Showing posts with label making. Show all posts
Showing posts with label making. Show all posts

Monday, July 29, 2024

Let's see...3 + 2 +7 is 12? Add another 4?

 









Dear Makers,

On the coffee table is a reading project.  On the side table, a stack of pencils and a journal; more books: a writing project.  The kitchen table has a bag of clay, watercolors, another writing project, a bag of knitting, a box of fixtures from the (in progress) bathroom remodel.  Another surface has a correspondence project on it.  An embroidery project on another.  That's just the main living area.  

In my studio, in the stifling heat, I decided to count up the art/craft projects that are currently in make mode (mood?).  I counted 12, plus 4 sub-projects, so 16, say.  It felt a little overwhelming, or manic, or loony, so like anyone would, I thought what about combining this project with that one?  What if I take these unfinished watercolor collage pieces and glue them onto the unfinished Cat Boxes?  I mean, eleven Cat Boxes is probably more than the market (ha!) will bear.  Although, to be sure, I have mailed away 4 and handed away one, so I am not up to my cardboard ears in them or anything.  Yet.

Well, of course I thought this idea was perfect!  The combinatory is my favorite dance move!  The "cumulative gestures" as Rebecca Solnit writes.  And, here is your song of the day, so we can all dance to it!









Tuesday, June 18, 2024

I was going....

 








Dear You,

Hey, it's me again.  I had to write again, because I don't want to read even One More Word before I tell you something.  It's because it changes me, all the words, all the ideas; it makes me doubt my feelings, my memories, and mostly that is fine, but I really want to explain something in my own way, before it has slipped into the shadow of what The Real Writers have said.  (n.b. I believe there are actually only two modes, two verby places you can be:  Writing, or not writing.  Both are very real.  The funny bit is that there is no difference until there is this complimentary (symbiotic? parasitic?) action place that you can be:  Reading, or not reading).  

Well that is more than the usual amount of instructions, isn't it?  It's just my way of beating about the bush, hoping to feel more at home with my topic.  Let me start again:


Title:  Worldbuilding.


Dear You,

It's something about world-making. About the audience, about who it is for, this thing you make, you made.  It wasn't a castigation for me to be a mom, it was a redirecting, a new audience for the things, worlds, I made.

At night, I would build great towering block sculptures on a low/coffee table (this table, even, was 'made'; it had been a normal, chair height table; we cut the pedestal in half, and I painted the top of it pale yellow, and the apron with lines from the Wordsworth poem about daffodils), and my son (which is not how I have trained myself to say it, I avoid it, the damned 'my.' Not my son, but a son of mine, a person, who exists with or with out my mineness), my son would wake each morning and hurry down to topple these block towers.  It was a percussive, joyful destruction that was the start of day building for and with him.  A railroad, a story book, a cake, a drawing, a mess.  I made these things for an audience of one, and it was the most appreciative audience you can imagine- utterly devoted.  He loved everything I did, and I loved everything he did.  Occasionally there was some kind of sense of my value from an external point of view that tripped me up, that made me worry I was nothing, or that I should be doing something else.  The work of it, performing mother, performing family, felt great to me; it was only the occasional intrusion of the outside world, another world, that had me wondering.  Someone would say, 'can't he make his own sandwich,' and I would feel terrible, like I had stolen his independence and subjugated my own.  When you are very high, you can also fall to a very low down, I guess.

You can say what you want about the artistic impulse and vocation, but when I make something, a painting say, or these words here, these writings, I want someone to see them, I want an audience, a witness to my construction, and when you do something for someone, when you make them a sandwich, a scarf, an afternoon of conversation, you are getting your audience.  The thing that you make and the audience are totally interchangeable.  You make a party, you make a statement, you write a letter, you write a poem.  You give it to friends, family, a publisher (so they can reject it).  

This has been on my mind for years, this contrary feeling I have about being a mother, about having been a mother.  It was the same for me, to make a stuffed velvet ball with a jingle bell in it, or a wooden rattle, as to make a sculpture; the difference only was in that the child really, really appreciated it, thought it was magic to have made it.  I have not received such acknowledgement of my art from anyone else.

