Sunday, February 07, 2010

Blues Chapel and Last Words, Columbia


(Above: Tapestry in Blue, 51" x 112", 2006. The unit is the focal point for Blues Chapel, honoring 24 early female blues singers. The 24 mixed media portraits are hung as a single unit. Click on image to enlarge.)

Blues Chapel and Last Words were installed with the volunteer help of my "Artist's Way" group friends including Dolly Patton (and her daughter Sims), Margaret Neville, Regan Regan, Kay Reardon, Mary Langston, and Kim Bendillo.

(Above: Last Words, an installation of cemetery related art quilts and mixed media pieces surrounding a grouping of sheer chiffon banners on which collected epitaphs were "written" in free motion embroidery. Click on image to enlarge.)

Without a doubt, the exhibition looks much better than I could have done alone. Kim Bendillo, a professional interior designer at a big architectural company (Garvin Design), "set the cemetery". Mary Langston assisted. I ease-dropped on their conversations about my work and was treated to unique insights....things I didn't realize about my own work! It was really exciting to hear my art being discussed with such seriousness and respect. The resulting display is stunning. The groupings make sense and are beautiful together while highlighting each piece.

(Above: Never Accurate But Never Dull (left) and Ready for Burial (right). Grave Rubbing Art Quilts. White artificial cemetery flowers at the base. Click on image to enlarge.)

Sharon Licata, my friend and fellow Gallery 80808/Vista Studios artist (stone carver) helped me set the lights through the large space. My mentor Stephen Chesley calmed my nerves, supported my plans, and suggested the white artificial flowers at the base of the wall on which Ready for Burial was hung (above). Kay, Margaret, and Regan sorted and placed them.

The reception was on Friday night, 6 - 8....even though the exhibition stayed open until midnight! My partner and caterer for the evening was The Blue Martini, a late night bar with live music every Thursday through Saturday. They are located off the common hallway to the gallery. Eboniramm (above) sang a free blues tribute at 7 PM. I had "ushers" in Blues Chapel who passed out fliers about the show with advertisements from my sponsors, Shives Funeral Home, Fletcher Monuments, and the Christian Counseling Center.

(Above: Shannon Purvis, owner of Body Rites...a local tattoo shop... and her boyfriend Porter Barron as ushers for Blues Chapel. Shannon is also part of my Decision Portrait Series. She posed for Tattoo Artist with the stitched words "Marked for Life". Below: Shannon during the reception...please note that i'm in the background, center....one black shoe and one white shoe on tights with the opposite shade! Click on either image to enlarge.)


I had to wear something "special" for the reception. I had purchased an interesting pair of tights while in Stockholm with Annica (over a year ago) but never wore them. The reception was the perfect occasion....one leg black and the other white. A pair of black patent leather, four inch heeled shoes was altered....one was painted white just hours before I put them on! It was a blast! I also carried a martini glass...filled with a BLUE LOUNGE LIZARD! I don't like martinis...but a margarita with blue liqueur and lime slices and a salty rim completed my outfit!

(Above: Later I had to replace the black-and-white high heels for my comfortable felt studio slippers. They are part cat, part mouse, and part jester! The black velvet dress was a "hand-me-up" from my younger sister Sonya....altered to fit me because I'm so short waisted. Click on image to enlarge. Photo by Kim Bendillo)

(Above: Blues Chapel, view of south side of the room. Included: Three of six faux-stained glass fiber pieces, genuine mahogany church pew, one "Angel in Mourning" piece, and a wall of "Elements on Blue" series with Taking Flight in the middle. The "Elements in Blue" series and Taking Flight are all free motion machine embroidery directly into hand stitching with heavy yarns on polyester with heat-transfer designs. Taking Flight sold on Saturday night! Click on image to enlarge.)

Below are dozens of photos (in no particular order....sorry!) I'll caption them and they can all be "clicked on" for enlargements. Ordinarily I'd pare this number down to just a few but my parents couldn't make it to the show due to severe snow storms between here and there.....so, I hope everyone enjoys them!


(Above: Two soldiers looking at Killed Instantly, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt. Photo by Kim Bendillo. Click on image to enlarge.)

The exhibit remains open through Tuesday, February 16, 2010 Monday - Wednesday from 11 AM until 6 PM. Next Thursday - Saturday I'm keeping "bar hours"....11 AM until Midnight! Should be fun...and I'm already getting lots of stitching done in my studio while manning the show!

(Above: Dr. Bob Jolly, putting a "red dot" (indicating that the piece is SOLD) on Stained Glass XVIII. Click on image to enlarge.)

There have even been some SALES....which is most unexpected! Being an installation artist, I approach art making as a serious attempt to create a special environment....an atmosphere that evokes a particular sensation of time and place. The exhibition was about SHARING uniquely sacred places....a chapel remembering early female Blues singers and a cemetery that asks viewers questions about how they'd like to be remembered themselves. All I hoped was that my work TOUCHED people. Sales, however, are always GREAT!


