideas. I have always been interested in cultural anthropology and to pursue and expand this study I have created a new world in which I am a xenoarchaeologist**, exploring and presenting an entirely new culture, free of any preconceptions. My work allows me to learn more through each artifact and celebrates culture through the creation of material culture.
     
**Xenoarchaeology is a hypothetical form of archaeology that exists mainly in science fiction works concerned with the physical remains of past, but not necessarily extinct, alien life and cultures.

kristi.baca@gmail.com
www.kristibaca.com