Showing posts with label embroidery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label embroidery. Show all posts

Friday, November 18, 2016

The Rhinoceros Project at Ramon's Tailor



The Ramon's Tailor installation is up! Visit here to see a sneak peek!

Our opening reception is tomorrow, November 19, from 3-6 PM. Join us at 628 Jones Street for sewing circles, rhinoceros cookies, and rhino ephemera!

We will be in residence on Saturdays and Sundays, 12-4, till January 8. Visit us to take a break from the holiday craziness and sit, sew, and share!

Sunday, June 29, 2014

A Visit to the Wounded General and more!



Two weeks ago, Robert and I finally made it out to see Heather's studio and her gallery, The Wounded General, out in Point Reyes Station.


It's a small space, but is doing rather well. While we were there, there was even a surprise encounter with Anne Beck, who happened to wander in!

Heather's work is influenced by 19th Century Art, narrative, wordplay, and playfulness, in paint, prints, and textiles (in addition to being a poet!) The image directly below is part of a series that she is doing in response to the Bayeux Tapestry. She described it as a woman's story of survival compared to a male story of conquest.


The Wounded General also features work from local Marin County artists, and a few familiar East Bay folks - like the Don and Era Farnsworth piece centered on the wall below:


Other works:


After a lunch at Marin Sun Farms, Robert and I popped into Gallery Route One, a space I've driven by many a time but until now had never wandered in. In their Project Space, there was an exhibition called, Disappearing Act, Our Role in Species Extinction, with works by Marie-Luise Klotz and Xander Weaver-Scull. I was very excited to see Weaver-Scull's 30 foot long accordion book, printed with stencils:


Not only a pretty cool piece, a helluva way to display it.

Every time I visit Point Reyes, I feel like I could live there happily, if I only had a paying job that could keep me in plenty of cheese from Cowgirl Creamery. Right now, it's way, way too long of a commute for me.



Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Bookworks at the San Francisco Public Library


Some images of my work in the Pacific Center for Book Arts exhibition in the Skylight Gallery of the San Francisco Public Library. As much as I'm tired of exhibitions of artist books given names like "Bookworks," I'm honored to be in the company of many amazing artists.


The piece I entered was one of my most recently finished artist books, Kasha Katuwe. I'm slowly developing a body of work exploring the intersection of papermaking, book craft and architecture, embroidery, and landscape.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

2011 so far...


The image above is a preview of one of my two newest artist books, Fossil Fuels. It is a unique artist book made up of relief prints, intaglios, collographs, digital prints, and hand embroidery. Fossil Fuels, and another artist book, Coal Burning, will be debuted at the Third Biennial Codex International Book Fair, at the Central Booking booth. I will also have an assortment of some of my older books.

In related news, I am currently part of The Book, A Contemporary View, at the Delaware Center for Contemporary Art in Wilmington, DE, and will be part of an upcoming exhibition, Battle of the Sexes, at the Delaware Art Museum, also in Wilmington.

The Book Bombs collaboration continues, with a recent print bombing of San Francisco. We are also currently part of the exhibition Social Commentaries at the Catich Gallery at Saint Ambroise University in Davenport, IO. In February, we will be releasing our newest zine, The Ethics of Wheatpaste, for the first time as both hard copy and a free, downloadable pdf, as part of the Refugee Reading Room project of Amze Emmons. More on this to come. . . .

So if you are in the Bay Area for Codex, please stop by the Central Booking booth and say hello! And if you haven't yet - check out my new website!

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

White Mountain, New Artist Book


My newest artist book, White Mountain, was inspired by the White Mountain, outside of Rock Springs, Wyoming. It is also the first piece I've made in my new home in California. The book is embroidery on handmade flax-abaca paper, with a flax-abaca cover dyed with walnut dye. It is currently on display at the Sonoma Public Library as part of the exhibition Thread Loves Paper curated by Emily Marks.

I'm busy unpacking, but have much news! More to come...stay tuned.