The Gallery at Penn College presented our work so beautifully and involved many different departments to experience it.
Monday, October 26, 2015
Wednesday, July 15, 2015
Wednesday, January 14, 2015
An Experiment
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| detail of Young Man |
I've been experimenting--making fabric of used tea bags to stitch. I love the idea of it's fragility yet strength & the marks the captured tea makes upon the paper container. Tea bag paper can generally withstand more abuse & water than normal paper. I like the way no tea bag is alike, as the subject matter I stitch--each of us is unique & special.
These are some pieces still in process, but I'm liking the ability to stitch on paper of a sort. I'm hoping to create a new body of work using this material & concept, as well as trying fine, transparent papers.
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| Young Man |
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| Susan |
Friday, December 19, 2014
Congratulations, Capital City Arts Initiative!
I'm so pleased to announce that the Capital City Arts Initiative was awarded a $50,000 grant from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts!
Isn't that grand news?
Tuesday, November 4, 2014
"Release"
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| Release |
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| Release |
Isn't it amazing that these 50 columns of broken comb like forms, create such a powerful image.
Thursday, October 30, 2014
My Friend & Fiber Partner in "A View Within"
Karen Rips, in World of Threads, opening tomorrow, 11/1.
A View Within is our collaboration, featuring body imaging works in different formats.
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
The Brain Initiative Moves to the University of Chicago Medical Facilities
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Monday, October 27, 2014
New Venue
Soon many of the pieces in "The Brain-Art Initiative" will be moving from its current location, the Beverly Arts Center, to The University of Chicago Medical Facility.
This is the first time I'll have work in a university medical facility and I'm very excited.
This is the piece that will be traveling onto the University. It's multi threads on fiberglass mesh, machine stitched. It received 3rd place.
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| Brain MRI |
Lia Cook also had a piece in the show, receiving 1st Place. You can see it below:
Thursday, October 16, 2014
Wednesday, October 1, 2014
A Great Pleasure
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| Change of Plans |
As part of the CCAI program featuring textiles in my show, Silk & Sinew & a show at their neighboring facility, the BRIC, Tom presented a through overview of textiles throughout the centuries to the present.
As a professor of textiles in the MFA textile program at the Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, Tom Lundberg offers students not only a wide variety of experiences with textiles & their processes, but a broader knowledge of textiles in art.
But better yet, Tom inspires his students to create thought provoking works of art, as Sara Rockinger's work:
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| In/Visible |
Pics From my "Silk & Sinew" Show
Friday, September 19, 2014
Getting it Done
Just finished hanging Silk & Sinew at the CCAI Courthouse Gallery. The show features work spanning almost a decade, showcasing my large silk florals to my embroidered body imaging.
Hope you can join me for the reception, Sept. 26th 5-7. The show runs through Jan. 22nd.
Here's details:
Where: Carson City Courthouse, 2nd floor
885 E. Musser St.
Carson City, NV
When: Sept. 22-Jan. 22, 2015
Reception: Sept. 26, 5-7
Sponsored & funded by CCAI
Sunday, September 14, 2014
My New Solo Show
Last year I was lucky enough to be introduced to Sharon Rosse and Glenn Clemmer. They visited my studio and offered me a show sponsored by the Capital City Arts Initiative. I'm so excited about this show! It will feature some of my silk florals and body imaging.
One of the grand things CCAI offers besides a great venue to show your work, is an essay written by an expert in your field. I was so fortunate to have Sara Rockinger write my essay. Watch for it to appear on my website.
Hope you can join me, Friday, Sept. 26th, 5-7 pm. If not, hope you can pop in or view some photos I'll post later.
One of the grand things CCAI offers besides a great venue to show your work, is an essay written by an expert in your field. I was so fortunate to have Sara Rockinger write my essay. Watch for it to appear on my website.
Hope you can join me, Friday, Sept. 26th, 5-7 pm. If not, hope you can pop in or view some photos I'll post later.
