A few months ago, Alida at Tweety Loves Quilting asked me to participate in a blog hop. Not your typical blog hop, but one with an interesting twist. Each participant was to choose a "conventional" art piece (painting, drawing, sculpture, architecture) of any era, and to create a fiber piece inspired by the chosen piece. How cool is that? Of course I said yes.
It was a very well timed request for several reasons. First, studioQ is in the middle of a monthly challenge based on this very idea. Each month a member selects a "masterpiece" and we all reinterpret it in fabric. It's been a fun exercise. And second, my new "thing" is creating intricately pieced quilts based on photographs, using my favorite tuning fork unit as the building block, and taking them from realism to abstraction. They end up being blurred, distorted pieces, with the inspiration only obvious if you look at the original photo. I'm really enjoying these pieces. You can read more about the studioQ challenges and the two (so far) photo-based tuning fork quilts on this blog.
For my blog hop piece, I wanted to combine the two processes. I decided to take a painting and transform it into an abstract piece using tuning fork units. I had done several landscapes this way, but this was my first effort at using the tuning fork to recreate a portrait.
So I needed to chose an inspiration piece. I had assembled a lot of "candidates," but nothing really stood out in my mind. And then, about a month ago I visited the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia. In the first gallery there were a number of paintings and murals by Henri Matisse. I walked into the gallery and, well, I had my socks knocked off. Not literally of course, but mentally. I loved the assertive colors and the graphic simplicity of the piece. I'd found my inspiration piece!
Le Rifains Assis (The Seated Riffian) by Henri Matisse |
The tuning fork unit in two fabrics |
So I started making tuning fork units to represent the head of the man in the painting. And for the first green stripe on the wall behind him:
I then added the blue rectangle to the man's right (that's his right, our left), started adding dark green for his clothing, and started making red tuning forks for the floor.Here we are at day three. I've pretty much roughed out the picture, and am making more units to fill it out. The darn thing always shrinks a lot when sewn together. The blue rectangle, for example, became way too small, so I had to add another row (both vertically and horizontally) of blue tuning forks.
And then I started sewing it together. For this piece, I sewed a great deal of it together in vertical rows. The exception was the blue rectangle section and the stool. I wanted straight horizontal lines between the blue and yellow, the yellow and red and the brown and red. So I sewed those in rectangles rather than strips, giving me a sharp line between the sections.
Here it is nearly together:
And finally, here is the finished piece. Man on Stool, Blue Field (Tuning Fork #32) by Heather Pregger, 30" x 35" |
Check out these other artists participating in the blog hop!
Monday, May 9th, 2016
- Maartje (http://quiltinginamsterdam.blogspot.com)
- Lee Anna (http://lapaylor.blogspot.com/)
- Renee (http://www.quiltsofafeather.com/)
Tuesday, May 10th, 2016
- Yvonne (http://quiltingjetgirl.com/)
Wednesday, May 11th, 2016
- Alida (http://tweloquilting.blogspot.com/)
- Heather (http://www.heatherquilts.blogspot.com/)
Thursday, May 12th, 2016
- Cynthia (http://cynthiasark.blogspot.com.au/)
- Janeen (http://quiltartdesigns.blogspot.com/)
- Wendy (http://www.kwiltkrazy.com)
Friday, May 13th, 2016
- Carol (http://www.quiltedfabricart.com/)
- Jennifer (http://www.inquiringquilter.com)
- Nina-Marie (http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.com/)
- Joan (http://www.moosestashquilting.blogspot.com/)
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