0 Comments

Today I’ve been to visit the gallery where our exhibition will be, in Ledbury, Herefordshire. It’s a lovely little space in the half-timbered listed building, up a little staircase, three connected rooms with sloping ceilings. I wanted to have a look at the state of the walls, the floor, the hanging system and so on. This turned out to be quite tricky…

The gallery was full to bursting with stuff… so much stuff, if I hadn’t been there for a specific reason I would have just walked straight out… there were paintings, drawings, photos, craft items, materials, browser racks x 3, glass cabinets x 2, folding tables, about 8 plinths… too much. By comparison, our show will look quite sparse I think.

But this is no bad thing is it Bo?


0 Comments

Right then, better get on with it.

I wrote a big list of things I’m going to need, and things I want to make before the exhibition…a small thing, a medium sized thing that will probably be a bit tricky, then I should really finish the great big quilt that I started and that got put down with the wrist injury and hasn’t been picked up since… I should finish it, because much of the conversation about the latest body of work has been about scale. My other textile pieces are sort of hand sized. The quilt is body sized. Those measures are significant too I think. The small pieces have taken one day each(ish) to make. The quilt probably one year.

I’m going to pick it up and sort it out this evening. Once I get going on it and the obsessive/addictive thing kicks in, it’ll be done in no time!

I keep telling Bo it’s his turn to write here. I do try not to nag. Nagging is futile. He doesn’t believe in turns. He’ll do it if he wants to. At the moment he doesn’t want to. That’s fine… I think I said somewhere at the beginning of this that I talk lots of rubbish and Bo talks a little bit of sense. Interesting that the same ratio of rubbish:sense exists in writing as well as in the real world!

I think it is interesting reading back over the year… I think I had a clear idea about how I wanted this to be, including the blog. It hasn’t been like that, because of course, Bo is a different person. I let it go. That’s a bit of a first for me, I am on occasion, a bit of a control freak. I think I have learned to accept that this is how it is. That has been easier to accept, because I know that Bo is doing some really great exciting work. Some he shows me, some he keeps to himself for a while. There are still links in the work, and there are still some pieces where you can’t tell if it’s Bo’s or mine, or both at once, the joins don’t show. But it also follows two distinct and developed paths of research and interest. I now cannot wait to see it all together… to see the patterns and paths that link the work… and the new ground we’ve both found too.


0 Comments

Bo,

Someone has said that the combination of my online interactions and the physicality of my work has been the impetus for this investigation into pixel and stitch….

hadn’t occured to me….

what do you think?

e


0 Comments

We have a title:

ONE

A one year collaborative project between Bo Jones and Elena Thomas.

The artists exchange and overlap work, as images are deconstructed and reconstructed in an exploration of the relationship between one stitch and one pixel, asking how images are constructed from them, and how they gain meaning.

After a break from this blog, I have at last settled on what my work might be. I expect the work exhibited will be a selection of what has come before, but this is how I’m working now. I often have a mental list of rules, but don’t often write them down. I think it makes me sound a bit bonkers.

ONE

The rules:

I can only use what is already on my table, and in the one basket of scraps that any normal person would throw in the bin.

I can only use either discarded, unpicked threads, or those already in the one bowl, leftovers from other projects.

I can only use one type of stitch – running stitch.

I can only stitch things together to make one layer, or that contribute structurally.

I cannot add applique, or make decorative stitches.

I can only use text that has been previously stamped for other purposes.

I cannot trim frayed edges.

I cannot fray trimmed edges.

I can only make a piece in one day. At the end of the day, it is finished.

I can only use parts/patches/pieces/elements/scraps/fragments to make a whole.

The reason I make these rules is that I have decided the work should not be showing off. Its beginnings should be simple, humble, not ornate or ostentatious, just bits of stuff. The parts should not try too hard.

Meaning might then be construed from these ingredients and thoughts they subsequently prompt in me or the viewer.

The whole is perhaps becoming greater than the sum of its parts?

The ONE that Bo works with is different to mine. But we still seem to manage an overlap, the title still relevant to both of us, some work made by both of us.

Absolving myself of the responsibility for finding meaning has been difficult. More so for Bo I think. But deciding that not having a meaning, that the play and experiment is worth enough is fine. We have meandered around each other and the theme(s). We have disagreed and agreed, and changed our minds frequently. All of that is ok. Once you let yourself do it, of course it is fine. We are the artists, we only have to justify it to ourselves, not even to each other.

I am always saying that in my work, meaning turns up later, that the playful, slow making process, allows the thought to catch up. Having told myself that it might not this time, has been liberating. And actually, as the work gets spread out on the table, the floor, the walls… it all starts to become a coherent body of work. There are clear visual links between Bo’s work and mine, which is astonishing given the circumstances of the way in which we have worked on this.

I am starting to see little traces of my thoughts in the work… little links between one piece and the next… it is, surprisingly, starting to mean something… to me at least.

This blog has documented the development and stalling and re-energising of the work, alongside the development, stalling and re-energising of ourselves as artists free from the formal assessment of the MA course. That bit was unintentional. Bo said he was unable to blog about his changing state while it was happening. I get that. I don’t mind spewing it all out – you may have noticed.

What I think is interesting is that one year pathway. Not a trajectory, certainly not that. We’ve been feeling our way to here. I’m glad we had the idea to just book this space and try to fill it. It has kept us talking, to ourselves and each other. It has given focus and purpose to our play.

Sorry for all the nagging, Bo.


0 Comments

Sometimes I just need to sit.
Sometimes I just need to leave alone.
Sometimes I just need to wait.

Increasingly I associate this blog with the artist and my own personal blog with the teacher. As the boundaries between the two have become progressively more defined and obvious to me, new questions and dilemmas have presented themselves to my thinking and engagement with this project, and it has taken leaving things alone to resolve and move forwards once again.

Elena is on my case to write something……. PR towards the show……. My thoughts, my silence needs addressing……

I haven’t reread previous posts. I’m writing this as I think it to fulfil Elena’s request as I recognise that she is right.

I hit a wall. My thoughts changed daily. I wasn’t sure I wanted to continue. I haven’t wanted to blog…. To share my anxiety….. To burden you who read this with my self doubts that seem to be more prevalent since the Masters ceased……

OFSTED…….. Family…….. Exams……. Work………

Tired….. Pressure…..

Can teaching and making Art coexist?

So I rested and played on my iPads…… No thought, just experimenting with formulas. No intentions. No planning. No meaning…..

Waiting……

The conversation between the two of us, (Elena and myself) continued. I know I worried her….. Sorry…. I considered quitting not just the show, but the making of Art altogether. Over analysis, evaluation and giving meaning to, no longer seemed like a reasonable pursuit of my time. Did the great masters explain their work in depth to justify its existence? This was no longer fitting to my role as educator or artist. Perplexed….. What could I do?

Leave alone…..

Yet through the conversation; through the experimentation; through the leaving alone of the rationale, the work started making itself again and the results seem to fit back neatly into the theme we are pursuing in this collaboration.

Stimulated, I returned to where I left off…… not just here but from my Masters work to. The progression of me, my thinking and the work I want to produce, rather than feel I need to produce, brought me back to my partners illness and the virus…..

Virus….. Pixel….. Stitch…..

Multiplication causes what in each context?….. The sum of the whole?….. The bigger picture?…..

Now, working with viruses my attitude is changing. They are my pixels – but by mutating them to I am finding new beauty and understanding in them….. to a degree, a cure that aids me in my daily approach to the frustration of my partners disability….. I’m bugging the antigen….. The artist is returning and I am pleased with the results.


0 Comments