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art

More meltdown

Sorting through piles of old fabric scraps I came across these pieces of nunofelt, made many years ago on my kitchen table. These are left over from some other half-forgotten project, party clothing for a friend. Now to be reworked as Meltdown Cold Fusion (lol), the blue piece …

Nunofelt on black cotton, 45 cm sq, work in progress

..and a table runner for the red piece.

Nunofelt, 150cm x 50cm, work in progress
Categories
art

Oil quilt detail

The Oil quilt consists of four panels made up of about 80 squares of 20 x 20 cm, printed, painted, drawn, embellished, stitched and embroidered in various ways. I’m finding it hard to finish, the desire to add more detail is strong but almost certainly misguided. Better to work on another piece I think.

Oil quilt, detail, approx 70 x 35 cm

This detail is from the upper left of the second panel, it feels topical. The quilt as a whole seems to be a polemic.

Oil quilt detail, approx 70 x 35 cm

This second detail is from same panel, lower right.

Categories
art

Winter Hare

For the first time in several years I thought I might send some seasonal greetings cards. Lots of scrap material and lots of thread awaiting a little effort, as well as plenty of card and dance paper, so here we go. My favourite animal will be the theme, the much persecuted hare, in winter costume.

Embellishing scraps of fabric is fun, but the embellishing needles have become rather costly at around £3 each – they break easily. So it’s important to take care using the embellishing machine, needles move fast but fabric movement must be slow. I also use embellished fabrics for doll costumes.

Once the fabric is available I cut the hares out and began stitching, might have been easier to stitch first then cut out. Hand stitching is kept to a minimum, whiskers and a little finishing. Anyway the results are just about ok, I think.

Winter Hare cards, work in progress (2)

I printed some text onto hand-made paper as a backing for the fabric hares, printed a greeting on A4 card with a small name label on the reverse. Once the hares are complete I stitched them onto the backing paper, then glue the whole piece to the card.

Winter Hare cards, work in progress (1)

I work with both the printers – one laser and one inkjet – the mac computer, a Husqvana/Viking sewing machine, an embellishing machine and many threads, pens, fabric scraps etc. and with music playing, often BBC R3 classical. The pics show the dry work area, I’ll be gluing elsewhere.

Categories
art

Meltdown 9

Meltdown 9, mixed fabric, embellish, embroider, stitch, 30 x 30 cm

Categories
nuclear

Fukushima 0n-going

The 2011 disaster at Fukushima continues and shows no sign of being cleaned up within any of our lifetimes. In that year, almost inconceivably the whole of central Japan was almost rendered uninhabitable with the possible evacuation of 50 million people being seriously considered by the Japanese government.

The Netflix drama, The Days certainly captures the sense of disaster (I found it rather slow for drama but then is it entertainment?) and correctly states that no one knows why the reactors didn’t continue to meltdown, destroying half of Japan. Fukushima now pours irradiated water into the Pacific and since there are no solutions in sight that will continue, perhaps with pauses, for the foreseeable future.

The International Atomic Energy Agency, the sales force for nuclear power continues to promote nukes large and small, regardless of the disasters and in denial about the carnage, death and destruction wrought by Chernobyl and Fukushima, just two incidents, neither of which can they in any way deal with.

Categories
art

Meltdown

After a busy few days in London, several art galleries as well as street actions culminating in the gigantic – 800,000 peaceful folk – Palestine demo I’m doing some sewing, revising some old ideas. Meltdown, a series of fabric pieces, embellished, embroidered and heavily stitched, begun in 2015 as a response to the disaster at Fukushima (2011 on-going).

Meltdown pieces at the sewing machine, about 20 x 20 cm

The subtlety of colour and stitch is rather lost in these photos.

I enjoy creating something – maybe not beautiful but hopefully of interest – using the tiniest of scraps picked up from the studio floor or stuffed away in waste bags.

Most of the thread I use for larger pieces or clothes (rare now) is organic cotton which is a little heavier than ordinary cotton, but for this work rayon, made from wood pulp is perfectly good. Not a plug just that these are widely available, Marathon rayon threads are very low cost and although they can be a little weak for some work they have a pleasant lustre and strength isn’t an issue here.

Categories
art

Oil quilt detail

The air we breathe rips at our lungs, detail about 25 x 40 cm

Somehow, despite the number of essential sudoku games, online jigsaw puzzles, &c. progress is made and the quilt is nearing completion.

Categories
art

Oil quilt

Oil quilt detail, about 40 x 50 cm

Most of this was complete months ago, just doing borders now. If the text seems topical, October 31st 2023, it’s because the people in charge in the west never stop bombing some poor brown folk somewhere in West Asia, Africa or Central America, or anywhere else they fancy.

Categories
art

Artists for Palestine UK

On Speaking and Silence: the New McCarthyism

For anyone who cares about their fellow human beings in Gaza, nothing is more important at this moment than to speak out.

Israel and its allies are trying to build a wall of silence around their devastation of Gaza.  Around the world, those who seek to break through it are having to contend with an extraordinary and shameful campaign of pressure and threats. No-one who speaks out, from the UN Secretary-General  to a London tube-driver, is exempt. 

Yet the breakthrough has happened. In every sector of society people horrified by the attack on Gaza are speaking out. The huge demonstrations in the major cities of the world reflect the strength of public feeling.

Among cultural workers, we have seen an outpouring of solidarity, and resistance to attempts to undermine it. Here are just a few examples, from Britain and the US. 