(Above: Cindi Boiter, Bob's wife, and I posing by Stained Glass XVIII. Cindi is more than a friend. She's a talented writer. She blogged about my show, promoted it on Facebook, came, and then bought the piece for her Victorian styled house....a perfect artwork that will fill the dual function of beauty while giving the illusion of a real, architectural, stained glass feature in her home! Click on image to enlarge.....THANK YOU BOB and CINDI! By the way....Cindi's blog post about this show and me is about the most impressive article I've ever read with regard to my work. I am truly honored. Click HERE to read her well crafted words.)

Now.....just the photos and captions! Let me know what you think!


(Above: Blues Chapel, View from the north looking across the focal wall to the southern wall. Click on image to enlarge.)


(Above: Stained Glass XVIII, XIX, and XX with one of the "Angels in Mourning" series. One corner of Blues Chapel. Click on image to enlarge.)


(Above: The other three faux-stained glass fiber pieces (XV, XVI, and XVII) with another "Angels in Mourning" work....and the opposite corner of Blues Chapel. Click on image to enlarge.)


(Above: Stained Glass XV, XVI, and XVII with church pew and Altar for Forgiveness. Click on image to enlarge.)


(Above: Blues Chapel with church pew. Artwork from left to right: Blues Madonna; Cats Leave Paw Prints on the Heart (Grave Rubbing Art Quilt); The Blues (abstract embellished fibers), Ma Rainey, Domestic; Elements in Blue: Blessing, and Altar for Forgiveness. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Tapestry in Blue, mixed media focal point for Blues Chapel honoring 24 early female blues singers. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Reverence, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt....attached to one of the black curtain panels...just outside my studio door. Also...the "margarita" styled flower arrangement sent by my Mom and Dad, my sister Sonya and Vipin and their little dog Lulu. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: View through epitaph banners to western wall in atrium, especially to Spirit in Stone, Angels in Mourning Series. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: View through epitaph banners to northern wall in atrium, especially to On Earth a Bud, Angels in Mourning Series and Lost at Sea, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt Series. Click on image to enlarge.

(Above: View to epitaph banners from large, side hallway including two "Angels in Mourning" series works and Artificial Flowers, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above and below: View down the large, side hallway past two 7 1/2' long grave rubbing paneled curtains to the atrium with the epitaph banners. Click on image to enlarge.)

Now....a little "side story". During the twelve weeks that I facilitated a recent "Artist's Way" group, we (the group) spoke about our current projects. Naturally, I talked about creating Blues Chapel and Last Words....about dumpster diving for artificial cemetery flowers....about grave rubbings and ways by which society remembers their deceased family members. Margaret Neville, one of the members, owns The Mad Platter....a paint-it-yourself ceramic studio carried on the conversation. Her business is very near a floral shop that produces funeral sprays. Margaret's "favorite" arrangement was one with a telephone and a "Jesus Called" banner. We found this hilarious. A few moments before the reception officially started, such an arrangement (but with a cell phone!) was delivered. It included a card from the entire group....THANK YOU SO MUCH! Honestly, I wanted this small hallway to become a faux-chapel niche and intended to make some sort of funeral spray for this location. Because I ended up in "over drive" creating six major pieces instead....this "vision" was simply going to go undone....until serendipitously the perfect spray arrived!

(Above: Our Lady of Found Art Objects Triptych; One Less to Love on Earth, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt; and JESUS CALLED funeral spray from my Artist's Way group. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Photo taken from where JESUS CALLED funeral spray stands....looking past Tomorrow in Heaven, Angels in Mourning Series; Ready for Burial, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt; to the main gallery entrance with Blues Chapel. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: The back side of the wall on which Ready for Burial hangs.....a place for Time Flies, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt besides two "Angels in Mourning" Series pieces. The pedestal provided a place for sponsors' literature. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: The Hour is Near, Angels in Mourning Series seen through two of the free motion stitched chiffon banners of epitaphs. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Blues Chapel, including Tapestry in Blue, focal point honoring 24 early female blues singers; Bessie's Quilt; Blues Bible (which sold on Saturday night); an "Angels in Mourning" series pieces as well as a small "Elements in Blues" embroidery. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Spirit in Stone, Angel in Mourning Series seen through free motion embroidered epitaphs on chiffon banners. Artificial cemetery flowers cover the edge of the room's flooring. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Southern wall in the atrium including a few of the free motion epitaphs on chiffon banners on the left and artificial cemetery flowers ringing the edge of the room. Above, from left to right: A Bud on Earth, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt; Sweetly Sleeping, After the Toils of Life, 'Til We Meet Again, Angels in Mourning Series; and Death the Divider, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Farewell, Beloved!, Angels in Mourning Series seen through a chiffon banner embroidered with epitaphs. From top to bottom on left: Sacred, Be Ye Also Ready, and Thy Blessed Will Be Done, Grave Rubbing Art Quilts. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Same wall as above except no chiffon banner....plus The Hour is Near, Angels in Mourning Series on right. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Blues Chapel during the reception. I'm on the far right talking to Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher, Fletcher Monuments, sponsors of the exhibition. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Another shot early during the reception. I'm in the center...notice the black and white, alternating shoes/tights. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Another photo early in the reception. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Ready for Burial, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt and view to the main gallery with Blues Chapel. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: The entrance to Blues Chapel and Last Words including Ready for Burial, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt and view past the main gallery entrance....looking to the atrium with Last Words. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: View of hallway between the main gallery entrance and the atrium....where My Epitaph Quilt, Eccles II, and Weep Not For Me (an others) hang. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: JESUS CALLED....funeral spray gift from my Artist's Way group! Click on image to enlarge!)

