Crooked Little Beginnings

I’ve been anxious for the past few weeks to get started on a new project for the upcoming exhibit A Somewhat Secret Place: Disability and Art.  I want to create a woman and her seeing eye dragon, a piece I’ve tentatively named “Shared Vision.”  These sculpted cloth projects of mine always start out with big ideas and rough drawings.

Seeing eye dragon sketch 1
Seeing eye dragon sketch 2

I have been overwhelmed with life lately — doctor’s appointments and tests, storytelling events, family matters — all the good, bad and distracting that gets in the way of creation.  Since I’ve only ever made human figures and dolls out of cloth, I spent spare time studying how animals are made and how to use gussets and other fabric sculpture tricks.

I carefully drew out a pattern and did my best to make accurate gussets.  Gussets are those magical fabric inserts that will give my dragon an open mouth, and a dimensional head and face.  However, unlike the skilled makers who I studied, I am not mathematical or even inclined to measure much.  I draw and eyeball things.  I put things together on paper then just start tracing, cutting and having fun.

This is all to say that my first day working on the dragon had a rather comic end.  I did the head first because that’s where the most detail and personality will be.  It’s also the most difficult to construct.  I don’t know what I did wrong — probably several things — but the mouth went all wanky. I went ahead and colored in the eye and tongue because it looked so funny.

slack-jaw-asaurus

Who knows?  I  may make a full Slack-jaw-asaurus one day.  Meanwhile, back to the drawing board for the dragon.

Next week, I’ll try to post more on this project of mine and some of the other artists who will be showing work in the Somewhat Secret Place show.

Remember to enjoy your mistakes — might as well, if you’re anything like me, you’re going to make plenty.

Dream Tree Embroidery

Dream Tree Embroidery

When I first started doing “art” embroidery, I was told that leaving the finished work in the hoop made it look too crafty/homey.  It would never be considered “real art.”  Now much more craft is considered real art, whatever that means.  I never stopped using the hoops as frames, and in fact, use embroidery hoops as embellishments for some of my cloth sculptures.

Anyway, I finished this embroidery today and secured it with a whip stitch around the hoop.  It’s called Dream Tree.  I like using basic plant shapes and making up  my own details.  I love the impressionist nature of cotton floss.

Dream Tree Embroidery
Dream Tree

It’s 6 inches around. I scanned it instead of photographing it because the beading didn’t show up well on the photograph.  I gotta stop working in monotones — but I love doing it.  I hope your dream tree is slightly off balance and has deep happy roots.

A Somewhat Secret Place: Disability and Art by Catherine Jennifer Helen Miller — Kickstarter

I’m very excited about this exhibit — and Catherine Miller has curated a piece of mine for the exhibit!  This exhibit will take place in July in Portland and it’s going to be a wonderful experience watching it grow.  Catherine J.H. Miller is a vibrant and dynamic curator with some very innovative ideas of how to present art.

Please take a look at the video on this Kickstarter campaign and consider becoming a patron of the arts!

I’ll keep you posted on my piece as it develops.  I may also be telling a story and doing an artist talk with the exhibit.  Yay!

 

 

 

A Somewhat Secret Place: Disability and Art by Catherine Jennifer Helen Miller — Kickstarter.

Blogtalk Radio Interview

I got interviewed on the Nancy Wolkse’s Blogtalk Radio program Aging Resourcefully for the work I do on my other blog, Chronically Inspired.  Here’s a link if you’d like to listen.

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/adult-placement-network/2011/04/11/apns-aging-resourcefully-interviews-joy-corcoran-of-chronically-inspired