"...vision is always ahead of execution, knowledge of materials is your contact with reality, and uncertainty is a virtue." Art and Fear by David Bayles and Ted Orland
Our group of artists agreed to pick a photograph, which each of us would interpret in her own way.
It
made me think of women quilters back in the 19th century, spurring each
other on to greater heights of inventiveness, as they watched their
neighbors take the same old shirt fabric and use it in entirely
different ways.
We chose a photograph taken by Maura McEvoy,
a stunningly simple shot of a mandarin orange and two dominos, sitting
in a raku fired bowl on a deep teal colored linen background.
My
first thought was to get as far away as possible from the photograph
and create a quilt that looked nothing like it. Then I careened back
with an almost comical desire to imitate the photograph in a very
literal way.
Frustrated by opposing impulses, I decided to channel my imaginary 19th century ladies.
It
seems to me that these women were the early forerunners of color
theorists like Josef Albers, employing an understanding that colors
appear differently, according to the colors around them. The use of
color in a pattern created the spirit of the quilt.
Although
I'm no slave to pattern (I usually want to break it as soon as I
begin), I wanted the blues of my piece to pulsate around the squares,
suggesting the delicate cracked bowl with the bright orange mandarin and
the ochre colored dominos.
One week and many stitched together scraps later, I've begun to enjoy the process; stepping into the unknown, unsure of where the next stitch will take me and also not knowing exactly where the final stitch might reside.
One week and many stitched together scraps later, I've begun to enjoy the process; stepping into the unknown, unsure of where the next stitch will take me and also not knowing exactly where the final stitch might reside.
Thinking of my ladies, both the real and the imaginary, I'm discovering the loveliness of uncertainty.
