“CU: Copper and Textile Fabrications” Coming in May



Fran Solar and Sayward Johnson are weavers. But their primary medium is not cotton, wool, or silk—it’s metal. Both artists combine textile techniques to create unique woven canvasses and sculptures.

Currently living in Squamish British Columbia, Fran studied interior design at the University of Manitoba, and her interest in textiles and design soon found its expression in weaving. For many years, she used traditional techniques and fibres to produce clothing and textiles. In the nineties, she began experimenting with basketry, and through workshops at Basket Focus conferences delved into working with metals. Today, she combines metal with such textile techniques as loom weaving, basketry and quilting to produce unique woven sculptures and wall hangings. Copper, brass and stainless steel wires and sheets, along with any interesting bits and pieces of hardware and industrial surplus, are altered with heat and chemicals to produce various patinas and then “woven” into what Fran calls “vessels” and “wall art.”

Fran Solar’s work is held in numerous public and private collections, and she is represented by galleries in British Columbia and Alberta.

Sayward Johnson has been weaving for about fifteen years and discovered weaving with wire when she was studying at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design. She considers herself first and foremost a textile artist and uses wire to explore various techniques. She too uses patina processes to alter the colour and texture of the wire, and this is often her favourite part of the process. It can take weeks, and the outcome is often surprising, which can completely change her vision. Her 12-harness Leclerc loom takes up most of the space in her Ottawa studio, which is in an old bread factory converted into the art collective Enriched Bread Artists. After weaving a piece, she embellishes with embroidery or further chemical solutions. A former forestry worker, Sayward draws much of her inspiration from natural forms, lichens, stone and the Canadian boreal forest. For example, her Defense Mechanism series started as studies of tree bark.

You won’t want to miss the work of these outstanding textile artists. The exhibition opens on May 3 and runs until July 16. Come to the official opening event on May 7 from 2 to 4 p.m. where you’ll have a chance to meet them both and learn more about their work.

Don't let this one go..................



http://www.out-of-the-box.org/news.html


Do you have time to treat yourself? Check out the Fibre happenings between Toronto, Kingston and Ottawa.

I have listed the website above for you to follow.



Here are the highlights


The Kingston Fibre Artists' annual show and sale, "A Stitch in Time", takes place at the Tett Centre for Creativity and Learning, 370 King Street West, Saturday, April 2, 2016 through Saturday, April 30, 2016.



Inspiring Threads- are you interested in Embroidery? The Assoc of Canada is presenting Inspiring Threads in Toronto




Fibre Fling 5 Show and Sale! April 8 & 9th in Ottawa, On



Fibrefest 2016 – Our 21st Annual Festival of Fibre Arts

Lamb Race to End the 21st Annual Fibrefest September 10 and 11, 2016

Mark the weekend of September 10 and 11, 2016 on your calendars because you won’t want to miss the Mississippi Valley Textile Museum’s 21st annual Fibrefest. The two-day festival of textiles and fibre arts will end this year with a Lamb Race. At 4 pm on September 11th, hundreds of wooden lambs will be thrown over the main falls in downtown Almonte, and the owners of the first three lambs to reach the finish line will win fabulous prizes. Tickets for the race will be on sale at the Museum well ahead of the event.

At two locations — the Museum, and the Almonte Arena,—visitors will find demonstrations, vendors, and exhibits—a full two-day festival of fibre arts! Local guilds will demonstrate spinning, knitting, weaving, rug hooking, lacemaking, smocking and quilting. Vendors include spinners, weavers, and fibre artists from across the province, as well as quilt shops and alpaca farms.

That’s My Style, vintage clothing show and sale will have a large number of vintage clothing dealers will again give patrons the opportunity to enjoy and purchase a huge variety of vintage fashions in one location.

The Friends of the Mississippi Valley Textile Museum will again be providing tea room services, featuring homemade goodies, beverages and sandwiches all available at a reasonable price.

Admission to Fibrefest is $5.00 per day, which includes access to all sites.


For directions and other pertinent information check out the Mississippi Valley Textile Mill info at:

http://mvtm.ca/mtvm

Check out the Happenings in your neck of the woods







As usual the Textile Museum in Almonte is hosts to many Artists.

Check out the biographies of their yet to come Fibre Artists as well as their wares. The variety of skill, passion, and overall architecture of their crafts will appeal to you and possibly awaken your own inner creative self.

Enter the link into your browser to read all about it!


http://mvtm.ca/mtvm

2016 Triennale



This may be of interest to YOU !


La Triennale Internationale des Arts Textiles en Outaouais 2016 is a major international cultural event presenting the world of contemporary textile and fibre arts in the national capital region of Canada.

Follow La Route des Arts Textiles, as you discover the Outaouais region, and visit international calibre exhibitions, attend a film, master class or conference presentation. Participate in a hands-on collective project and attend a vernissage in the many participating exhibition centres throughout the region.

Please check out the gallery and workshops on the site.

http://triennale-outaouais.com/english-2016.html

“Woven Photography” at Textile Museum



If you think that architecture and quilting seem unrelated, think again. Once you experience the Mississippi Valley Textile Museum’s new exhibition, you will never look at a building the same way! “Surface Fabrications,” which opens on December 8, features the work of artists Diane Laundy and Robin Laws-Field.
Diane Laundy brings the eye of a photographer and the design sensibility of the quilter to the skyscraper, where she discovers poetry, playfulness and patterns of beauty and originality. “There is an inherent sense of order and structure in both quilting and architecture,” says Laundy, “that lends itself to the creation of pattern and rhythm. I approach architecture as a fabric to be cut and shaped by my viewfinder, and patterned and embroidered by the world around it.” Laundy presents her creations on archival paper and silk and suspends them from rods hung as quilts are hung.
Robin Laws-Field was searching for a new approach to her fibre art as she zoomed her camera lens in on the textured surfaces of sites she was visiting. She suddenly realized that she had discovered a new way to create abstraction in her work. The images in this exhibition come from sites around the globe and all focus on surfaces: peeling paint on a shutter in Turkey or footprints in the sands of India. She interprets these with a range of media from paint and dye to clay and yarn, always incorporating a threaded needle wending its way through the composition.
Come and be dazzled as these two talented artists show us a new way of looking at the world. “Surface Fabrications” runs from December 8 until February 13, 2016. The official opening event is on Saturday, December 12 from 2 to 4 pm. The Mississippi Valley Textile museum is located at 3 Rosamond St. in Almonte






The Friends of the Mississippi Valley Textile Museum will be holding a canteen at the show serving light lunches including soup, sandwiches, beverages and tasty desserts at the Christmas in the Valley Artisan Show. November 7 & 8th from 9am- 4pm at the Almonte Arena. All proceeds from the canteen sales will be going to the general operations of the Mississippi Valley Textile Museum. www.valleyartisanshow.blogspot.ca