(Above: Guest book and brochures with flower arrangement from my sister Wanda in Munich! Click on image to enlarge. THANK YOU WANDA! THEY ARE BEAUTIFUL!)

(Above: Two 7 1/2' grave rubbing panels hanging with black curtains in large, side hallway off the atrium. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: View to Farewell, Beloved!, Angels in Mourning as seen through the epitaphs on chiffon. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: View through epitaphs on chiffon banners to western atrium wall. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: View through epitaphs on chiffon banners to eastern atrium wall. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: View of epitaphs on chiffon banners hanging from the skylights in the Gallery 80808/Vista Studios' atrium. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Another view of the western, atrium wall as seen through the chiffon banners. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Detail of free motion embroidered epitaphs on chiffon banners. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above and below: More photos of the free motion embroidered epitaphs on sheer chiffon banners hanging from the atrium skylights. Click on image to enlarge.)


(Above: View of the southern atrium wall through the chiffon banners. Click on image to enlarge.)


(Above....okay....here's another view. I just LOVE how this looks....it is ghostly, legible, and gently moves in the breeze from the heating/air unit. People were encouraged to walk through the field of fabric. Many were moved nearly to tears. That's when I knew my efforts were truly worth it! Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Another photo from the entrance. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Looking down the large, side hallway...past the 7 1/2' grave rubbing panels to the atrium with the epitaphs on chiffon banners. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Be Ye Also Ready and Thy Blessed Will Be Done, Grave Rubbing Art Quilts as seen through the epitaphs on chiffon banners. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: FINALLY....the last image.....the artificial flowers collected after many dumpster diving excursions to the cemetery. All petals were carefully dissected from their plastic stems and veins, washed, rinsed, and dried in our guest bathroom! Okay....my husband is saintly in his patience for my bizarre art ideas! The results, of course, were colorfully PERFECT! Click on image to enlarge.)

Photo are coming!


(Above: Entrance to Gallery 80808/Vista Studios for Blues Chapel and Last Words. Click on image to enlarge.)

Blues Chapel and Last Words enjoyed a fabulous opening reception complete with Eboniramm's live blues vocals last Friday night. Since my exhibition is partnered with a late night martini/music bar, I'm in the space until midnight Thursday - Saturday.


(Above: Main gallery space....location of Blues Chapel. Click on image to enlarge.)

Even today, Sunday, the show is open from noon until 6 PM.....so my ability to blog is very limited....but the images and video clips are GREAT! This post is just a "teaser" for the coming photos!


(By the way, there have even been a few sales! Many people were teary eyed while reading the free motion epitaphs hanging in the air on chiffon....and walked away clutching literature from the exhibition sponsors!) Everything went PERFECTLY!

Jeffrey Day's blog post on Blues Chapel and Last Words

Jeffrey Day covers Blues Chapel and Last Words on his blog, Carolina Culture!

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Don't even think about sleeping this weekend

Thursday, Feb. 4

Exhibitions take you from the church to the graveyard
Susan Lenz began working on her series “Blues Chapel” in 2006 and “Last Words” in 2008. She wasn’t thinking about it at the time, but it turns out they made good neighbors like a church and a graveyard.
“Blues Chapel,” an homage to women in the blues. and “Last Words,” fabric pieces based on gravestone rubbings, open today at Gallery 80808/Vista Studios.
“Blues Chapel” started as a part of a thematic show at the gallery, “The Blues on Lady Street,” to bemoan the never-ending streetscaping in front of the studios. Lenz admitted that she didn’t quite grasp the idea, but she did start learning about the blues, something she didn’t know much about. A strong feminist Lenz made 24 saint-like images of great women in the blues - Ma Rainey, Bessie Smith, Nina Simone, Billie Holiday and Alberta Hunter and others. Many of these women had hard lives – suffering at the hands of the music industry, men, drugs and alcohol. (She pointed out that she was saying this two days after singer Beyonce won six Grammy Awards.)
These individual portraits grew into something bigger and turned into an installation complete with altar and candles in her tiny studio. Not long after, the Sumter Gallery of Art asked her to show the works in a much bigger space.

“Oh, I’m going to have to build a church,” Lenz said she thought at the time.
So she did adding “stained glass” pieces, a bigger altar, more candles and flowers and two church pews.

The genesis for this work was as random as for “Blues Chapel.” While at a residency in Maine in 2008, she was reading a book about quilting and it suggested using rubbings from graves in quilted fabric.
“I started doing these rubbings, but I thought it the back of my mind, ‘I’ll never use these,’” she said.

She was wrong about that. “Last Words” is made up of 30 grave rubbing quilts, 25 photo transfers with stitching and sheer fabrics embroidered with epitaphs.

Since stopping by those family plots in Maine, Lenz has done rubbings from California to Columbia and many places in between as well as England. The rubbings are from graves dating from 1596 to last year.

