Sunday, January 14, 2007
Textiles As Art: Antique Textiles
No. 1138
Hungarian Embroidery with fringe
1800 - 1900 A.D
Size: 24 x 24 in
An informative resource for antique textile information. Covers a range of topics from buying and selling to restoration and preservation to appraisals and pricing.
The gallery includes Chinese silks of the Tang to the Qing dynasties, Pre-Columbian South American textiles, Central Asian Ikat and Suzani, Renaissance and Medieval European objects, Coptic and Ancient Textiles, Classical Islamic and Persian silks and velvets, as well as ethnographic Costumes and antique Kashmiry and Persian Shawls.
Sunday, January 7, 2007
Through The Needle: The Art of Ray Materson
Raymond Materson believes in the healing power of art. While serving a 15-year prison sentence for drug-related crimes, he salvaged the thread of socks to create miniature scenes, most measuring only 2 and 1/4-by-2 and 3/4 inches, with 1,200 stitches per square inch to create miniature tapestries depicting life inside and outside prison walls and used needlepoint to stitch his life back together. Under such conditions, his art was both an escape and an act of courage.
Saturday, January 6, 2007
What F.I.G. Is All About
I am starting this blog to share with my F.I.G. friends, websites that may be of interest to them and photos from our meetings. Posting will probably be sporadic so I recommend using a news aggregator (also known as feed reader, news reader ...), like Bloglines, to keep you informed of updates.
An explanation of what F.I.G. is about is in order for those not familiar with the acronym. To my knowledge, there are no other F.I.G. groups (redundant, I know, but that is how we refer to ourselves) but that does not mean that you, dear reader, cannot start one. If you do, please let us know by posting a comment. We would love to spread the concept.
An explanation of what F.I.G. is about is in order for those not familiar with the acronym. To my knowledge, there are no other F.I.G. groups (redundant, I know, but that is how we refer to ourselves) but that does not mean that you, dear reader, cannot start one. If you do, please let us know by posting a comment. We would love to spread the concept.
The Fiber Interest Group, or F.I.G., as it is fondly called, was started in November 1980 by nationally known doll maker and fiber artist, Lenore Davis, and continues to this day. The original purpose of the group was to provide an informal discussion forum for fiber artists in the Cincinnati and Tri-State area (Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana) where they could show, ask for help and receive feedback on recently completed or almost completed fiber or fiber-related art works, a productive exchange between the artist and the members present. When this type of support is not needed, and it often is not, other textile-related discussions have been encouraged and have run the gamut from books, exhibits seen and to be seen, competitions, travels, reports on workshops taken and more. Since it’s inception, F.I.G. has expanded the base of it’s membership which now includes collectors, teachers, students and other individuals interested in learning more about the local fiberarts community.
Meetings are informal affairs and have ranged in attendance from a few to many. Most are held in, but not limited to, a member's home or studio. Often, a theme is selected by the member hosting the meeting, as a prompt for discussion or suggestion for what to bring and share. Occasionally, a field trip is planned to a school, for a demonstration, perhaps, or an area museum to see an exhibit, or other place of interest. Meetings take place four to six times a year.
F.I.G. has no officers, dues, or paperwork. Persons interested in attending a meeting send one or more SASE (self-addressed stamped envelopes) to the “envelope person,” the only "official" in the group. About a month before each meeting, this person complies a set of envelopes which are given to the person who has volunteered to host the meeting. The host uses these envelopes to mail out a flyer they have created with pertinent information about the meeting they are hosting. One envelope in a member’s set of envelopes is marked “last envelope.” Receipt of this envelope indicates that the envelope person has run out of envelopes for the person receiving it. Unless that person sends in more envelopes, they will no longer be notified of meetings. Using this simple formula, Cincinnati’s F.I.G. has endured since its inception.
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