Friday, June 25, 2010

Paste Up Collage Exhibition


My piece Moon Fog was juried into Paste-Up 2010. This is a juried exhibition of small format collages, and each year they have some fabulous collages on display. Paste-Up 2010
ALL Arts Gallery
Lowell, Massachusetts
June 26, 2010 - July 18, 2010

Does it Matter?


Does it Matter?
Does it Matter to you,
that the wind blows,
gently?
At night, when the owls come out,
do you hear their call?
The slow movement of heron wings
sound like a million butterflies.
Can you see the sparkle of the sun
on morning waters,
reflecting,
waking you
from the inside out.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Making her Mark


Making her Mark
posted from Fosters, article can be found here
Sunday, June 13, 2010 by Bea Lewis bwheel@metrocast.net
Wen Redmond's journey as an artist began when she started making her own clothes as a teenager. 

Redmond went on to graduate from Mansfield State College in Pennsylvania with a degree in home economics. After retiring from teaching to marry and raise a family of three, she concedes she got "antsy" as her children grew and started making "artistic clothing." From there she evolved into making art quilts and now describes herself as a fiber artist.

"I've always been doing stuff even back in high school. I made my own clothes and prom dresses and just kept going. I love textiles," she said.

The League of New Hampshire Craftsmen has since juried Redmond in both stitchery and surface design. She has mastered a number of quilting and silk screening techniques. Along the way she said she still uses some of them as she creates a variety of wall-hangings and other pieces saying, "Because I know the rules now I can break them." 

Today, she combines painting and digital media into one-of-a-kind art pieces.

To make her holographic scenes, Redmond drapes silk organza — a transparent fabric — over photos of rocks, tree, utility poles and even her own shadow, giving the images a dreamy feel.

The elaborate surface designs that characterize Redmond's work are not serendipitous, but a deliberate effort to devise unique mark-making techniques.

She often takes her inspiration from nature but puts a unique twist on her digital photography, explaining she enjoys manipulating her photographs using Adobe PhotoShop. A photo of a rocky coastline on Deer Isle, Maine has been enlarged 10 fold and the lichen-covered rocks are now bathed in yellow instead of blue-green.

Explaining that she keeps an art journal, Redmond said she cuts potential ideas out of magazines and when looking at a mixed pile spread out on the floor waiting to be incorporated, she photographed "the pile of trash," and used the image to create the foundation for one of her pieces.

Dedicated to the creative process as a way of being, Redmond is attracted to the tactile quality of fabric and finds it ideal for rending a variety of subjects, including the natural world. As a fiber artist she is constantly challenging herself to do something she hasn't done before. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't, but she says the fun is in the doing and the learning. 

She is quick to point out, however, that mastery of a technique is not immediate, and that within every perceived failure are the seeds of future success.

She was just recently selected to teach at the Surface Design Association in Minneapolis in 2011 and was also tapped to teach fabric painting at "ProChem," a company that produces surface design material for painting textile crafts.

"What I enjoy most is the unexpected, just jumping in and seeing what happens," she said. "Now I'm manipulating photos in PhotoShop. With my holographic pieces I layer photos with fabric and it creates a whole different effect. I enjoy the exploration."

She will be demonstrating a variety of fabric painting techniques at the League of New Hampshire Craftsmen Shop in Meredith on Saturday, June 19 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Her work can be found at the League of New Hampshire Craftsmen stores in Meredith, Concord, North Conway, Nashua and Hanover. More of her work can also be viewed at www.wenredmond.com.

Fiber artist Wen Redmond discusses some of the techniques she used to create this piece on display at her Rollingsford studio. She will be demonstrating a host of fabric painting techniques at the Meredith League of New Hampshire Craftsmen shop on Saturday, June 19 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Bea Lewis/Citizen Photo

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Colors on Cloth

I love to experiment with surface design, using all kinds of processes to see what they do and how things will work out. Heres a few of these...
painted cotton using diluted acrylics with a thermal fax silkscreen
simple sunprint on silk noil using buttons as a resist
painted masa paper highlighted with inked brayer
dyed antique kimono silk with 2 different thermal silkscreens
painted cotton with created foam stamps, and medium with small squares of gold stirred in

I started taking pictures of just the fabrics because I enjoyed how they looked. Just for fun. Nice.
Look for my fabric painting demo at the Meredith NH League of NH Crafts Sat - 6/19, 1100-200.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Solo at the 'Bean'

Come see my solo show at the Black Bean, a local cafe in Rollinsford NH, just North of Portsmouth NH. It's a delightful cafe with homemade foods that will sure titillate the palette.
It will be up until June 28th.



info-www.blackbeancafe.com
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