Tuesday, September 9, 2014
Brain-Art Initiative
The Beverly Art Center, Chicago, presented their new show, "The Brain-Art Initiative" Sept. 12. The reception was the 12th, from 7-9. The show will run through Oct. 26th.
This is my new piece, that I've shown earlier, that was awarded 3rd place:
This is my new piece, that I've shown earlier, that was awarded 3rd place:
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| MRI Brain |
Thursday, August 14, 2014
Opening at the San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles
Sunday, 8/10, ITAB currently being shown at the San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles a juried exhibition of work merging fiber media with or representing technologies. Some artists used digital jacquard weavings, digital printing & photography, laser engraving among other techniques.
Others, like myself, were low tech artists, representing technologies in their work. My work, MRA HEAD, is 12' x 5' stitched fiberglass mesh showing the blood flow of the brain through a magnetic resonance angiogram.
It's an amazing show and will stay open until Nov. 9th. I hope you can see all the amazing pieces.
I really love the shadows that are created from this piece--one of the reasons I wanted to attempt to stitch on mesh.
And thanks to Karen Rips, my friend & collaborator of A View Within, for taking this & other photos. I was so flustered when arriving, I had forgotten my phone in the car.
Others, like myself, were low tech artists, representing technologies in their work. My work, MRA HEAD, is 12' x 5' stitched fiberglass mesh showing the blood flow of the brain through a magnetic resonance angiogram.
It's an amazing show and will stay open until Nov. 9th. I hope you can see all the amazing pieces.
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| I'm standing in front of my piece, HEAD MRA |
And thanks to Karen Rips, my friend & collaborator of A View Within, for taking this & other photos. I was so flustered when arriving, I had forgotten my phone in the car.
Sunday, August 10, 2014
New Work
Sunday, July 13, 2014
The Brain Initiative and Good News
Update:
And good news! I just heard yesterday, 8/20 that this piece was accepted into the show! I'm so excited! Will tell you more soon.
And good news! I just heard yesterday, 8/20 that this piece was accepted into the show! I'm so excited! Will tell you more soon.
Somehow I found this call for entry:

So I've been working on two pieces I hope to enter. Both are 60" x 60", stitched with multiple threads on fiberglass mesh. Using 5-6 threads through a needle's eye is demanding, especially since the mesh is so fine. But I'm managing, slowly.
This is an MRI slice across the brain:
It's still pinned to my design wall, as you can see in this close up:
Friday, June 27, 2014
Getting Ready for ITAB
Getting ready to ship my piece, Head MRA, to the San Jose Quilt & Textile Museum, I had to resort to persuasion--hanging it from my 2nd story deck. It's so large, I don't have a space 12' high to hang it. So misting it & letting it hang allowed it to try to get its wrinkles out from being stored on a roller for months. My neighbors probably were wondering what I was doing.
I came across this information about the show from the SJQ&TM site:
This is so exciting! I love these artists' work & can't wait to see what they've produced for this show. And hopefully, some of the artists will be at the opening reception, August 10. An artist walkthrough will take place 1-2 and reception from 2-4.
The show runs from July 26th through November 9. Hope you get a chance to visit this show.
Thursday, June 19, 2014
ITAB at the San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles
I've been honored to have been chosen to be one of the participating artists in ITAB, a show based on technology, hosted by the San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles.
Here's the museum's newsletter about ITAB:
Head MRA
(fiberglass, polyester thread)
Here's the museum's newsletter about ITAB:
ITAB 3
The Museum’s signature exhibition—the third Inter- national TECHstyle Art Biennial (ITAB)—will fill the galleries from July 26 – November 9, 2014. This year 70 artists submitted 135 artworks. Jurors and distinguished artists Louise Lemieux Bérubé, Michael James, and Patricia Malarcher selected a fascinating mix of 39 pieces that related to the theme and description of the exhibit.
Jurors were asked to select works by artists merging fiber media with new information and communication technologies in their artistic processes, as a medium of artistic expression, or in the content of their work.