“I found one that said ‘Never accurate, but never dull,’” she said. Another for an artist couple (not yet dead) read “Actor to Ashes, Dancer to Dust.”
“You get a wonderful sense of these people,” Lenz said.

The show has a serious side. She wants people to think about how they will be and want to be remembered (not to mentioned disposed of.)
“I hope this opens up a dialogue for that to happen,” she said.

To help with that planning, the “Last Words” has sponsors: Shive Funeral Home and Fletcher Monuments. Both will have literature at the show. (Flipping open a monument book, Lenz was pleasantly surprised that a headstone could be had for $300.)


The artist had some extra work she wasn’t planning. When “Chapel” was shown in Denton, Texas, starting in November, one of the “stained-glass” pieces was sold. She figured the installation would work fine without that one piece. Then two weeks ago a Greenwood bank purchased the other five. (“Blues Chapel” has been shown several places; “Last Words” piece have been in regional, national and international exhibitions.)

“I've been working like crazy trying to create six new pieces,” Lenz said last weekend. “Same size, same ten-blue hours a piece It has been insane.”
(She finished them with a couple of days to spare.)
An opening reception takes place Friday from 6 to 8.

In conjunction with the show and just down the hallway at the Blue Martini singer Eboniramm performs tunes by many of the singers spotlighted in “Blues Chapel” at 7 p.m. The performance is free. For the second one at 9 p.m. admission is $5.

The show remains on display through Feb. 16. Because it is tied in to Blue Martini, the gallery will be open unusual hours: 11 a.m. to midnight Thursday, Friday and Saturday; 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday Tuesday and Wednesday; noon to 6 Sunday.
The gallery, 808 Lady St., can be reached at 252-6134 and the Blue Martini at 256-2442.

The State Newspaper carries an article on Blues Chapel and Last Words!

Life & Style

Sunday, Feb. 07, 2010

Lenz' 'Blues Chapel' calls for reflection


Susan Lenz holds a special admiration for the sacrifices and hardships endured by some of the nation's most celebrated - and not so celebrated - female blues singers.

"They were true to their art. They took their hardships and they made music out of it," Lenz said.

But many died without the fanfare their artistic careers deserved, she said. "Many of these ladies deserve better."


It's with a passion for honoring those lives and encouraging others to reflect on their own that the Columbia fiber artist has opened "Blues Chapel" and "Last Words," at the Gallery 80808/Vista Studios.

The free exhibit, which opened Thursday, runs through Feb. 16.

"Blue Chapel," features 24 images of female blues artists that are positioned throughout a space that depicts a chapel and is filled with the sounds of blues music.

The accompanying "Last Words" is an abstract cemetery, featuring various gravestone rubbings that share the stories of the dead through the words and images carved in their gravestones.

The exhibit combines art quilts, mixed media photos, and fibers.

"Everything here is about creating memories," Lenz said.

Lenz first got the inspiration for "Blues Chapel" in 2005 while viewing an exhibit in the National Women in the Arts Museum in Washington, D.C., where staff members had created a room dedicated to blue singers.

"When I started this, I knew nothing about the blues," she said.

But while viewing the exhibit she was struck by the women's perseverance and their stories.

"Immediately, I got it. I got the sacrifices. I knew what the blues were about," she said. "When I was reading these bios, I could really identify with making art, even if people weren't paying attention."

So she wrote down the names, and has selected 24 of the 25 woman from that same list which includes Ma Rainey, Bessie Smith, Nina Simone, Billie Holiday, and Alberta Hunter.

Renz admits she settled on 24 singers rather than the original 25 because that number provided a better fit for her display. But she hopes viewers will be as moved by the women's stories as many have been by their music.

"Early female blues singers lived in a male-dominated society, in a segregated country and worked in an industry that took advantage of their lack of education and opportunity," Lenz said. "They struggled, made sacrifices, and sang of their woes. They helped change the world for today's young, black, female vocalists."

In the accompanying "Last Words," Lenz combines quilts of grave rubbing, photographic images of angels in mourning and a series of chiffon-stitched epitaphs to create a space about remembering.

She collected many of the stories found in the epitaphs while visiting various cemeteries around the United State and in England.

Her hope is that visitors to the display will reflect on their own lives, and she said what memories each person holds closest is up to them.

"I'm hoping they'll walk away with an ongoing dialogue in their mind about memory and remembrance," she said.

IF YOU GO

Blues Chapel and Last Words

WHERE: Gallery 80808/Vista Studios, 808 Lady St., Columbia.

WHEN: Continues through Feb. 16.

GALLERY HOURS: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday; 11 a.m. to midnight Thursday, Friday and Saturday; noon to 6 p.m. Sunday.

ADMISSION: Free

Tuesday, February 02, 2010

SPONSORS!


(Above and below: Stained Glass XX. 57" x 18". Framed: 64" x 24". Free motion embroidery and melting on polyester stretch velvets and acrylic felt. Click on images to enlarge.)



(Above and below: Stained Glass XIX. 57" x 18". Framed: 64" x 24". Free motion embroidery and melting on polyester stretch velvets and acrylic felt. Click on images to enlarge.)

