Serendipity connections : Vietnamese reverse appliqué and Louise Bourgeois

Vietnamese reverse appliqué

The present unexpected continuation of that rare climatic creature – an English heatwave – makes it just too too unpleasant to lug boxes about or to worry about working our way through the heaps of things for the time being out of sight in the garage. Unpacking has stalled. So, hooray for Wimbledon fortnight, the perfect excuse for two weeks of almost complete indolence and indulgence. To justify a long afternoon sofa bound, cool drink to one side, knitting and notebook to the other, during the morning I distract myself  with small, easily ticked off but somewhat unimportant tasks, like sorting the pillowcases, tidying the tool box or attempting to label random unattached electricity cables (not to mention signing on with doctors and dentist). Small successes achieved on this front, I give the kitchen surfaces a quick wipe over, plump the sofa cushions, generally whizz away any untidiness visible from my chosen seat, then on with  the television and relax. Luxury! The vicar joins me from time to time but his chosen place of indolence – er, I mean research – is as usual at the table in the garden under a large umbrella,  Ipad to the fore and pipe on the go (or from my observation not quite on the go as it seems in constant need of relighting!). The cat is somewhere hidden in the bushes but undoubtedly with a direct view of him who feeds her as she rarely lets him go far out of her sight. All quite perfect.

Vietnamese reverse appliqué: detail

We have still to find the box of kitchen implements or the clothes from the hook on the back of our previous bedroom door but happily some lovely unexpected things have appeared, including a few more Vietnamese purses (whose hand sewing is far too good for harbouring heavy coins) and one of my grandson’s picture books, which somewhat surprisingly is devoted to the artist Louise Bourgeois. Such different treasures but suddenly it came to me not so different. The Vietnamese reverse appliqué first blogged about here  falls in with one of my own favourite design themes – maze-like lines where, so to speak, you don’t take your pen off the page until there’s no where else for it to go (like this and this). All who visited the Tate Modern Gallery when it opened in 1987 will remember Louise Bourgeois’  giant spiders in the huge open spaces of the former turbine hall and they were giant works in more sense than one for they quite overshadowed her smaller, quieter textile works where you can see her love of these sort of graphics too, curls and spirals  to the point of obsession – whether roughly sewn, embroidered, patchworked, printed or painted. Strong colours, especially red, predominate.

Vietnamese reverse appliqué (sadly stained during recent house moving)

For me discovering these little works came much later and though I was sometimes a bit uncomfortable with her often rough sewing, I found the exuberance and use of colour exhilarating. But it was her fabric scrap books that really won me over – the Ode à l’oubli  (ode to forgetting) made in her nineties from fabrics, large and small from her previous living. Couldn’t we, shouldn’t we all be doing this? Each of my girls would love to have a tangible record or reminder of the fabrics that accompanied them in their lives. We may not all be Louise Bourgeois but we each have our own story to tell  – why should it not be in fabric, instead of, or as well as words. To see more than I can show you, try Louise Bourgeois fabric scrap books  and read this from the Moma website on Ode à l’oubli. Then start making your own unique fabric memory.

Vietnamese reverse appliqué (stained during recent house moving)

Vietnamese reverse appliqué

More about Cloth Lullaby, The Woven Life of Louise Bourgeois by Amy Novesky and illustrated by Isabelle Arsenault  in my next post. Meanwhile I hope you will enjoy looking at the fine stitching in these photographs (about 75% of the original size.)

Cloth Lullaby, The Woven Life of Louise Bourgeois by Amy Novesky and illustrated by Isabelle Arsenault

 

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Another batch of the vicar’s birthday cards

Apologies for not posting recently but unpacking is proving more complicated than I (short term pessimist/long term optimist) had anticipated, especially when interrupted by a visit to London to continue blackout blind making (not my favourite activity – sewing blackout fabric is not the world’s most enjoyable experience, but when you commit to doing something, you commit …)

In the meanwhile, here are a few more of the vicar’s cards.

David Addison: birthday card for traveller

 

David Addison: birthday card for a desert traveller (who was I think learning how to clear land mines at the time)

 

David Addison: a fantasy on architecture – perhaps (for whom we now have absolutely no idea – a good reason to blog these things!)

Knitting progressing slowly, embroidery at a complete halt. Can’t wait to get back to both.

 

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