This year for the first time we contracted with an off-site website, Art Call to help facilitate the entry and jury process. The artists applied directly to the website and uploaded their information and images. The jurors were able to see images, details, and information about the artwork except for the artists names and personal information.
It was an easy application process and saved hours of administrative work for Museum staff. It was both a fitting trial run for a tech- themed exhibit and a successful way for applicants, jurors, and staff to process a lot of detailed information.
As anticipated, artists responded with digitally printed works, videos, computer-aided designs, and jacquard weaving. Some highlights of the exhibit include two gorgeous and dramatic jacquard weavings by Janice Lessman-Moss. These complicated and multi-layered designs could only be woven with the aid of a digital jacquard loom, as the patterns, more like abstract paintings, never repeat. The underlying fabric layer of hand– felted wool creates a dynamic and interesting border and textural contrast to the astounding patterns.
As anticipated, artists responded with digitally printed works, videos, computer-aided designs, and jacquard weaving. Some highlights of the exhibit include two gorgeous and dramatic jacquard weavings by Janice Lessman-Moss. These complicated and multi-layered designs could only be woven with the aid of a digital jacquard loom, as the patterns, more like abstract paintings, never repeat. The underlying fabric layer of hand– felted wool creates a dynamic and interesting border and textural contrast to the astounding patterns.
The large scale work by Paula Chung, "Head MRA," is a powerful portrait of what is seen through the lens of a medical procedure. Although the piece references an intimate and personal health experience it also shows the strength and vulnerability of what lies beneath our skin. In contrast a small scale work by Melissa English Campbell is a tour de force of how one perceives and creates an image. Composed of 2,640 layers of digitally printed cotton sateen, "Our Sons" reveals a remarkable portrait on all sides of the stacked cube.
Perhaps the most techie of all the works, "NEUROTiQ," is a brain animating fashion—a knitted,
3D printed, EEG brain sensor— that maps thoughts and exhibits brain states with color. Created by Kristin Neidlinger and a team of software, hardware, and 3D modeling engineers, and knit designers, this electrified “hat” reads brain states and translates this into colors from red indicating Delta or deep sleep, to orange for Theta state or meditation, to yellow green for Beta or consciousness.
ITAB once again provides a thought provoking and fascinating look at the creative merging of textile and technology.
Deborah Corsini Curator
You can see the whole newsletter here.
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
A Long Time Coming
I've never shared my other art pursuits before, but have gotten up the nerve to try today.
I've been attending art classes at our local community college in South Lake Tahoe (LTCC) for several years and have had such wonderful instruction & experiences. I feel so fortunate to have been able to learn from the best, whether it's drawing, painting, or 3D sculpture through carving & clay building.
One of my instructors, Phyllis Shafer, just had a retrospective at the Nevada Museum of Art in Reno, Nevada, entitled, I Just Went out for a Walk, showing landscapes of the Sierras, Great Basin and Arizona deserts. It was an amazing collection of her previous works with an excellent accompanying book. Not only is she an amazing painter, but a wonderful instructor.
So here are two of my paintings from her figure painting class. I was so fortunate, as well, to have the help of a fellow student that is a great framer. He made my paintings look so much better!
I've been attending art classes at our local community college in South Lake Tahoe (LTCC) for several years and have had such wonderful instruction & experiences. I feel so fortunate to have been able to learn from the best, whether it's drawing, painting, or 3D sculpture through carving & clay building.
One of my instructors, Phyllis Shafer, just had a retrospective at the Nevada Museum of Art in Reno, Nevada, entitled, I Just Went out for a Walk, showing landscapes of the Sierras, Great Basin and Arizona deserts. It was an amazing collection of her previous works with an excellent accompanying book. Not only is she an amazing painter, but a wonderful instructor.
So here are two of my paintings from her figure painting class. I was so fortunate, as well, to have the help of a fellow student that is a great framer. He made my paintings look so much better!
Chair with Nude
Mallory
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