Friday, July 26, 2019
Small Village by the Sea
I just hung this small, insignificant piece in my bedroom and it pleases me to look at it. The central panel was created during a workshop I participated in years ago. This year, I framed the image with fabric strips and added 3-D artifacts from my walks along the Atlantic Ocean not far from my home in Rhode Island. It's a small piece that speaks of the local to me, of the simple delights of engaging with the the immediate sights and objects of daily life in a specific place.
Saturday, July 20, 2019
Matching Set
I just finished a set of placemats for my son and daughter-in-law and their two daughters. I started these when their new kitchen was completed over a year ago. Yoon and I selected an anchor fabric together (floral batik at far right) and I complemented it with fabrics from my collection.
Each placemat has a unique design of piecing and of quilting. I imagine that each person will gravitate towards her or his favorite. Which one is my favorite? I'm not sure; possibly the one above?
Below is the full set of six divergent/convergent pieces. Which is your favorite?
Wednesday, July 3, 2019
Wild Dance at Night
The topic of a recent "challenge" at Quilting Arts magazine was "Choose Your Own Palette." I wanted to submit, but the topic was just not inspiring me. Then I happened upon the idea of sewing bright scraps between layers of netting. Of course! This is exactly my palette: wild, bright, odd, and unpredictable! Top photo is the finished piece, 9" x 9." Bottom photo is enlarged detail.
Articulating Fabricating: The Arts of Text on Textiles
I recently submitted the following proposal for a presentation at the 2020 SAQA national meeting. I learned today that it was not accepted. Oh, well. Onward!
Articulating Fabricating
The Arts of Text on Textile
“Articulating Fabricating” will
explore the nexus of visual and verbal strategies that artists deploy at the
intersections of textual arts and textile arts across a range of practices. The
very words text and textile derive from the same Latin root
meaning to weave, and the practices
have diverged and converged at different times over human history.
After a brief historical review,
focus will shift to analysis of categories of current textile arts that include
textual elements such as alphabetic shapes dissociated from meaning,
inspirational words and phrases, historical data or narratives, subversive
texts, and other forms.
Textile arts span genres of
decorative, functional, fine-art, sculptural, multi-dimensional, abstract,
figurative, conceptual forms, and more. Textile
artists have always been articulate in the construction, promotion, and display
of their work. They create titles, artist
statements, website text, descriptions, blogs, and essays. They teach others with step-by-step
instructive narratives. More and more textile
artists are now using words and alphabets as integral forms within the work
itself. By means of embroidery and other
threadwork, applique or fusing, free-motion calligraphy, collage, paint, and
other creative strategies, textile artists inscribe words on surfaces of their
art. Despite an increase in linguistic forms on textiles, there has been almost
no commentary on this array of strategies.
What does this mean? What are the
antecedents of this text/textile conjunction? What are the categories of such work? What is the impact on those who view the
work? How does this strategy compare
with similar strategies in other genres of visual arts? Is the commentary on other art forms applicable
to discussion of textile art? The goal
of this presentation is to begin such a discussion.
With a focus on contemporary
textile arts, “Articulating Fabricating” will draw upon critique and discussion
of art/literary forms such as visual concrete poetry, Dada, typography, and conceptual
art. Examples of practice and statements by artists such as Faith Ringgold,
Peter Sacks, Sara Impey, and others will be included.
Friday, June 14, 2019
Fabric Gifts
I will visit friends in Pennsylvania next week and I'm bringing a small stash of fabric for a young artist friend. On the left are two wrist bands made from shirt cuffs and child-sized waistbands. Pockets rescued from discarded clothing are fun to include in projects. And I've cut pieces of fabrics from Africa and Thailand to transfer from my collection to hers. Have fun!
Wednesday, June 5, 2019
Small Fun
Monday, May 27, 2019
Saturday, May 25, 2019
Songs for Orphaned Mothers
These are the poems that are inscribed on the artwork called "Songs for Orphaned Mother" that I exhibited at the Jamestown Art Center recently. See photo at 5/13/19 "ART Update" post.
