Tuesday, 10 May 2016

Here & There @ Belconnen Arts Centre

Last week our group exhibition, Here and There was opened at the Belconnen Art Centre by Sally Burdon, Director of the Asia Book Room, and Dr Chris Bourke, Minister of Small Business and the Arts in the ACT.
Sally Burdon opening 'Here and There' at BAC
Although Barbara, Sharon and I exhibited a portion of this exhibition at the Barometer Gallery in Sydney last year, this exhibition has been extended, with new works by each artist specifically for the Belconnen Arts Centre Gallery. We had a great turnout and received many positive comments about how good our work looked in the space. We would also like to acknowledge the Australian Artists grant we received from NAVA in support of the costs of holding this exhibition.
Admirers of Sharon People's work
Entry to the exhibition - works by Rogers, Peoples and Ryder
Our works respond to the displacement felt when you are in one country and thinking about, or making work about, another. For Sharon, this was a family pilgrimage walking several hundred kilometers of the camino to Santiago de Compostella in Spain. Sharon mentioned in her artist talk that while her feet were in Spain, the sounds of the cicadas and bees and smells of the eucalyptus leaves under her feet took her head and heart back to Australia.

Shibori textiles by Barbara Rogers
For Barbara, her experience of the Japanese art of shibori  in Australia with Japanese shibori master, Hiroyuki Shindo, inspired many trips to Japan and abroad to study this magical technique. Barbara's work differs from many shibori practitioners in that she starts with a black cloth, and discharges the colour out using the itajime technique with carved clamped boards or shapes, then develops her complex patterns by building up layers of colour with Naphthol dyes. Her deceptively simple designs are actually the product of years of painstaking development, getting the patterns and colours just right, so it all flows seamlessly.
View of my work with People's work on the left and Rogers' on the right
My latest work shown here are textiles that I started in Malaysia on my Asialink Arts Residency at Rimbun Dahan in 2013, then subsequently finished once I got back to Australia.  Whilst over there, I was finishing stitching some large panels I had started here for an exhibition called Natural Wonders as part of the Canberra Centenary.  Sitting stitching large naturally dyed textiles whose plants had been sourced from Pialligo and Aranda, I had the idea for the Here and There exhibition because it seemed incongruous to me that I was far away from home, but making work about the four seasons in a hot and humid country thousands of kilometers away.  Similarly over the last year or so I have been finishing off the work I started in Malaysia, thinking about place and people, the landscape and the history.

Series of 'bandages' entitled 'Valley of Hope Ara' by Julie Ryder
Many of these textiles have been naturally dyed with plants from the wonderful garden planted by Angela Hijjas at Rimbun Dahan.  Some of them were dyed then post-mordant printed, others were printed with mordants before-hand and dyed later.  By printing with mordants first, you can create some wonderful colours all from the one dyebath.  This is the basis of the workshops that I often teach around the country for textile or craft retreats. Details of these workshops can be found here

The format of these long textiles stems from my research into the history of Sungai Buloh, the closest town to Rimbun Dahan. I have found some subsequent information online here:

"...At its height, the settlement had more than 2,000 residents, its own school, police force, places of worship, library, theatre, and even currency. Inspired by the “garden city” movement of the 19th century, it came to be known as “The Valley of Hope”. So pleasant was it, that even when effective treatment became available, many former patients chose to stay.
Although a large proportion of the sufferers were ethnic Chinese, the settlement was also home to Indians, Malays, Javanese, Eurasians and indigenous people. Whatever their race, religion or class, they shared a common bond in being outcasts from society at large. The result was probably the most diverse yet harmonious community Malaysia has ever seen..."

So this  started me thinking about the bandages that are still knitted today by volunteers all over the world to help bandage the limbs of these afflicted people. Apparently knitted cotton bandages are softer and more cushioning that manufactured ones.  In my "bandages" I have included iconography from Christianity and Islam to reference the harmony that coexisted within the Valley of Hope.  The series of striped bandages reference the 'ara' found on the left and right hand sides of the pua kumbu woven cloths of the indigenous Iban of Borneo.  I had the wonderful experience of staying for a few days with the weavers from Rumah Garie in 2012 where we participated in their ngar ceremony for mordanting all their cotton warps for the next two years of ikat weaving.

Detail of 'Valley of Hope Ara' by Julie Ryder
 The Leprosy Colony in Sungai Buloh still exists today, albeit with only a couple of hundred inmates and their families, but they have built up a thriving nursery business that is supported by many locals, and that was also a lovely coincidence that I was also using plant dyes to make work about healing and harmony.

In addition I made four textile artworks entitled 'Budaya lintasan', or 'crossing cultures' that have been mordant printed, appliqued and stitched then stretched over canvas.
'Budaya lintasan' series of textiles
These works complemented perfectly the work I had previously done about Canberra for  Natural Wonders and Here and There at the Barometer Gallery last year, which can be seen in previous posts.



Thursday, 21 April 2016

The Hindmarsh Prize

Amazing news hot off the press is that my work, Under the Microscope, has been selected for the inaugural Hindmarsh Prize for glass.....yes, you read it correctly... GLASS!

