Showing posts with label GTAG. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GTAG. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 3, 2022

Aug 3rd - Joanne Frankel Workshop

 Joanne's textile art specialized in combining drawing and painting with hand and free machine embroidery. A design drawn on paper was free machined onto a base fabric.


 
This was then painted.


Fabric was appliqued onto the painted design and completed by machine embroidery.


This piece then has to be hand embellished.

Textile workshop samples by pupils today in Joanne's class.

Joanne's work as shown below is truly inspirational. She is a wonderful teacher and was willing to share so many of her ideas and expertise with us. The workshop was a fabulous day and we learnt so much from her calm and attentive teaching method. A big thank you from all of us here at GTAG (Grassington Textile Arts Group).







Friday, June 10, 2022

June 1st - Whimsical Wall Hanging with Emily Notman

 

 Work by Emily Notman

GTAG members have just had another amazing workshop creating a textile wall hanging using contemporary mixed media techniques. With Emily Notman. The first part of the day the group experimented with paint, ink and dyes to ensure each piece was unique. 




They then built up a wall hanging which was to include textural embroidery and hand stitch.

Emily studied at Leeds College of Art and Design which resulted in a passion for photography, textiles, and fashion. She then went on to graduate from the University of Cumbria in Contemporary Applied Arts.

She said: "I create bestoke textiles mixing media and building up tactile delicate surfaces. I work and rework my pieces with paint, dyes, bleach, and ink, burning and layering until finishing with hand stitch. I find beauty in flaky walls, overgrown buildings and encrusted surfaces; this is something I recreate in my work. My pieces evolve and grow with time, incorporate history with layering and sometimes the tiniest mark or stitch changes a piece dramatically. It is this detail that excites me. "

What a fabulous introduction into contemporary textile work for our members. Emily was a font of inspiration. Below are the beginnings of the work started during the course.

  


Tuesday, May 10, 2022

May 4th - Contemporary Textile Workshop with Elnaz Yazdini

 


A fabulous workshop and a great introduction to a contemporary workshop in Mixed Media and Stitch at the May meeting of the GTAG  (Grassington Textile Arts Group).

Elnaz is a practicing mixed media textile artist, specialising in mixed media textiles and embroidery design. She says "My practice crosses boundaries between textiles for fashion, jewellery and sculpture".

Elnaz arrived at our venue with boxes of inspirational items to incorporate with stitch or full kits for those members who felt a little timid when embracing these new ideas.

She also provided plenty of samples for the group to use as inspiration in their pieces.

Elnaz stressed that the main focus of her work was to challenge the process of embroidery and stitch to develop new ways in which to connect, embellish and transform materials.

Below are a few samples of our groups work after a morning with Elnaz. She certainly provided the group with new ideas and inspiration to incorporate into our next stitch projects.









Samples of this month's travelling pages:

April sunsets in Rossendale

Easter Bonnet

April Nature Notes




 


Monday, September 6, 2021

Next Meetings: Wednesday, September 15th Stitch Day, Wednesday October 6th "Botanical theme lino print onto fabric" workshop with Catherine Carmyllie

GTAG  are looking forward to the Stitch Day on September 15th, when we bring our own items to work on. This is a way of sharing ideas and inspirations. There will also be the opportunity to make a Yorkshire button for those who wish to.

Our next workshop will be with Catherine Carmyllie on the first Wednesday of next month at 10:00am. Due to the popularity of this course, Catherine will be bringing another tutor and we can now accommodate 25 participants.

Can I remind members to bring their blue contributions to the Raffle Basket on the first Wednesday of October.



Hebden Bridge open studios is taking place Oct 1st - 3rd and well worth a visit.

Northlight Autumn programme is now available at Hebden Bridge

Catherine Carmyllie Botanical theme lino print examples sent by Catherine.




"The impact of my Churchill fellowship studying medieval tapestries on my current practice" by Dr Chrissie Freeth


We were treated to a superb talk by Chrissie Freeth at our first meeting back at the Rugby Club. Chrissie is a traditional handloom weaver and tapestry artist based in Saltaire in West Yorkshire. Chrissie explained that as an archaeologist she was interested in historical textiles and first learned to weave on a warp-weighted loom as an undergraduate. She gradually left academia to weave full time. Thanks to the Churchill Fellowship she was able to travel across Europe and to the US to study collections of medieval tapestries to better understand the techniques used by weavers at the zenith of tapestry production. 
The fellowship resulted in an archive of over 14,000 images of 170 tapestries which she uses as an invaluable resource in her present work. Chrissie's work explores the female experience and in particular those universal themes that connect us across cultures and centuries - exile, grief, fractured families, failed motherhood, rejection, and survival, defiance, rebirth. Her tapestries are inspired by real women, usually ancestors, or by folk tales. She plays with symbolism and religious iconography and whilst pre-renaissance tapestries are a foundational inspiration and academic interest, her work re-imagines them for contemporary relevance.





 Thank you Chrissie for an inspirational start to our new GTAG (Grassington Textile Arts Group) year and congratulations on having your work "Memento Mori" selected for the Royal Academy's Summer Exhibition, which is being held from the 22nd Sept - 2nd Jan.

Here is a completed 3D floral textile work from our afternoon mini workshop.