Everything is coming together for the exhibition! The final two faux-stained glass fiber pieces are complete (and Steve is installing them into their frames even as I'm typing!) Yet, the best news is that the show now has SPONSORS!

Of course, I'm partnered with the Blue Martini, a late night bar located in the same building as Gallery 80808/Vista Studios. They're catering the reception and hosting Eboniramm, a local blues singer, for the evening. Now, however, I've got real sponsors....important businesses that are directly related to the concept of Last Words....in fact, they are totally important to the overall theme of the dual installations.

This show is about REMEMBRANCE and MEMORY. This will be obvious in the "cemetery" portion/Last Words.....but it is also central to Blues Chapel. Many of the 24 early female blues singers that are part of the focal point died poor, alone, forgotten, and under appreciated. Janice Joplin helped pay for Bessie Smith's gravestone....years later. Ma Rainey's obituary listed her occupation as "housekeeper". Blues Chapel pays tribute....remembers and honors the contributions of these amazing ladies. My sponsors know all about this! They specialize in the ways of remembering those who have gone before us!




Shives Funeral Home was the place I toured last summer. The experience touched me deeply that day but continues to direct many of my ideas. It was influential....and helped me make personal choices too. There advertisement sums up the questions my work suggests.....Do Your Loved Ones Know Your Wishes?

Fletcher Monuments is another local business. Though I had no earlier connection to them, I know of their work. Their brochure, which will be available during the exhibition, features a beautiful, ornately carved Gothic stone....which I've seen every time I visit the local cemetery (which is rather often!)

The Christian Counseling Center is another very important group in our community. Their grief counseling session is the most affordable way to handle the emotional impact that death can bring to those left behind. I know my work depicts the subject...and might possibly remind people of their personal anguish. I'm relieved that I'm able to provide a positive outlet to anyone who might be suffering.


I hope is that those seeing the exhibition, on-line or in person, will be touched by the work. As an installation artist, I try very hard to convey a message....to establish a sort of dialogue with the public....to suggest a concept that is personal....to make people THINK! Hopefully, the work will inspire people to consider the ways in which they want to remember others and the ways in which they want to be remembered in the future. The art is meant to ask questions like, "What words would I like on my grave marker?" and "When was the last time I visited my grandparents' plot?" and "What will I be remembered for? What will mark my life on Earth?"

It is one thing to pose the questions....it is another to provide a way to find an answer! The sponsors are just the key. Their literature will be present. If someone wonders about their future plans, there will be a way to put the plan into action! If someone, reading all my free-motioned epitaphs, decides that their parents' grave needs one.....they will be able to learn how this could be done....hassle free....no obligation....just the subtle possibility to put a thought into action!

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Four new Faux-Stained Glass Fiber pieces FINISHED!


(Above: Detail of Stained Glass XV. Click on image to enlarge.)

My sister Sonya told me I needed a "studio assistant" but, in truth, I already have one. My wonderful husband Steve has been assisting the impossible schedule that is allowing me to work over eight hours a day on my faux-stained glass fiber pieces while still managing our "paying jobs...framing". He's driven my commissioned piece to the Grovewood Gallery in Asheville, NC; restocked our antique booth at Terrace Oaks Antique Mall in Charleston, SC; delivered my successfully juried piece in the Florence (South Carolina) regional juried show; bought a bolt of WonderUnder (Bond-a-Web) from Hancock Fabrics; and ironed several 12' black curtain panels for the upcoming exhibition. He cooks and cleans too! If this isn't "studio assistant"....I don't know what one might do!



Thus, I've used my soldering iron on the first four of six faux-stained glass pieces....needed for the upcoming exhibition that opens this Thursday! (The original six were SOLD just two weeks before the show!) Yes, melting acrylic polyester felt and stretch velvets embedded with previously painted WonderUnder does smell....and the air likely isn't very healthy to breathe....so I wear my ventilation mask!


On Saturday morning I photographed the four and started on the final two pieces. Saturday night I mounted them onto their over-sized Edelweiss linen mat boards. Today Steve installed them into their frames....ready to go! Four down....Two to go! (These photos were taken in our back framing room....not my studio where other people/artists would be exposed to the odors!)


(Above: Stained Glass XV. Approximately 57" x 17". Polyester stretch velvets and previously painted WonderUnder and metallic foils on acrylic felt. Free motion embroidery using 100% black cotton thread. Melted. Click on image to enlarge.)


(Above: Stained Glass XV. Below: Detail. Click on images to enlarge.)



(Above: Stained Glass XVII. Below: Detail. Click on images to enlarge.)



(Above: Stained Glass XVIII. Below: Detail. Click on images to enlarge.)

Thursday, January 28, 2010

WORKING!


I'm splitting my time between working at Mouse House (my antiquarian and limited framing business with my husband Steve) and my studio....where I'm knee deep in polyester velvet, painted WonderUnder (Bond-a-Web) and enjoying hours of free motion stitching on at least four large faux-stained glass pieces!

