Monday, August 31, 2015

Join the MU Fiber Arts Club!


Please consider joining and MU Fiber Arts Club!
Our first meeting will be September 3rd at 5pm in the fibers studio.
There will be pizza and lots of fiber fun!
Welcome to the Fiber Arts Club!  We look forward to your involvement in the club.  Meetings are held in the MU Fiber Studio located on the second floor of Bingham Commons on the first Thursday of each month at 5 p.m.
We discuss new fiber projects. As well, we attend conferences to help further our knowledge regarding the art of fibers. Weaving, felting, paper making, and dying fabrics are all medias that we work with in this organization.
Mary Sandbothe
President of the Fibers Club

Thursday, August 27, 2015

New full-time Fibers faculty member, C. Pazia Mannella, has work in Extreme Fibers: Textile Icons and the New Edge, August 20 through November 1, 2015 at The Muskegon Museum of Art.

C. Pazia Mannella, Force, detail

Extreme Fibers: Textile Icons and the New Edge examines the state of fibers and textiles in the fine art world today. The exhibition has been developed by the Muskegon Museum of Art in coordination with Guest Curator Geary Jones of Grand Rapids, Michigan. The artworks on display reveal the diversity of the fine art textile and fiber movement, and its transformation into a multi-media and discipline-spanning phenomenon. Participating artists come from around the world, including an invited slate of 27 artists that are visionaries in the field: Luis Acosta, Kyoung Ae Cho, Kate Anderson, Ewa Bartosz-Mazus, Lia Cook, Thomas Cronenberg, Nancy Crow, Patricia Hickman, Jan Hopkins, Wolfgang Horn, Ferne Jacobs, David Johnson, Gerhardt Knodel, Gyöngy Laky, Maximo Laura, Tom Lundberg, Libby Mijanovich, Laura Foster Nicholson, Krystyna Sadej, Arturo Alonzo Sandoval, Chizu Sekiguchi, Sherri Smith, Ixchel Suarez, Yoshiko Wada, Dawn Walden, Carole Weller, and Bhakti Ziek.
A slate of artists selected from juried submissions received from countries around the world will join these masters. Narrowing from a field of over 300 entries, jurors Ferne Jacobs and Namita Gupta Wiggers selected 79 works from 51 artists for inclusion. These juried pieces join those by our invited artists for a showing of over 120 fiber and textile based artworks. One artist from the juried portion of the show will be selected by Ferne Jacobs and Namita Gupta Wiggers for the California Fibers Beyond the Boundaries Award. This award is sponsored by California Fibers and is given annually to a fiber artist for artistic innovation in subject matter, materials and/or technique in a national or international fiber exhibition. The winner will be announced at a later date
Viewers will find tapestries, quilts, weavings, sculpture, basketry, and a host of other forms on display, from functional works to fully abstracted shapes. This is a remarkable opportunity for West Michigan to see truly contemporary, international artwork by artists that defined and continue to transform a major art movement
One artist from the juried portion of the show will be selected by Ferne Jacobs and Namita Gupta Wiggers for the California Fibers Beyond the Boundaries Award. This award is sponsored by California Fibers and is given annually to a fiber artist for artistic innovation in subject matter, materials and/or technique in a national or international fiber exhibition. The winner will be announced at a later date.
Extreme Fibers will open at the Dennos Museum in Traverse City, Michigan, December 6, 2015 and run through March of 2016.
Underwritten by Bayer CropScience. Program support provided by the Michigan Council for the Arts with the National Endowment for the Arts.
http://www.muskegonartmuseum.org/exhibitions/

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Speaking With Threads, Jane Sauer, Curator, August 28-October 25, 2015, Craft Alliance Center of Art + Design.

Mark Newport, Batman 712

Speaking With Threads
Jane Sauer, Curator
August 28-October 25, 2015

Opening Reception:
Friday, August 28, 6-8pm
Speaking With Threads
"Life on the Grid" by Mary Bero

Featured Artists:
Mary Bero, Sonya Clark, Kathy Halper, Cindy Hickok, Mark Newport, Carol Shinn, and Benji Whalen

Innovations in Textiles 10
Gallery Hop
Friday, October 2, 5:00-8:00 pm

Curator’s Talk in the Gallery
Saturday, October 3, 2:00 pm

Workshop
Finding the Magic in Disappearing Fabrics with Cindy Hickok
Friday, October 2, 10:00 am-4:00 pm

Poetry Reading
Stitching Verses in the gallery
Thursday, October 15, 6:30 pm
Presented by the St. Louis Poetry Center

This exhibition is presented in conjunction with Innovations in Textiles 10, a regional collaborative event celebrating fiber art.