Songs for Orphaned
Mothers
© Josephine Carubia 2019
Song I
Do orphans make the best mothers?
or grandmothers?
Are they grateful for the scraps
and just
one solid man?
Do they raise loyal children who
gather on Sunday
to eat
their
sustenance and
witness their
amazement?
Will they muscle nothing, no,
less than nothing,
into a noisy fragrant kitchen
full of helping hands?
Does an orphan mother mourn?
Does she know the whole cloth of
what she
doesn’t know?
Where were you born?
When were you alone?
You came so far.
Did you find it here,
what you lost?
Was it enough?
What is enough?
When is
enough?
How is
enough?
Who is
enough?
Where is
enough?
The map of you has few places
marked.
Places called together
and
places called
alone.
Does being mother cancel
being orphan?
How many stitches to hold it all
together,
but never quite
repair?
Is it good enough? Or could it
possibly be
beautiful?
I am making this song for you and
all orphan mothers.
Song II
You were broken when they died,
but the
needs of others
fused your
bones into
shapes and
purposes.
Silent and hurt,
you submit
your dreams
of home to
the required
husband’s
ambition.
Still a child, you
bore a
child with
no mother
of your own.
You fed the living children and
the dead.
You hoarded scraps
against the
day
of hardships beyond
the dry
charity
of a
suffering town.
The gabriel went over sea
and under
ground
to return
and leave,
return and
leave.
Return.
Still, not much was
something
familiar on
your
tongue.
Broken again, in the dark,
shaken,
soiled and sick,
holding
only wisps
of once
familiar penury
as
beautiful memory.
Meanwhile huddled children caring
for
children iterate
towards new
trajectories
invisible
on the shifting dim
horizon.
Song III
You don’t smile toward
the future—
Why would you?
If you knew I was
coming,
would you smile?
Between that girl with a
ribbon in
her hair
And me, mistress of comfort
and
machines,
A century of burdens
borne
across vastness,
punctuated
by rare moments
of ease, if
not joy.
The photographer’s moment,
a pause
before
the abyss.
You, however, persisted.
stepping
forward despite
the drag of
events,
towards
this intersection
of your
hopes and my thanks.
A century passes.
A faded photo surfaces.
Lines intersect.
I recognize you.
Your hand held still and straight
is my hand
still.
Your wrist outgrowing
its sleeve—
your stance
with weight
on one
foot—
Your face, the same and different.
All familiar; all family.
Girl!
One fancy dress over
one heart.
Beating.
I remember your words for
a full
belly in dialect.
I remember the heavy bucket of
soapy water
up and down
the
building hallways and stairs,
and I
remember the mop.
I remember you calling “Sal-lee”
up the dark
shaft window
by the
sink.
Do you recognize me?
This is my hand
at the end
of your arm.
Song IV
This corner tells the story of
that time you cried.
Here you climbed the hill
just to
find she was
already
gone.
This piece is for when
you waited,
and waited,
and waited.
But here you saw a star
streaking
across
the sky and
thought
it was a
sign of
future joy.
This rough patch speaks
volumes about
harsh voices always
leaning against you.
Song V
She is not who you think she is:
a fat old woman in a faded dress
stepping from stove to sink to
table
on swollen ankles.
Once she was an orphan girl,
an island girl, almost cinderella,
married at fifteen,
but not living the dream.
Not beautiful, but determined.
Sometimes looking out the window
to the others bustling on first
avenue.
Sometimes falling asleep in the
kitchen.
From discarded pieces and bits,
mingled with tears, blood, and
love,
she generated family:
hard-won wedges
into uncertain futures.
Wednesday, May 22, 2019
Wearable Art
I recently sent this photo of my "wearable art" string backpacks to my sister and invited her to choose one for her birthday gift. They are all fully lined and some have interior pockets. Each one also has a story . . . of who gave me a piece of unique fabric from Africa, of what I learned while making it, of the dear teacher who suggested fabric/color combinations, of where I was when I purchased some component.