My friend Kim Bendillo of Garvin Designs took these photos Monday night. By day Kim plans the interiors of major architecture projects. Next week, however, she is "setting my cemetery". We discussed the upcoming installation while I snipped shapes and ironed them into place.

As of last night, four panels (approximately 58" x 18") were constructed and two are completely stitched with 100% cotton thread awaiting my soldering iron....then melting, mounting, and framing. I'm quite sure four will definitely be done....and, if possible, two more!

Monday, January 25, 2010

Artificial Flowers, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt...and a "Good" Problem to Have!


(Above: Artificial Flowers, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt. Crayon on fabric rubbing, heat set; recycled artificial flowers from cemetery dumpsters; vintage linen table runner; recycled fabric and felt batting; beads and beaded trim; hand and machine embroidery. Click on image to enlarge.)


(Above: Artificial Flowers, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt Series. Detail. Click on image to enlarge. Words: On Earth a Bud, In Heaven a Flower.)

This is the last art quilt I planned to finish before my upcoming exhibition. The show is scheduled to be installed on Wednesday and Thursday...February 3rd and 4th. So, I'm ahead of schedule on this score. I'm really excited, especially since Kim Bendillo of Garvin Designs is "setting the cemetery". There will be over 30 Grave Rubbing Art Quilts on display as well as 25 piece in my Angels in Mourning Series....plus the sheer chiffon banners with free-motion embroidered epitaphs hanging under the skylights at Gallery 80808/Vista Studios.


(Above: Detail, Artificial Flowers. Click on image to enlarge.)

All the flowers came from my many dumpster diving trips to local cemeteries. After retrieving the blossoms from the trash, I dissected each one....discarding the plastic and wire....leaving only the fabric. I washed them, lay them flat to dry, and separated the tiniest flowers into separate plastic bags. I knew I wanted to stitch these little flowers on something. I didn't know at the time that I'd create this quilt. In fact, I already have an art quilt with these words on it. It is called On Earth a Bud. Thus, I'm calling this one Artificial Flowers. When I made the earlier piece with this epitaph, I did attach a few small, white blossoms....but I didn't think of really going over the top with them....until more recently! It was lots of fun to stitch and bead. Also, the background is mostly machine stitched. I liked this variation too.


(Above: Twelve Grave Rubbing Art Quilts....as designed and pinned....on the floor....last September. Click on image above.

Last September I designed and pinned twelve Grave Rubbing Art Quilts. These represented more work than I possibly thought I could finish....but I got them done! In fact, the newest pieces in the series, Ready for Burial and Artificial Flowers, weren't even planned at the time. I wouldn't have believed that I could stitch so many so quickly.

It is a good thing I work fast!


(Above: Artificial Flowers, reverse. Click on image to enlarge. Created from a badly stained, plain white old tablecloth and vintage linen calendars. The calendars were from my mother and sister who cleaned out several boxes and a storage unit last spring.)

(Above and further below: My studio as I left it yesterday. Please note Artificial Flowers laying on the floor in the back!)


(Above: The six faux-stained glass fiber pieces created for Blues Chapel last June....now sold!)

I need to work fast....faster than ever before. Last June I created six faux-stained glass fiber pieces. Above is a photo of them...finished, framed, ready for exhibition. They were part of Blues Chapel at the Greater Denton Arts Council's Gough Gallery from November through the first week in January. They were intended to be shown at Gallery 80808/Vista Studios when I stage Blues Chapel again. When one sold, I still had five....until late last week. Countybank in Greenwood, South Carolina just bought the other five. Now....with less than two weeks before the opening and only nine days before installation, I find myself with a "good" problem....working faster than I've ever worked before. The studio is an absolute disaster area. Yards of polyester velvet with WonderUnder (Bond-a-Web) ironed to the back are everywhere. I'm almost out of painted WonderUnder too. These pieces are approximately 58" x 18". After non-stop work this weekend, I've got three ready to stitch....then solder, melt and frame. Gotta run now....no more time to blog!

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Commission from Grovewood Galleries


(Above: In Box LX. Commissioned by the Grovewood Gallery for their client. Click on image to enlarge. Approximately 12" x 32"...and will frame up to about 20" x 40". I'm just waiting on the framing selection.)


(Above: Detail of In Box LX with signature box. Click on image to enlarge.)

Although I've been busy getting ready for Blues Chapel and Last Words, my solo exhibition at Gallery 80808/Vista Studios (February 5 - 16), I spent most of the past weekend working on a commission from the Grovewood Gallery in Asheville. The client wanted the piece to be a horizontal and avoid hot pinks and purple and pastels. This is the result.


(Above: Detail of In Box LX with date. Click on image to enlarge.)

Most of my In Box pieces can hang as either a horizontal or a vertical. I've stitched my initials or name and date in the corners in ways that allow for either orientation. Knowing, however, that this would be a horizontal. I signed my name in the lower left box and dated it in the lower right with all the letters lining up to the "bottom".


(Above: Detail of In Box LX. Click on image to enlarge.)

This series was originally inspired by the architecture of Freidensreich Hundretwasser, the Austrian artist who designed fanciful, eco-friendly building with brightly colored mosaics and wall treatments. I'm currently reading a great biography....more inspiration!

