course seminar 2 reading fashion and textiles
TRANSCRIPT
Why do I have to write an artist statement? It's stupid. If I wanted to write to express myself I would have been a writer. The whole idea of my art is to say things visually. Why can't people just look at what I do and take away whatever experiences they will?
statements
Yuko Takada
For me tracing paper represents the fine l ine between dream and reality
Chiyoko Tanaka
Many of my pieces, once woven by hand, are laid down outdoors on the ground, or on a rock. I then rub them over and over again, carefully, with a selected stone or a brick. I just want to touch the earth through this process, and to trace the texture of the ground.
For these works I have coined the phrase Grinded Fabric.
Masaklazu Kabayashi
When I held a single thread loosely between my hands, I noticed that i t formed a beautiful, natural l ine. For the next ten years I explored this idea.
Naomi Kobayashi
I am intimately aware of the rhythms and cycles of nature, sometimes powerful, at other t imes delicate. The circles I have been presenting for several years symbolise the cosmos
Machiko Agano
I am attracted by the mysterious shapes of nature: patters made by the wind on desert sands; shapes on eroded rocks on coastal shores; clouds driven across the autumn sky. While these natural patterns serve perhaps no purpose, nevertheless I feel drawn to the power of an invisible and all-encompassing force of which I am part.
Mitsuo Toyazaki
I am interested in our everyday, ordinary senses. Of particular interest are people’s thoughts in regard to clothing. What is it about clothing that creates anxiety? The question is l inked to the objectives behind my work, and in particular to the consideration of two motifs: decoration and symbols.
Ann Hamilton
My first hand is a sewing hand
Like human skin (cloth) is a membrane that divides an exterior from an exterior. It both reveals and conceals.
Interiors are also exteriors
Caroline Broadhead
I am interested in the idea of a negative double of the body, the insubstantial mirror image, the inescapable other…..I wanted to use the shadow as an illuminating element, with a reflective fabric cut to the cast shadow, and here revealing the lining, the inside of a dress. The small scale of these pieces gave them a simultaneously sweet and sinister feel, reflecting the various meanings of shadows.
Anne Wilson
My objects and installations explore the themes of time, loss, private and social rituals. The work draws upon culturally constructed meanings (coded women’s work, art historical conventions), conceptual processes and perception. I use predominantly the materials of hair and cloth and labour (hand stitching) associated with the domestic work place……. The visceral nature of human hair is in contrast to the formality of white linen and sets up an aesthetic oppositional tendencies
Michael Brennan-Wood
I’ve been interested in microphotography since I was a student…it’s almost an inner landscape, or cellular landscape.
I looked at one of the lace designs closely and it reminded me of skin.
Towards the end of the 80’s I was beginning to get very interested in textile history and to question the derisory way in which decoration and pattern were written and talked about.
I like the idea of a genealogy, of being part of the history of textiles. It makes me feel rooted in a tradition
Yinka Shonibare
I am actually producing something perceived as ethnic in inverted commas, but at the same time the African Fabric used in my work is something industrially produced and given its cultural origins, my own authenticity is questioned.
Christian Boltanski
Second-hand clothes speak of someone who was here but is no longer here. The smell and the creases have remained, but not the person. Pieces with clothes are more diff icult…one thinks of the Holocaust. I always try to use modern clothes so that they can be recognised as things of today.
http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/artists_stories/single/983559
describe image
Form - describe what you see
Colour schemeOne colour or dominantPrinciple shapesTexturesVariety or unity of TexturesArrangement of the elements in the workForms relationship to Content
Process - how it became
What materialsProcesses and techniquesHow was the work madeWith whatWhat tools How and where was the work begun What skills were used
Context - extending beyond the physical
What is the work aboutWhat is its subject matterOvert Vehicle for social religious moral political concernsObserved directly remembered imaginedRepresentational or distortedWhySuperficial or hidden meanings
Mood - bringing yourself into the picture - empathy
How does the work affect you Does it relate to a mood feeling or emotion you have experiencedArtists/designers feeling during the making of the workQuiet/noisy happy/sad