More exciting news……

We recently received an email to say that this blog had been placed third in a list of UK Textile Art blogs which is very exciting. So thank you everyone at Feedspot and please go to their website at this link to see the post.

Feedspot

More news about DIS/rupt in Peebles coming soon but by all accounts good viewing numbers at the gallery to see the work.  This weekend Saturday 30 June, Textile Study Group member Mary Sleigh will be teaching a workshop, Stitching a Story. Booking is essential and further details can be found by contacting the Tweeddale Museum and Art Gallery at 01721 72480 or email museums@liveborders1.org.uk to see if there are any places left.

On Saturday 7 and Sunday 8 June another member, Julia Triston,  will be teaching  and more information about her class Text in Textiles can be had at the same contact numbers above.

For information about the DIS/rupt project and to see photographs of the work as well as read back numbers of posts when the artists in the group were interviewed about their personal projects and themes, please check our website for information Website

And finally……..

The opening of DIS/rupt on Friday evening at the Tweeddale Museum and Art Gallery was lovely and the large group of people who came to see the work in its new temporary home were fulsome in their praise of the venue and, of course, the work. It never ceases to amaze how different a body of work can look when set up in a different gallery. The galleries in the Tweeddale Art Gallery are lovely – the main gallery has wonderful ceiling windows which create a sympathetic light atmosphere and the work has space to ‘breathe’. The lower gallery is also well lit and shows the work to great effect so the group is very pleased with this finale to the DIS/rupt Tour.

Entry to the Museum and Gallery is through an archway off Peebles High Street into a lovely historic courtyard where visitors will see one of Ruth Issett’s colourful pieces on the wall of the Gallery.

Whirl, Wind & Weather, Ruth Issett

There is parking nearby as well as on-street parking if available and Peebles itself is a lovely town set within the Scottish Border countryside with many independent shops and local attractions so well worth a visit. The team from Textile Study Group and the Gallery staff have done a wonderful job hanging the work and visitors will be met with a very interesting “thought-provoking” exhibition.

Full details for opening and access can be found at the gallery website and remember there is a series of workshops programmed for the period the exhibition is open run by Textile Study Group members.

All information about opening hours can be found at the Gallery link Tweeddale Museum & Gallery

Minerva and beyond

Already two weeks since DIS/rupt opened at the Minerva Arts Centre, Llanidloes in Wales and we have had good feedback from visitors who have been. It is always exciting to see how the work  changes as it is set up in different surroundings and becomes part of the new gallery for the duration of its stay. The lighting variations, as well as the physical space alter how visitors view the pieces which means that each new gallery keeps the experience of visiting fresh. Here are a few photographs.

Of course, it will not be long before the work is packed up again and shipped to Peebles. More information about that very soon but in the meantime if you are in the Minerva Arts Centre area, you will be made very welcome if you visit. Check their website for opening times. Minerva Arts Centre

 

Debbie Lyddon

One of the main tenets of the Textile Study Group  is continuing to develop our individual professional practice and therefore the twice yearly weekends when we meet up to work together, are opportunities to explore the professional practice of other practicing artists as well talk amongst ourselves. Recently the group members met and enjoyed an inspiring workshop with textile artist Debbie Lyddon. Many of you will know of Debbie and maybe follow her blog or have seen her work in exhibitions, so during a very busy few days I took the chance to speak with her and ask about her practice and inspirations.

Q     Debbie, have you always been a textile artist?

A     No! I started life as a musician, playing and teaching the flute and I trained for four years at the Royal Academy of Music.

Q2     So how did you get started in textiles – what was it that clicked?

A      It was always a question of ‘do I do music or art?’ The school I went to had a very active music department and so, at that stage, the music won. However, I have always drawn and painted and I come from a household where everyone knitted and sewed. I’ve always seen playing the flute as an activity that went alongside these ‘hand’ occupations. When I had my children and it became impossible to pursue a musical career it was a very short step to making art instead. I started with adult education classes, putting one child or other on the crèche, and the whole thing has snowballed from there.

Ground Cloth Object – Coil

Q      What are your main influences?

