Showing posts with label Sarah Mitchell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sarah Mitchell. Show all posts

Friday, January 7, 2011

FOLDING, UNFOLDING, ENFOLDING


Box of Autumn by Eva of Tinctory. See blog here.


I read of someone writing poems on handmade paper, folding them into origami cranes and leaving them all over London, to brighten someone's day.
From origami cranes I pondered over writing a blog post about folding paper .... or fabric .... canvas or metal. I thought of folding dog ears in a book to keep one's place .... and unfolding. My thoughts inevitably wandered over to wrapping, unwrapping, folding, enfolding...... Thus, this post was born :-)
Necklace by Eva of Tinctory. See shop here.



Film Star by John Latham. See link here.



Painting is an open book by John Latham

Between Folds/Encyclopaedia by Francisca Prieto. See Website here.
Mary Bogdan. See Flickr photo stream here.

A favourite image I've posted before by Sarah Mitchell. See link here.
"I enjoy the process of folding the paper, sewing the signatures, and the fact that from this repetition, surprising new things can emerge... " - Sarah Mitchell


Romance by Cara Barer. Website here.


Blue Lotus by Jenny Gifford. Photo by Lianne Burton on Flickr, here.

Tiny wrapped parcels by Kwang-Young Chun have intrigued me for a while. Photo by Jasmine Trabelsi on Flickr, see more here.



I love these metal packets by Kyleen Jeans. See link here.



Folding by Katherine Chang Liu. See more here.

Friday, November 27, 2009

TIED UP

Wonderful box of paper treasures by Sarah Mitchell. See more of her experiments here.


These are a few of my favourite things. Parcels and books, boxes and bundles, sticks and stones, or stacks and piles of anything for that matter .... all tied up with string. Or tied up with ribbon ....or wire .... or whatever will serve the purpose.



Wraps by Mary Ellen Long. See Flickr photostream here. Blog, here.



Winter Pressings by Mary Ellen Long. These wrapped scroll forms hold gatherings found at the "burial" site.


"Each year before the first snowfall, I lay paper of various sizes and forms on the earth. This paper becomes buried under the winter snows to then be harvested in the spring. This ritual documents the passage of time and the amount of snowfall that particular winter. This method is a little like printmaking with nature - the earth being the plate and the snow being the press." - Mary Ellen Long

Language Bound by Mary Ellen Long
Whilst trying to decide which images to post I asked myself why I was attracted to each piece. What was it about each piece that spoke to me? And then I remembered a poem I had read on Paper and Word by Chris Gray.
#
What can I know of these things?
Many things appear to me strange and wondrous
Remnants of times past
Silent
Yet speaking to my soul
In an unknown language
That I seem to understand.
Chris Gray 2006


Rapt Rocks by Nancy Neva Gagliano. See Neva's blog, here


I was thrilled to find these amazing wrapped rocks by Nancy Neva Gagliano. 

Neva writes, "I began WRAPPING some of the many rocks together that I'd long stacked around our house. I called them RAPT, from enraptured."


" .... some are wrapped with their own sort of fossils, and silk/waxed linen threads, silver or copper wire, various papers. the latest rocks also are wrapped and then waxed." - Nancy Neva Gagliano


Rapt Rocks by Nancy Neva Gagliano

Small sculpture by Jade Pegler. See Jade's photostream on Flickr, here.


Beautiful images of aged papers, stacked, collaged or painted on Linda's blog, here.



Qirky little clay parcel made by Don Madden. Visit Don's blog, here.See post about the parcel inside Peevay's head, here.



Textile art by Chris Gray. See Flickr photostream, here and textile art blog, here.



Package 2 by Jeane Myers. See photostream here. Website, here.

Jeane Myers is a warm and generous artist who shares her process and progressions on her blog. A progression can involve anything from hacking and ripping an old painting in two .... or three, scratching, scraping and wiping off layers of paint, adding this, adding that, stomping on it, throwing it out into the rain, rescueing it after a few days, turning it upside down, reworking it and ..... quite frankly my heart can't  take it, but Jeane has taught me to loosen up and have fun while making art. Go and see for yourself!