1.
Thousands of visual artists and curators signed an open letter published in Artforum magazine that expressed solidarity with the Palestinian people and called for an urgent ceasefire in Gaza. A behind the scenes campaign by a number of powerful art dealers and collectors aimed to pressure individual artists to retract. A week later, the magazine’s owners fired its editor, David Velasco. 

“I resent these cowardly bullying and blackmail campaigns to distract everyone in the art world from the central demand of the letter, which was: cease-fire!”

Firing Velasco did not stop the movement. Velasco responded, saying, “I’ve no regrets… I’m disappointed that a magazine that has always stood for freedom of speech and the voices of artists has bent to outside pressure.” The next day artists Nan Goldin and Nicole Eisenman announced they would no longer work with Artforum. Eisenman, who currently has a solo exhibition at London’s Whitechapel Gallery, said: “I want to echo what activists have been yelling in the streets: Not in my name. This war will not be done in my name. I resent these cowardly bullying and blackmail campaigns to distract everyone in the art world from the central demand of the letter, which was: cease-fire!”

Nearly fifty Artforum employees and contributors have now signed a letter demanding that Velasco be reinstated, saying his termination “carries chilling implications for Artforum’s editorial independence”. And three senior members of the editorial team have resigned in protest saying the firing is “unacceptable”.


“I have no regrets about anything I have said or done in regards to Palestine, Israel, or the occupation and war.”

2.
Separately, nearly 800 writers signed an open letter published in the London Review of Books warning of “grave crimes against humanity” and calling for an immediate ceasefire. Last week, New York’s premier cultural centre the 92nd Street Y decided to abruptly cancel a scheduled reading by one of the letter’s signatories, Pulitzer prize-winning author Viet Thanh Nguyen.

Following the cancellation, the director and programming staff resigned their posts. The rest of the 92nd Street Y’s poetry reading season has been “put on pause” following withdrawals from other writers. Viet Thanh Nguyen, who relocated his reading to a new venue, said in a  statement: “I have no regrets about anything I have said or done in regards to Palestine, Israel, or the occupation and war.”


“There’s an atmosphere that is wholly intolerant of any expression of sympathy for Palestinians living under occupation, any discussion of the root causes of the conflict.

3.
In London, the launch for Nathan Thrall’s book ‘A Day in the Life of Abed Salama: A Palestine Story’ at Conway Hall was cancelled at short notice following a ‘recommendation’ by the police. Thrall said: “There’s an atmosphere that is wholly intolerant of any expression of sympathy for Palestinians living under occupation, any discussion of the root causes of the conflict. … For events around that sort of a book to be cancelled… is outrageous.”

4.
A couple of weeks later a long-planned London event organised by Palfest, the Palestine Festival of Literature, was cancelled by its host, the Royal Geographical Society. But the event found a home at the National Education Union, where hundreds packed the auditorium to listen to Soweto Kinch, Tamim al-Barghouti, Harriet Walter, Julie Christie and others. 


“Hunting for a particular combination of words in every single piece of writing – no matter its focus – is a strategy. The goal is not to fight antisemitism. It’s to make people fearful to speak up against Israel’s ongoing genocidal violence for fear of being fired/smeared”.
Naomi Klein, October 28th 2023

The intimidation and suppression faced by Velasco and numerous artists are incomparably less brutal than that suffered by Palestinians for generations. Palestinians, as Naomi Klein wrote today in her powerful rejection of “McCarthyite censorship”, are paying the highest price and have done for decades. Attempts to silence protesting voices in other countries are nonetheless part of the ongoing attack on the Palestinians in Gaza, in the West Bank and beyond. A people deprived of solidarity, a people whose history cannot be spoken, is a people stripped of its defences. Censorship protects those who inflict violence on them. 

Following Israel’s threats to Al Jazeera this week, the wife, son, daughter and grandson of journalist Wael Al Dahdouh were killed by an airstrike. Al Dahdouh’s colleague Tamer Al Misshal said, “Wael has continued to report on Israeli atrocities despite the ongoing threats against him and his family, and he’s refused to leave Gaza in order to convey to the world what is happening there. His voice will go on – that we can guarantee. All our voices will go on, and we’ll continue to cover this assault to get the truth out every day.”

As of last night, many of those voices have been silenced. Internet, cellular and landline services have been cut off in Gaza. Palestinians face a complete communications black-out amidst an unprecedented bombing campaign. Israel is seeking to separate Gaza from the world.

Silence is enabling war crimes on a horrifying scale.  We refuse silence.



The above was written on Saturday 28th October

Categories
art

Oil quilt in progress

Oil quilt, detail, 60 x 40 cm

Most of the work for this quilt was complete months ago but current events are spurring me to finish. I’m mainly adding borders at the moment but there will be more work after that, pens and stitch and some discharge paste to remove colour in a few places. It can be hard to know when to stop! The original poem was written long ago, it’s on this site in artist’s book form.

Anti-art was a term adopted by the COBRA group of artists who formed in Copenhagen, Brussels and Amsterdam in 1945, as WW2 in Europe ended, a reaction to the horrors just experienced. Some of their work is at the Cobra Museum of Modern Art in Amsterdam, well worth a visit if you are in that great city, I found it inspiring. The label anti-art for works that end up in art galleries is a good place to start a discussion about what is art (yawn) because as soon as a gallery is involved or the works are sold then it must become art of some sort. Perhaps if they had kept the work to themselves the group would have been labelled as producers of Art Brut, a form which doesn’t seek public approval or sales, generally.

There is a documentary currently (October 2023) on BBC iPlayer about the Dada movement, closely associated with anti-art.