A trouble arises in me still; a concern that this makes me soft, un-ambitious, a flabby feminist.  But I hope that maybe you will read this and find it acceptable, this delineation of the truth of my experience... instead of continued hiding and hoping that no one notices how good I had it, how much fun it was to be appreciated as a builder of worlds, a maker The World.  





Friday, May 8, 2020

Love & Envy














Stop Looking Like a Sweater,
wool, 142 x 65 x 5cm, 2013,
Celia Pym




Dear Dying of Envy,

Oh I know how you feel!  You plod along for years, you think you are getting somewhere, you feel, 'yes, this little square of felt with threads through it is really saying things, this is it, I have made something relevant!' 

And then.  You find someone like Celia Pym and you know that you have wasted your efforts, because here is a her that is really making beautiful, poignant, elegant, expressive objects.  The kind you have always wished to make.

Well, tough cookies.  There is nothing you can do but try to bury your hurt and soldier on making things that are not as clearly distilled as these.  A better one made by someone else is just that; a better one made by someone else, and our job here it to minimize the suffering we cause, and that includes our endless, whingeing self-suffering.  So let's rewind, and re-phrase this post:


Dear Looking Out for Beauty,

Here it is, an artist and maker who is sending me over the moon with the wonderful things she has made!  I know you will love them too.  Let's run and get our needles right now, and start to stitch together the beautiful old broken and tattered scraps.  Let's not worry about it coming out good, let's just let each stich come like a drop of rain, with only gravity to guide it where to fall.  Let's just make little marks until we have daubed out a poem of plenty, an elegant pile of eraser rubbings, a page of smudges that mean that time happened here, and it was.









PS
Be sure you investigate a piece titled Blue Knitting.






Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Doubting.










Dear Thomas,

Here's the thing about doubt- it's creeping like a shadow all around the place, and if you let it touch you, if you let it fall on your ideas, on your skin, you are halted, stopped, going no where, becalmed.

The thing is to do something, anything.

Today, I am going to my making place, to combine little bits into some things that will go all together in an exhibit 9 months from now.  I am hoping to have loads of oddments, all pinned to the walls.  My mantra for this project:  More than this, there is nothing.  Sometimes, it feels even less than nothing, and that can be a bit worrisome.  But, mostly it seems like a very appropriate response to everything.  Which might be circular reasoning, if you are still with me.

More Than This is our song for the day, and there is another More Than This for you, as well as chords for you to strum while you sing it and believe it, because it is as true as anything yet.











Thursday, April 18, 2019

Cinema











Dear Popcorn & Junior Mints,

You know how I am always talking about how manipulative films are?  How you are led into a dark room and then blasted with enormous imagery and deafening sound and made to feel things by the movies?  Well, that's one reason I don't often tell you what I think you should see at the movies.  It's a powerful medium, and a huge responsibility.

And so I take my chances, I take the risk of harming, boring, or insulting you, and suggest that you watch this wonderful film made by Isabella Rossellini.  Since I am in such a loose mood, I also suggest you see this wonderful film, Woman at War.

When it is all over, and you have come home to your quiet house and your packet of candy is empty, I hope you will remember some of the important things from these two films:

Making so you can know. 
Umbrellas can be offered. 
The world is beautiful.
Singing is required.










Friday, March 16, 2018

Sewer, Tailor, Sewist, Seamtress.












Dear Sewists & Shoppists, and Whathaveyou-ists,

Will you look at these two beautiful people talking about making things and seeing and awareness!  It fills me to the brim with optimism.  Also, with desire, because the fabrics that they carry at Merchant and Mills are absolutely fabulous.  They are exactly what you want.  I have my shopping basket filled and my finger on what my dear friend calls the 'trigger:'  Meaning, the 'buy' button.  Yes, I am a click away from spending, spending, spending, but the film here and the window shopping are free and unfettered by shipping charges, reality, or seams that need to be ripped out.  So here's to potential!