Getting ready for the exhibition and NEW WORK!


(Above: Bread of Idleness, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt Series. 39 1/2" x 20". Crayon on fabric rubbing, heat set; vintage linens; hand and free motion embroidery. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Above: Bread of Idleness, reverse. Rusted vintage damask, vintage doilies, and a piece of material from my mother recycled into a rod sleeve. Click on image to reverse...and especially to see the word "BREAD" crocheted in the doily.)

There is excitement in the air at Gallery 80808/Vista Studios. The new year started off with Jeff Donovan's mid-career retrospective and this Friday opens the 10th Winter Exhibition of new work by Stephen Chesley, Mike Williams, Edward Wimberly, and David Yaghjian. Jeff, Stephen, and David all have studios at Gallery 80808/Vista Studios. All these artists are among my friends. (I consider Stephen Chesley my artistic mentor.) It is exhilarating to be around while artwork is being installed....especially when the next show is Blues Chapel and Last Words!

(Above: Detail of Bread of Idleness. Words: She looked well to the ways of her household and ate not the bread of idleness. This rubbing is from the Warstone Lane cemetery in Birmingham, UK. Almost all the graves are very, very old and there haven't been available plots for years. The language and word choices are very interesting especially during the Victorian era. This is such an epitaph. Click on image to enlarge.)

The energy has fueled my preparations! This week I've finished the "next to the last" grave rubbing art quilt, devised hanging rods for all 30+ art quilts, made identification labels, distributed the exhibition cards to various locations all over town, taken photos and blogged about my partner Blue Martini, and sent more press releases. I also updated the "church bulletin".


(Above: Church Bulletins for Blues Chapel. Click on image to enlarge.)

Every time I've mounted Blues Chapel, I've had a "church bulletin"....complete with readings, hymns, and a homily. Of course this "sermon" in print consists of several pages, a thumbnail of each Blues singer featured along with a brief biography. The last page includes a benediction...well....here's the last page:

Benediction: (Recorded by Nina Simone)

And I wish I knew how
It would feel to be free
I wish that I could break
All the chains holding me
I wish I could say
All the things that I’d like to say
Say ‘em loud Say ‘e clear
For the whole world to hear
I wish I could share
All the love that’s in my heart
Remove every doubt
It keeps us apart
And I wish you could know
What it means to be me
Then you’d see and agree...Every many should be free…

Postlude: Yonder Come The Blues by Ma Rainey, 1926
“I worry all day, I worry all night. Every time my man comes home, he wants to fuss and fight. When I pick up the paper to read about the news, just as I’m satisfied, yonder comes the blues…”

AMEN

The flowers were given this month with sincere appreciation, thanks and acknowledgements to Mr. John Whitehead, Columbia Music Festival Association; Deb Dyer and The Staff of the Greater Denton Arts Council; Karen Watson, Sumter Gallery of Art; Jessica Coppin; Gita Larson; Chuck Herin, Pegheds, Inc.; Dorothy Warren, Tourism Coordinator at Region 2 Discovery Center in Edgefield; Allen Coleman, Executive Director at the Pickens County Museum of Art and History; Kim Bendillo, Garvin Designs; Mary Langston; members of Susan’s Artist’s Way group; The Blue Martini; Shannon Purvis; Porter Barron; the cyber community of fiber artists reading http://artbysusanlenz.blogspot.com; Dr. and Mrs. Henry and Linda Lenz; Steve, Mathias, and Alex Dingman; and especially the musical inspiration of these early, female Blues professionals.

I'm excited that Kim Bendillo has agreed to "design" my cemetery. She's very, very talented and a professional interior designer....the kind that earns her living at a full service architecture firm making selections for major building projects like dormitories, churches, office buildings, and the like. Like Steve and me, she's a graduate of The Ohio State University. I know the cemetery is going to be FABULOUS!

Kim is also one of the people who participated in the Artist's Way group I recently facilitated. The group has continued to meet monthly....checking in on one another's artistic adventures. Last time we met was at Kay's house....and it was a blast. Kay is QUITE a cook and a very generous hostess. The group is assisting as volunteers to install Blues Chapel and Last Words. Lucky me....a professional designer and an entire crew of helpers! There is definitely an air of excitement and fun!

Great photos from Blue Martini!


(Above: The Blue Martini produced this poster advertising our event! Click on image to enlarge.)



The excitement is growing! The Blue Martini and I have a blog for our joint venture. It is HERE!

The partnership between music, art, fine beverages and good friends is going to be terrific! I can hardly wait to install. Yesterday I finished all the rods for the art quilts and distributed exhibition cards to various locations throughout Columbia. I've also enlisted Kim Bendillo, of Garvin Designs, to make the hanging selections for "Last Words" (cemetery portion of the dual art installation. I am SO LUCKY to have such talented friend....a working professional who ordinarily selects the colors, designs, materials, and interior schemes for large projects...like dormitories, churches, new office buildings, etc. Kim was in my Artist's Way group. Other members are helping with the installation too!

Friday, January 15, 2010

Ready for Burial, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt


(Above: Ready for Burial, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt. 69" x 42". Crayon on fabric grave rubbings, heat set; vintage dress and bed covering; hand and free motion embroidery. Click on any image to enlarge.)

