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April exhibition featuring Nike Schroeder, Amber Jean Young and Tonje Hoydahl Sorli

NikeSchroederStudio003  Amber Jean Young   Tonje Hoydahl Sorli

Celebrate Spring with our fresh new exhibition featuring three talented textile artists, all with their unique take in both their technique and of course their subject matter. Nike Schroeder divided her time between her native Berlin and Los Angeles until she moved to L.A permanently. Her new studio is a light filled zone of creativity and her work looks equally at home in serene art galleries of on the pages of glossy interiors magazines where it takes pride of place in people’s homes.

Viewing Amber Jean Young’s quilts immediately transports you to a world of forests and endless skies. The fragmentation of both give it an entirely new perspective which is enhanced through the tactile quality of her medium.

Norwegian Tonje Hoydahl Sorli transplants instantly recognisable popular culture motifs into carefully woven tapestries, where the immaculate front of each piece contrasts with the reverse showing the trailing yarn. “This shows doubleside to most things, and also the more problematic or tangled sides of life,” she explains.

Textiles take to the streets with craftivism

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[Images courtesy of Betsy Greer and the ‘You are so very Beautiful,’ drop at Baltimore]

 

 

Definition of craftivism: ‘a way of looking at life where voicing opinions through creativity makes your voice stronger, your compassion deeper and your quest for justice more infinite’ Betsy Greer

 

 

Creating something often brings more pleasure than owning the finished piece, and now there is an outlet for all of your creativity.  ‘You are so very Beautiful,’ is a project originated by Betsy Greer, the ‘godmother of craftivism.’ Make a positive affirmation no bigger than the size of your palm starting with the words ‘you are’ and send it to Betsy or find out how to create your own drop where you live.

The benefits of doing so can be two fold. Not only are you adding to a cause, but sometimes samples you weave, sew or knit for a larger piece are often redundant once they are made. Try adapting them to give you the knowledge you need for your final work then send them onto a drop to spread a little happiness. We caught up with the lovely Besty to find out more about her and the project.

 

 

What is your background with craft and textiles?

I learned how to cross stitch from my grandmother during a visit to her house. We went to the store and I picked out a bookmark with a cow on it that I gave to my mom. I learned how to knit when I was living in New York City in 2000 because I wanted to volunteer with older people and thought that it would be the perfect thing to learn, something we could do together. Little did I know it would lead to learning to knit in a cool knitting circle! So I’m both community taught and self taught.

 

When did you start the site and why?

The spring of 2003. No one was using the word craftivism and I wanted a way to track its usage. So, BOOM, a baby site was made! If you had told me the term would be worldwide 13 years later I would have laughed at you. Now it’s a place where people hopefully can come to learn more about the term and how people interpret it. It’s funny there’s no road map when you create an -ism, so I just decided it was my job to be a godmother to it.

 

Although Craftivism encompasses all kinds of craft, what is it about textiles that lends itself to the cause?

Textiles are so personal, so tactile, so portable, so beautiful. That they have all  these things at once and go back thousands of years makes them pretty potent in terms of cultural value. Add on the fact that women were taught textiles for centuries and it becomes even more layered. With all this weight and cultural value, it is perfect for craftivism, which also has weight and cultural value.

 

Can you briefly explain the concept behind ‘You are so very beautiful.

At first I started writing affirmations for a daily app that asked questions every morning and night so you could track what you did. I started thinking they were kind of dumb, but over time I began to really like that question each morning, asking myself, what do I need to remind myself of today? Then I realized that if I stitched signs that had affirmations I needed to tell myself or perhaps wanted to tell others, I could heal myself in the making of them and then heal others in them finding them, in the hopes that whomever needs to find that message stumbles across where I left it.

 

What countries has it featured in so far?

The U.S., England, and Canada. There will be a drop in Australia in April!

 

If people want to contribute towards it what’s the best way to do so?

To learn more about how to participate, check out http://craftivism.com/yasvb

To learn more about what the project is, go to http://craftivism.com/youaresoverybeautiful.

For any questions, feel free to email me directly at betsy@craftivism.com.

To see what other people have made, check out the hashtag #yasvb on Instagram here: https://www.instagram.com/explore/tags/yasvb/

 

Follow us and artist update

TRIPTYQUE

Last year we were lucky enough to feature french tapestry artist Marie-Thumette Brichard in our first online exhibition. We recently caught up with her to see what she had been working on. As well as a solo show exhibiting all of her tapestries and collages from the last ten years, she has been weaving several mini-tapestries something she describes as “fun and interesting,  like drawing.” One of her latest pieces is the large Triptich (featured above), each tapestry measures 1 m x 1.3m. Marie deliberately didn’t give it a title, “this way everyone can see what they want. They are about drawings and links made by the waves when they hit the rocks.”

You can see this image on our brand new Instagram account which we will update each Monday and when we see something worth posting. We update our blog and Facebook  page every Monday for our ‘Inspirational Monday,’ post and we aim to have an exhibition of three textile artists at the beginning of each month. Check out our new Instagram account here, and please  follow us as the more people who know about us the more we can ‘wake up the world to contemporary textile art.’

 

Instagram

Video of amazing tapestry from start to finish

We were lucky enough to interview tapestry artist Kristin Saeterdal recently and although everyone realises the amount of talent and commitment it takes to weave a huge tapestry, this three minute video proves it.  ‘Remembrance of the Sun, How it was Made’ condenses 400 hours of tapestry weaving into under three minutes and also shows the whole process including drawing the sketch, dying the yarn and cutting the finished piece from the loom. Check out our Facebook Page or Kristin’s website to see the video.

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