The label on each says the following:
Persnickety PACK
Carry your snack
Larger than a pocket
(Smaller than a rocket)
Whimsy for confections
Inspiration for affections
Under, outer, or inbetween
Wearable art meant to be seen
Fabricated for delight
(c) jo.carubia 2015
Saturday, May 18, 2019
Work in Progress
This piece is called "Small Village by the Sea." It is 12" by 12". I showed it to V yesterday and he commented that it is "whimsical." I've heard that comment about some of my work before, but somehow it never sounds quite like a compliment. How should I take that word? Does "whimsical" mean the same as my own phrase: "Fabricated for delight."? Hmmm..... Something to ponder in my quest to investigate the conjunctions of text and textiles.
Friday, May 17, 2019
Ambitious Apron: Mother is a Closet Polyglot
Ambitious Apron:
Mother is a Closet Polyglot
We had no idea.
She hid behind the safe places.
She put on the disguise
and portrayed the staid
design of predictable
colors and patterns.
The choice of red, maybe,
Was evidence of bold.
Now we know.
Mother is a polyglot.
She speaks Cinderella and Spanish,
French and Esperanto.
She is fluent in Sleeping Beauty
And in Aramaic.
She can read musical notation
As well as slang,
And her calligraphy is meticulous
Through Mandarin, cuneiform, and hieroglyph.
Scherezade comes to her in THE original language.
She listens to the news in vernacular
and hears it with her heart.
She speaks indigenous
as well as ingenious.
She speaks in tongues.
Mother reads the news in
all the many codes of despair,
Yet she can tell you the etymology
of marmalade as she ladles it hot into jars.
Mother can sing sweet ditties
In baby babble,
And unravel the tangled
Threads of Babel.
Mother is a closet polyglot.
Labels:
apron,
feminist art,
polyglot,
text and textile
Thursday, May 16, 2019
Audacious Apron: Mother is of Two Minds
Audacious Apron:
Mother is of Two Minds
Mind #1:
These muddy browns and muted greens are perfectly good
colors!
Your father was wearing brown shoes on the day we met.
This green is practical.
Brown is embedded in the earth and that’s a good thing.
Brown and green form a reliable base; feet planted firmly in
soil.
Rooted and stationary in the natural and organic order of
the universe.
Mind #2:
My name should have been Sojourner
or Mecca or Athene or Poseidon or Mercury, that one with wings.
I could have been happy as one of those women who traveled
the world:
Nellie Bly, Gertrude Bell, Amelia Earhart, ……
Brown says “stick in the mud, stuck at home making the best
of it.”
I walk by the sea and collect starfish skeletons and sharp
teeth shed by sharks.
From Thailand, I gain blue horizons and wild proliferation.
Mind #1:
The thrifty housewife is the happy housewife.
Make do is the
motto of imagination.
Leftovers are better than money in the bank.
Mind #2:
I want to spend my life with great abandon!
Joy is a bottomless, heart-shaped bucket.
For once, I WILL shoot my own arrow and follow it through the
galaxy!
(c) 2018 "A is for Apron: Tales from the Domesticity Jungle," Artwork, Narratives,
and Poetry by Josephine Carubia, Ph.D.
Wednesday, May 15, 2019
Auspicious Apron: Mother Has a Wild Heart
A is for Apron #1
Auspicious Apron:
Mother Has a Wild Heart
One side of the apron is an updated
version of the traditional patchwork.
Patchwork is an art form that utilizes the diminutive detritus of
primary textile construction projects.
For example, a woman fabricates a new garment every year for each of her
daughters to wear for the first day of school. She saves all of the material
scraps in a basket. Eventually, she has
a stash of odd shaped pieces and random strips that call out to be arranged in
juxtapositions of color and texture. She
saves the scraps for the purposes of thrift, but she will mobilize them for the
purposes of delight. One day, her artistic sensibility kicks into overdrive and
she presses all the wrinkled pieces with a hot iron and begins to stitch them together
forming a collage of abstractions. The piece grows organically: a triangle
added here on this side, and a rectangle fit along this other side, with
perhaps an irresistible and original polygon as anchor at some sort of off-kilter
center.