Most of my Grave Rubbing Art Quilts are designed in my studio while playing with the fabrics and vintage linens.....but not this one! I saw the vintage black lace dress hanging on the upstairs wall at Terrace Oaks Antique Mall in Charleston and simply knew it would be the focal point for this piece. My mind's eye could almost see the grave rubbing words floating around it on a vintage bed covering. I could hardly wait to start stitching even while I waited in line to pay a mere $18 for the garment.

As luck would have it, I already owned the bed covering. It was old, tattered, and had holes; but, it was beautiful. I cut out a shape around the dress....irregular...to dodge the worst of the damage. I pinned the bed covering and dress onto a large piece of recycled black felt.

It was fun rummaging through my grave rubbings for the words: Coffin, Past Away, Nearer My God to Thee, Affectionate, Died, Dearest, Treasured, Early Grave, Beloved Memory, Called Home, etc. These rubbing were made in cemeteries from California to Maine to places in faraway England. I pinned them in place around the dress.

Over the Christmas holidays I stitched the words into place....as if "patches". I had removed the fringe from the bed covering when I originally cut it. There was enough that wasn't damaged to go around the entire piece...but I didn't just stitch in in place. The fringe on the top hangs downward; the fringe on the other three sides hangs outward, like it originally did.

Next came the free motion embroidered outline around all the letters. I'm totally in love with King Tut's Superior Thread 992. It's a variegated brown that is simply perfect. I was worried that the texture of the bed covering would make the free motion stitching difficult, but it didn't!

The presence of the dress is the first time that one of my Grave Rubbing Quilts suggests a human body. Thus, I decided on the name Ready For Burial. It is also the first time that the actual rubbings aren't the focal point of the quilt. I'm very excited about pushing this series into this new direction. I feel like this series is developing on its own....I'm just along for the ride and to do the stitching. It is an exhilarating experience.

I hadn't really thought about the reverse which is a good thing. A friend donated three beautiful, old tapestries to my stash. One seemed perfect....very Victorian in appearance, much like the dress. It wasn't long enough but I cut it and created a most unique back. Of course, the fringe added a new "problem". The back isn't totally flat now.

I built a rod that includes a half inch projection on which the hanging device was screwed. As a result, the piece looks great on the wall. It hangs about a half inch away from the wall, not showing a bulge where the reverse fringe is.

(The reverse....There's no way for me to photograph it hanging on the wall. Here it is lying on the floor at Gallery 80808/Vista Studios. Click on this or any other image to enlarge.)
I'm really thrilled about how this work has turned out!

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Eccles II, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt


Eccles II, Grave Rubbing Art Quilt. 24 3/4" x 34 3/4". Crayon on fabric, heat set. Hand and free motion machine embroidery. Words include: Here Reƒteth the Body. Buri'd Oct. 24 1794 November 11 th 1798 Aged 59 Years James Glover reƒurrectionis. Click on image to enlarge.)

(Detail of Eccles II. Click on image to enlarge.)

Most of my Grave Rubbing Art Quilts are collages of various rubbings. This, however, is a whole quilt but it is still a collage of sorts. The actual tombstone was quite large, several feet long and flat on the ground. I made the rubbing of the top with most of these words and then of the bottom...eliminating the entire middle. Generally, I don't include names but "James Glover" was actually at the very bottom, outside the surrounding design elements. It seemed unique and "right" in that place. I selected the word "reƒurrectionis" from the middle section and added it to balance the name. I love the old words, like "Reƒteth" and the apostrophe in "buri'd" instead of "buried".

(Detail of Eccles II. Click on image to enlarge.)

I thought about calling this piece "James Glover" but in conversation, mostly with my husband, I continued to call it "Eccles Two". Why? Because I already created "Eccles"....henceforth Eccles I. I shared the earlier piece HERE. Like it, Eccles II has a unique reverse. With the exceptions of making the rubbing, outlining the words in free motion, creating the back, and pinning.....this piece was entirely stitched in the car to Pennsylvania and back...and the edge was stitched in the Penske rental truck going back to Texas. I love riding....and stitching! It is the only way to travel!

This back was created from an old tablecloth my sister Sonya gave me over the New Year's holiday. To it I added a lace collar from my friends Ed and Bert. (Bert and I are often found bidding on table lots at Bill Mishoe's weekly auctions....and this is probably where the lace came. I added several other pieces of lace I'd purchased at Bill's auction!) Click on the reverse to enlarge and see my name free motion stitched in the middle.

Blues Chapel Videos!

I just posted two short video clips of Blues Chapel....straight out of the camera....on my Video Blog. The first one is HERE (15 seconds!) and the second one is HERE (only 10 seconds!). These were taken just moments before we packed up the show to return home at the Greater Denton Arts Council's Gough Gallery. The show was there from November 22, 2009 until January 6, 2010. Next, Blues Chapel will be at Gallery 80808/Vista Studios, 808 Lady Street in downtown Columbia, South Carolina from February 4 - 16, 2010! I'm "knee deep" in work and very excited!