Under The Microscope (Photo: Deb Jurss)

This body of work was created during my 2015 GLINT residency (see previous posts) as a sample for much larger works in glass for future exhibition.  My idea was to create a series of large microscope slides reminiscent of Victorian scientific microscope slides.
Image: http://www.victorianmicroscopeslides.com/slides.htm

These slides were beautifully decorated with printed papers designed by the different individuals or firms who specialised in the preparation of scientific slides for scientists or collectors.  They have become highly collectable themselves, unfortunately well out of my price range, but luckily I have access to the Cryptogam Herbarium at the Australian National Botanic Gardens who hold a lovely collection of Victorian glass slides of diatoms.
Detail image of my slide which has been printed and sandblasted
The image I have used in my slide above is an SEM of Phaeoceros inflatus by Dr Christine Cargill surrounded by a textile damask design typical of the Victorian era. Dr Cargill and I have worked for many years since our ANAT Synapse residency back in 2005, and we do joke that it is the art-sci collaboration that just keeps on giving!

The Hindmarsh Prize is specifically for artists who work in glass from the ACT region, and there were 18 shortlisted artists from a field of 31. More information about the Hindmarsh prize, and a sneek peak at each artist's entry, can be found here


Sunday, 17 April 2016

More Mordant Printing

Here are some more photos of the work produced  during the Fibre Arts Workshop in Ballarat a cou-ple of weeks ago (see previous post). These were taken by Gaye, who thankfully had the presence of mind to remember to take them. As usual I got so busy I forgot to do it myself! This first photo is really interesting because we were all trying to take photos of the table runner we made, but only Gaye's phone (on the right) took a photo of the true colours.

Colour differences between phone cameras (Photo: G Nieuwenhof)

Student's Finished work (Photo: G Nieuwenhof)

Beautiful colour ranges (Photo: G Nieuwenhof)

Lots of pattern and layering to build up texture and colour (Photo: G Nieuwenhof)

Saturday, 16 April 2016

Natural Dye Workshop @ Ballarat

Had a fantastic week in Ballarat with Fibre Arts Australia printing with mordants and dyeing with a variety of natural dyes, from fresh plant material,  powdered dyes as well as extracts. I had a wonderful group of students who were right on track to learn new ways of creating images and colour combinations by printing with mordants both before and after dyeing with natural dyes.  I think we worked out that we had made over 150 colours during the course of the week.....so all the students have built up a wonderful resource for their future forays into natural dyes.  Towards the end of the week our group had to make something for the "top table" so we decided to make this fabulous table-runner which we printed with mordants and then dyed in iris leaves.
Table runner after printing with various mordants (before dyeing)
We were all so proud of it and we raised $100 when it sold to one of the other tutors during the live auction.
Table runner after dyeing with iris leaves and decoratively stitched by students
After the workshop I had several enthusiastic emails from several of my class saying they had already started putting their new skills into practice.  That is so exciting for me as a teacher - to know that you have not only inspired others with your passion and knowledge but also to create the impetus for independant research and experimentation.

The Ballarat Class of 2016 - Awesome and talented ladies!!

Thank you all so much for a wonderfully calm and productive week!

Thursday, 17 March 2016

A Collection

To coincide with the Fibre Arts@Ballarat workshops this year there will be an exhibition of tutor's work entitled A Collection at The Lost Ones Gallery in Camp Street Ballarat from 16 March to 3rd April.
View of exhibition at the Lost Ones Gallery
This exhibition has been curated by Tara Poole from RIIS Strategic Consulting and will provide a wonderful snapshot of the talent and creativity of the tutors at this year's workshops.  It will give the general public an idea of what goes on at the Ballarat Grammar School when the boarders are away during the Easter holidays, and hopefully inspire some of them to try the workshops for themselves.
I am so looking forward to this year's class, to meet up with hundreds of like-minded fibre enthusiasts and to have a break from cooking and cleaning (and moving house) for a week. It is always inspiring to meet the other tutors, to go for daily walks around the lake, check out the botanic gardens and spend a whole week just exploring natural dyes and mordants in a well-organised and extremely fun working holiday.

Sunday, 13 March 2016

Hand/Eye Magazine

























I have been a follower of the Hand/Eye magazine for sometime so it was a great surprise to get an email from Jessica Hemmings to say that my chapter for her book Cultural Threads had been featured in the latest online edition. If you haven't read the book yet, you can see my full article here:
http://handeyemagazine.com/content/generate

Saturday, 5 March 2016

Asian Textile Studies

A few weeks ago I was contacted by two asian textiles collectors, David and Sue Richardson from the UK who have started their own website, Asian Textile Studies. They had found my blog over the internet and wanted to know if they could use some of the photos I had taken of my cloths that I had dyed whilst I was artist in residence at Rimbun Dahan in 2013. Specifically, they were after brown dyes for their last chapter on the website.

Rambutan skins with alum (left) and iron (right) on different silks

Mangosteen skins with alum on cotton (left) and 3 types of silk
Their email to me came just in time - I have been working hard in the studio to finish off a number of naturally dyed textiles for an upcoming group exhibition  about my time in Malaysia, entitled Here & There. So of course I have been cutting up these larger pieces of cloth to use in my exhibition.  If the email had come any later I would not have had anything to give them for their website!

Here & There  will be shown at the Belconnen Art Centre in late April, so I will write a more descriptive post about the exhibition closer to the time.

More photos of my work can be found on the Asian Textile Studies website here.