The developing patchwork has no
extrinsic orientation of top or bottom, but it develops a personality as it
grows. It begins to express preferences:
“Here I need a bright red!” or “I fancy a geometric pattern next to this
floral,” and “Yes, this IS up and THIS is down.” The choices emerging from the basket of
scraps are multitudinous and subtle. A pair of scissors may be as significant
as an artist’s brush or knife in fine-tuning the thrust of a particular shade
or shape. Eventually, the amorphous construction reaches a level of maturity
and commitment. The patchwork becomes an apron.
But, in the practice of patchwork,
the woman herself has also been gathered and transformed. She recognizes herself in the process and
knows that she is more than a basket of gently used and useful qualities. She
forges her own coherent statement of desire from the disparate urges set aside
over the years. Still, she will keep the new fabric of herself hidden (but
ready for action) on the reverse of her domestic utility; the patchwork apron. Did her family guess at what was hidden
beneath her quiet competence? In retrospect, her daughters will not be
surprised to learn that their mother had a wild heart.
A is for Apron
A is for Apron: Auspicious, Audacious, Ambitious
Tales from the Domesticity Jungle, 2018
Artwork, Narratives,
and Poetry by Josephine Carubia, Ph.D.
This photo is of me (center) and two of my friends in the International Women's Book Group, Azza Hussein (left) and Duygu Sevasci (right). They kindly agreed to model my Audacious Aprons at one of our meetings.
This entry is an overview of the project. The introduction is below and subsequent posts will be focused on each of the aprons.
Introduction:
The apron is a garment of
domesticity. It signifies the seemingly insignificant labor of women in the
containment of the home kitchen. The
apron covers and conceals potential and strength while claiming to protect delicacy
and beauty.
The professional male (or female)
chef may wear an apron, but it is structurally a different apron. Moreover, it
is worn under the sign of the chef’s hat (toque), which dominates the
view. The chef’s apron is also
diminished in significance by the chef’s coat which broadens the shoulders and
visibly projects dominance.
The aprons in this “Abstract, Bold,
Conceptual” artwork were constructed with a paper pattern called “Church Ladies
Apron.”* The narrative implied in the pattern title is that “do-gooding” women—often
in the extraneous years after raising their children—are baking cookies and
cakes, and arranging flowers and ceramic elephants for the church penny social. They are not executive women, not tech-savvy
women, not explorers, not officials.
They are not even WOMEN; they are “ladies.” These reimagined/reconstructed aprons have two distinct sides,
presenting two aspects of a woman. One
side may represent her traditional roles and the expectations of her
family. The opposite side reveals her
true aspirations, inclinations, and genius.
These are the first three aprons of an endless series.
*“Church Ladies’ Apron Pattern,” ©Mary Mulari Designs
Tuesday, May 14, 2019
Evening News: AYUDAME
My statements with the piece:
Materials: Vintage and new fabric, including fabric from
Thailand and Africa and prayer flag fabric.
“Artist’s Statement”
J. Carubia creates unique abstract, bold,
conceptual forms by following threads of imagination combined with words,
colors, patterns, textures, and shapes. Juxtaposition of opposites is an
inherent trait of her work. Finished pieces take the form of fiber
fables, longevity banners, memory banners, text-tiles, crops, and wearable
arts. “Evening News” (2019) employs
vintage and new fabric from three continents deployed in complex forms to
reveal gruesome bulletins of devastation alongside the heartbreaking ironies of
a typical evening news broadcast. The word AYUDAME (Help Me!) screams through
the piece, but does anyone understand or even notice?
Monday, May 13, 2019
ART Update
Here is my artwork at two recent shows! "Songs for Orphaned Mothers" was accepted into a collage show at the Jamestown Art Center. I will post the text (poem) separately. My "Audacious Aprons" were part of the Feminist Art Show at URI recently. I will post the text that accompanies the art separately.
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