Curatorial Statement
Jane Sauer

Speaking with Threads brings together the voices of 7 artists using linear elements of thread as a means of communication. Embroidery, a technique loosely connected to the technical practice of each artist in the exhibition, has been dated to the Warring States period (5th - 3rd century BC) in China. The process was originally used to tailor, patch, mend and reinforce cloth. This utilitarian approach led to the decorative possibilities of embellishing with stitches. The artists and craftspeople of the time developed new ways to turn, knot, loop, braid, and twist pliable linear threads to create decorative stitches.   Strangely, there have been no significant changes or advancements in the materials or techniques used in embroidery in the 2500 years since its invention. Rather, the changes that have taken place in the approach to stitchery or embroidery are seen in how it is used.

I selected these artists for their ability to use a simple and modest linear element to create a large statement. The artists I selected all have a distinguished and straightforward voice. I am fascinated by the end result from the accumulation of hundreds and perhaps thousands of small linear elements coming together, to make a powerful statement. Whether diminutive or large in scale, the pieces draw the viewer in to examine how each is constructed. Carol Shinn is a master with an ordinary sewing machine, using the threads as pencil strokes, building up layers of color, light, and shadow; an image emerges from a chaotic ground of tiny marks. Cindy Hickok also creates using the sewing machine, applying layer upon layer of strokes of thread until she has created a fabric of her own. Hickok’s wry sense of humor is what drives her narratives. Her art requires detective work to identify all the characters dancing across her backgrounds. Discovery is an important part of the impact of Hickok’s work.

Mark Newport is a master of many textile techniques. Knitting has been of prime interest to him in recent years. He uses stitches to create a strong graphic plane. Newport explores the supposed heroes of our culture, exposing their vulnerabilities as well as expressing their presumed power to protect. There is an uneasy dichotomy in the use of a female-oriented art form to create an ultra-masculine image. A level of anxiety is also created by the need for these super heroes to protect the innocent from the horrors of our society- the rapists, child molesters, robbers, and the bombs and hand guns which seem to be lurking behind every corner.

Mary Bero fearlessly breaks all the traditional rules of fiber art. She deftly combines embroidery, painting, and sculptural elements to create exuberant works of art. She is a virtuoso of color. Her images are loosely connected, as if part of a daydream or, at times a nightmare. The various elements in the picture plane come together through a succession of small marks, and build to a cohesive whole.

Kathy Walker questions the disappearing space between the public and the private. Her images are derived from material she finds on social media. She looks at the role technology plays in the lives of today’s adolescents, using a technique and material, embroidery, that is oppositional to the fast pace of the internet.

Benji Whalen’s heavily embroidered tattoos on stuffed arms clearly point to the cultural divide between generations and ethnic groups. He references current subcultures and lifestyles. His sculptures also raise the question of “what is art?” Does art have to be located on something that can be placed in a gallery or museum to be valid? Or can it be a part of your body? If art is a part of the owner, then is it personal and not public?  Can it be understood by the 60+ generation in this country?

Sonya Clark uses the symbols of race and identity to engage the viewer in a dialogue. She has an ongoing interest in the quality of black hair and its multi layered meaning. Hair in Clark’s repertoire is woven, stitched, twisted, and manipulated in unconventional ways, creating recognizable objects that become political statements upon closer examination.

It is my hope that this exhibit illuminates the overlap between art, craft, and popular culture.

http://www.craftalliance.org/exhibitions/delmar/speakingwiththreads15/speakingwiththreads.htm

Welcome Back Fibers!

Jo Stealey, Heirloom
C. Pazia Mannella, Force
The Fibers program is back in session for Fall 2015.

In addition to our new Blogger site we also are on Instagram.

https://instagram.com/mizzoufibers/

The hashtag we are using for the Fibers program is #fibersmu

Please follow us throughout the semester.

Professor Jo Stealey has moved from the Head of Fibers position to the Chair of the Art Department. For more information about Stealey please see: http://art.missouri.edu/full-time-faculty/jo-stealey

I am C. Pazia Mannella the new full-time faculty member in Fibers. For more information about me please see: http://art.missouri.edu/full-time-faculty/c-pazia-mannella