Masters: Art Quilts, Volume 2 Giveaway

Back in August, I reviewed the second volume of Martha Sielman’s (and Lark Books’) Masters: Art Quilts, Volume 2. You can read it here, if you don’t remember all the pithy things I said. I focused mostly on the male quilters included in the book in August. Honestly, it’s hard to pick a few to focus on…each time I look at it, I like different artists. Today, for instance, I’m sorta fascinated with Karin Franzen’s birds. I saw some of her pieces at the La Conner Quilt Museum back in April 2009, and they are always more wonderful in person than photographed, but certainly that doesn’t stop me from studying her work in this book.

I had given Martha Sielman my name as being interested in reviewing the book, hopefully receiving a copy from Lark. As you might read back in July, I was too tempted by sitting at the SAQA table at IQF Long Beach to stop myself from buying the book, which is a good thing for you, because now I have an extra copy. I’ve had it all month, and wish I’d been organized enough to do this giveaway early enough so that someone could have had an extra holiday gift, but I was too busy to even deal with my credit card bill, so here we are…a New Year’s gift to you. Comment below and I’ll draw on January 1st and mail it off to you. (yes, I promise to remember to do this).

I emailed Lark this time and asked for some pictures…you know, like 20 of them. They thanked me for my interest and sent four. Hey, that’s four more than I had last time! So enjoy…

This is Emily Richardson’s After the Sea Ship (silk, acrylic paint, hand sewn)…

You can see quite a bit of her work at the Gross McCleaf Gallery. At the moment, that page just shows a bunch of empty boxes, but if you click on them, some fairly amazing photos of her work pop up…you can definitely see the hand-stitching and the luminosity of the silks and sheers. I’ve seen her work in person, and it is drop-dead gorgeous. I actually think this piece looks better in the book than it does in this picture.

I didn’t mention Gayle Fraas and Duncan Slade the last time I reviewed the book. I wasn’t sure I liked their pieces at first, but in retrospect, the combination of far-away landscapes or maps with a close-up of water seems to reflect the ultra-realism of the images combined with hand-stitching. Their technique and ability to work together seems seamless. They live near the water as well and it shows in their work.

Alice Beasley is another artist I didn’t mention, although I am interested in how she makes faces. She doesn’t flinch from prints in her portraits, and her work recently got her a spot in Quilt National’s current show, so I’m not the only noticing her work is intriguing and makes you look twice. I wish she would blog more often, but she does admit her issues with technology…there are plenty of us who have started blogging only to realize we don’t really want to talk to the world. I’d like to see Beasley’s work up close too, although this book does a fairly good job of showing me a variety of her work.

Risë Nagin is a long-known name in textile art, but her piece Gate keeps bugging me to go back and look at it again.

This site on American Art was the closest I could find to a website for her. You should go watch this great video of her design process, though…

I love listening to and reading about how artists make their work. The piece above is not a small one, by the way…it’s 70″ square.

I did mention Izabella Baykova in my previous review, and since seeing her work for the first time in the Masters volume, Martha Sielman also published a short article on her work in Quilting Arts, the October/November issue (which is somewhere in my house). The piece below is Little Night Serenade #13 Allegro.

I would love to see her work up close…it’s hard to imagine from the pictures what her techniques are…and of course, as another quilt artist, I want to know how she MAKES it. Actually, the images themselves are worth it to just see from afar, but I suspect the detail in windows of this piece are lost in the photographs. The book says she uses sheer silks and paint and embroidery to create her work…it must take many hours to make a piece like this one. Does she start with a drawing? Is there a photograph she uses? Is it all in her head? These are the things I want explained.

Linda MacDonald’s work is also in the Masters’ book…I’ve been intrigued by her work for years, mostly because I came from a screenprinting background and hers were the first quilts that incorporated what looked like a printmaking background in their style. She actually uses a freezer-paper pattern and airbrushes her pieces, but they have the black lines that remind me of lino printmaking. Her focus is environmental issues, so the cut stump of lost forests shows up often.

Dorothy Caldwell’s Bowl is smaller than it feels to me, being only 18″ square.

You can see a lot of her work here. In the Masters book, Sielman describes Caldwell as drawing many lines in the wax before printing, all those hatchmarks done by hand, very labor-intensive work. It seems the more time we spend on our work, the more it holds others’ attention. I wasn’t thrilled by Caldwell’s work before, but have gone back to look at it again and again, so it has obviously done its job well. The textures of the markmaking and the simple line of the bowl, so simple it doesn’t even connect properly, draws me back…and that blue polka-dotted fabric hanging from the side…is it in the bowl or outside? I really do like this piece after staring at it over and over again.

Simply put, the book is a treat to go back and view again and again…even the more geometric works, which generally don’t float my boat, some of them are growing on me, whether it’s the movement of colors or the shapes caused by the patterns. Collections like these are important to our turning the quilt-as-craft into quilt-as-art.

Now I can go back to my quiet house (kids at dad’s!) and finish cleaning the litter trays…my gift to the cats. It’s an exciting Xmas Eve here in the Nida household…remember to comment with a way for me to get a hold of you if you would like a copy of the Masters Volume 2 book.

31 thoughts on “Masters: Art Quilts, Volume 2 Giveaway

  1. Kathy thank you for the wonderful reviews and the video. I will be taking a closer look at the artists you featured here. I hope that I will be the one to get your extra copy as I want to grab it out of your hand myself and take a closer look. Thank you for wetting my artistic appetite.

    Becky

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  2. I would be delighted to be included in the drawing for the book. I am amazed by the work of Izabella Baykova. I’ve only seen photos and would like to see it in person to understand how she achieves the appearance of light. And I have always admired Linda MacDonald’s work. Her meaning is clear without being spelled out

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  3. Kathy you are a terrific writer – great review insights. I’m glad to finally find you and will follow your work now. Thanks. And like Becky, I’d love to get that copy!

    Meanwhile, have a wonderful holiday.
    Mary

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  4. Great review. I too have kept examining art that I don’t particularly like and eventually fall in love. It’s not always love at first sight. Crossing my fingers that I am the lucky winner!

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  5. The information you shared was wonderful. I have this book on my to buy list for 2012 and would be delighted to be the winner so I can shift my purchasing dollars to yet another title on my list.

    I particularly enjoyed reading your review of the book, and in this post to see the video.

    Kristin

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  6. Isn’t it fun to be able to give away something wonderful? I would certainly love to take that copy right off your hands, and your review really makes me want to study up more on all of the artists. Thanks.

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  7. Lovely review, Kathy, and I enjoyed the video – also the front and center photo of Emily Richardson’s work. I missed a chance to take a class with her once at QSDS, and have kicked myself forever more, after that!

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  8. Kathy,
    Thank you for sharing. This book looks even more amazing than the first one, and your review really whets my appetite!

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  9. I have the first book, so the second would be a great addition to my “collection.” I had the good fortune to be able to see many of the works in person in Houston and was quite impressed.

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  10. Thank you, Kathy, for your review. I appreciate the extra information on the selected artists—more of a birds eye view of the artist and the process.

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  11. Kathy, thank you so much for sharing the video and for your detailed review of the book. I would like to find out more about the artists you mentioned. It would be great to win the book!

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  12. Pick me! Because I’ve only been a blogger for about one hour & haven’t clue what I’m doing! I’ve never made a quilt either but have wanted to for years so it is my new years resolution to make one so I’m hoping to blog it start to finish!

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  13. kathy, i seem not to recall the password that i entered because it will not let me ‘pass’ into your protected posts…….cstentz

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