Friday, August 13, 2010

On Vacation Mode!!!!

I am off on vacation with my husband till the end of August! I will be on beautiful Kos island in Greece! 

 

Greedings everyone!!!

KP

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

My Dream Canvas Blog Giveaway


There is a Giveaway of a pair of beautiful earrings at Anu's "My Dream Canvas" blog which I follow. This Giveaway is open to everyone! The winner will be  picked on Sunday Aug 15th.

The earrings are handmade by Joanna who runs a customized jewelry store on Etsy. You can visit it for some incredibly pretty jewelry.

To enter the Giveaway you should follow the instructions written in Anu's blog here

Good luck to everyone!

KP

Friday, August 6, 2010

Embroidery in Art - Patricia Dahlman


Some time ago I wrote a post about embroidery as a form of art through the artistic work of Olja Stipanovic. Patricia Dahlman is another artist I discovered in the Internet that uses embroidery to express her artistic temperament. She works on canvas, cutting out forms, then stuffing and sewing them together. These stuffed, sewn forms are either stitched using different colors of thread or painted with acrylic paint.
 
Her three-dimensional sewn forms are based on photographs from news magazines and off the Internet of people such as George Bush and events like the insurgency in Iraq.  The creation that follows, named "Freedom?", is a good example.


The subject matter of her work is taken from personal thoughts, life experiences and reactions to political events around the world.



My favorite creation is this one called "Family".


Short Bio:
Patricia  Dahlman was born in Cincinnati, Ohio and studied art at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio and Yale University Summer School of Music and Art in Norfolk, CT. Patricia has received a New Jersey Printmaking Fellowship at Rutgers Center for Innovative Print and Paper, two Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation Fellowships to attend Vermont Studio Center and Virginia Center for Creative Arts, a Yaddo Residency and a Puffin Foundation Grant for the War and Peace Print Project. Patricia has shown her work all over the United States and exhibited recently at George Adams Gallery in NYC, 621 Gallery in Tallahassee, FL and Jersey City Museum in Jersey City, NJ. Upcoming exhibitions include a solo show at "Art in the Windows" at the New York Public Library, Mid-Manhattan Library in NYC. Patricia lives and works in Lyndhurst, NJ with her husband the artist, Michael Dal Cerro.
 
You can see more of her work here.

So have you used or seen other people use embroidery in a similar or other contemporary  artistic way?

KP

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Greek Folklore - Lefkara laces or Lefkaritika


I found this interesting video talking about the "story" of lefkara laces. Lefkara lace inscribed in 2009 on UNESCO's Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.


The tradition of lace-making in the village of Lefkara in southeastern Cyprus dates back to at least the fourteenth century. Influenced by indigenous craft, the embroidery of Venetian courtiers who ruled the country beginning in 1489, and ancient Greek and Byzantine geometric patterns, Lefkara lace is made by hand in designs combining four basic elements: the hemstitch, cut work, satin stitch fillings and needlepoint edgings. 


This combined art and social practice is still the primary occupation of women in the village who create distinctive tablecloths, napkins and show pieces while sitting together and talking in the narrow streets or on covered patios. 


Unique mastery of the craft is passed to young girls through years of informal exposure and then formal instruction by their mother or grandmother in applying cotton thread to linen. When she has learned her art thoroughly, the lace-maker uses her imagination to design work that embodies both tradition and her own personality. Testament to the ability to appreciate multiple influences and incorporate them into one’s own culture, lace-making is at the centre of daily life for women of Lefkara and a proud symbol of their identity.

KP

Sources:
Ministry of Culture of Croatia.

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Dancing with the lace



Here are my latest lace creations. These handmade accessories are inspired by Pablo Picasso’s artwork on "dancers" done with a single stroke. They are made of a silver lace tape, close-stitched together with corresponding silver thread. They can be used as embellishments and applique's and be blind-stitched on any garment, like a pair of jeans, a blouse, a jacket, a scarf, or a hat and a purse, to give it a fresh look. They can also be framed and hanged on a wall, even glued on a card or lampshade!






I hope you liked my lace dancers! Any more ideas on how else they can be used are welcome!
 
KP


Monday, August 2, 2010

Greek Folklore - An Introduction to Greek Embroidery


Before I start presenting Greek traditional embroideries from different regions of Greece, I think that an introduction to Greek embroidery in general is necessary. 

Greek embroidery flourished between the middle of the 17th and the end of the 19th centuries. Embroideries were used to decorate the home, adorn traditional costumes, ecclesiastical garments and cloths. They could be identified according to their place of origin - Asia Minor, Constantinople, Cyprus, Thrace, mainland Greece, the Aegean or Ionian islands. Each region developed quite different styles and repertoires of designs using linen, cotton, and silk. Varying populations -- urban foreigners and rural natives, Catholic towns and Orthodox villages, invading navies and armies -- all contributed to a fusion of styles and motifs that led to one of the greatest displays of decorative folk art to be found anywhere in the world.

The styles range from aristocratic and patrician designs from Rhodes, the monochrome geometric work of Naxos, to the exuberant narrative style of Skyros and the Ottoman-influenced work of Epirus. Although styles and designs were transmitted either through commerce or marriage, particularly in the islands, strong regional patterns and techniques were preserved.
 
Depending on the materials used, Greek embroideries could be classified as (a) colored, worked in dyed threads, (b) white, using white silk or cotton threads, (c) lace, worked in cotton with needles, crochet or bobbins, and (d) gold-embroidered, produced with the use of metal threads, gold and silver wire and gilded wire.
 
The decorative motifs were arranged horizontally, vertically, diagonally or in a circle with patterns repeating or alternating. For example, bouquets or vases of flowers might alternate with cypress trees throughout an entire piece. Certain motifs were more popular such as the "tree of life" - a motif in Christian art referring to the Cross, signifying resurrection and eternal life, and also, fruitfulness and nature's bounty. Other common motifs were crosses, birds, flowers, double-headed eagles, churches, rosettes, anthemia - honeysuckle or palm leaves in radiating clusters, and geometric patterns.
 
The following embroideries are from the Greek Institute's permanent collection of embroideries, textiles and folk costumes.
 
 Table cover from Mytilene/Chios - a patchwork of motifs joined by Venetian-style lace
Silk and gold thread on cotton and linen - Wide variety of stitches, bobbin lace

Towel from Thrace - stylized men and women dancing
Silk thread, gold and silver wire on cotton - Counted thread and satin stitches

Tsevres from Thrace - "vase of life" with poppies and cypress trees
Silk thread, gold wire on cotton - Counted thread stitch


Can't wait to show you my handmade thracian tsevredes!

KP

Source:
Parts of the text and the photos are from the Greek Institute