A       My main influences come from what interests me and the experience of those interests in my life. Music has obviously had a strong impact. When you are at music college one of the things you are trained to do is to listen. You can’t play in an orchestra without hearing and understanding what everyone else around you are doing. The concept of noticing and experiencing that is inherent in my practice stems from my learnt sensitivity to hearing everything that goes on around me.

Q       The landscape is obviously a huge influence on your work. Can you give us a flavour of what it is about the Norfolk landscape that inspires you?

A      The Norfolk landscape has a huge bearing on almost everything I do. It’s an environment where I have spent a lot of time and the place has got into my bones. I think the contours, the light and the atmosphere of the landscape would come out in my work even if I didn’t try. It’s primarily a place of change. The enormous open skies, the muddy creeks and waterways of the marshes and the sand and dunes on the beaches are forever in flux. They move almost day by day and if I’ve been away for a period of time the differences are immediately noticeable. It is this variation that brings me back again and again as there is always something new to see or to hear or to touch.

Ground Cloth – Chalk

Q      What are your materials of choice?

A      Cloth is at the centre of almost everything I do and I take inspiration from the way it is used in this coastal environment. Sails, tarpaulins and other protective cloths are my primary inspiration. I use mostly canvas or linen, the traditional material for sails, and the sewing techniques use reference sail-making techniques. I have researched how these ‘coastal’ cloths would have been preserved and waterproofed and use the relevant materials: wax, linseed oil, bitumen and paint. Recently I have been using materials gathered from the environment to colour cloth and to make paint: chalk from Hunstanton and West Runton, red clay from Cley beach, yellow ochre from West Runton and seacoal from Wells beach. I love the fact that I am using materials from the landscape to evoke the landscape itself.

Q      Your sketchbooks are wonderful, are they your primary source of ‘note-taking’?

A      Yes and no! I often take my sketchbook and very basic drawing materials out with me. I like to sit and to look and to listen, and drawing or writing down my observations are an occupation that makes me be still and to actively notice. However, I don’t always have a sketchbook with me and I often use the memory of experiences that I acquire whilst out walking in my practice. I find that on a walk there are some memories that are stronger and more intense than others. These stick in my mind and often can become the germ of an idea.  

Ground Cloth Fragment – Chalk

Q       Your enthusiasm has been evident this weekend, do you enjoy teaching?

A      I do enjoy teaching. I like to meet people and to share my interests and it is very rewarding when everyone is enthusiastic back.

Q       Who have been the main inspirations or influences in your textile career?

A      Surprisingly enough, not that many textile artists: all the St. Ives artists for their connection to place. Gillian Lowndes for her innovative use of materials and Joan Livingstone for her large, abstract forms and use of utilitarian stitch.

Q       What do the next few months have in store for you and your textiles?

A      I have several exhibitions coming up later in 2018. I am delighted to have been selected to take part in the 62 Group exhibition CTRL/Shift at the MAC Birmingham from 21 July – 9 Sept, where I’ll be showing three large cloths that have been coloured with materials gathered from the landscape. https://macbirmingham.co.uk/exhibition/ctrl-shift I also have a long watercolour drawing/book in CLEY18, http://www.cleycontemporaryart.org an exhibition of new work by Norfolk artists. Also locally, I am in the process of making a large piece of work for the Wells Maltings Trust Art Trail, People of the Sea and Shore. It is a 3m x 1.20 pulled thread work coated in bitumen that will be placed outside on the site of a past shipwright’s and will make a connection between the former shipbuilding industry in Wells and the landscape. http://www.wellsmaltings.org.uk/heritage-trail-artistic-flair-people-shore-sea/

Q    What one piece of advice would you give someone starting to develop their own textile practice?

A      Make work that is personal and is about you and your interests.

Thank you very much Debbie, for an inspiring weekend but also for giving of your time to talk with me. What you say will be of enormous interest to our readers and we can but wish you well with the projects you have lined up for 2018.

If you would like to see more of Debbie’s work then find her website here Debbie Lyddon. Her blog can be found here Debbie’s blog and have a look at the links Debbie has added for information about the exhibitions and visit if able.

 

Thank you again Debbie.