Showing posts with label Allison Wilbur. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Allison Wilbur. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Allison Wilbur Teaches Shibori Dyeing Class

Shibori Dyeing Class

Meraki Studio, 30 Cutler St, Warren, RI

March 15, 2019 from 10:00 am - 4:00 pm

Fee $75



Allison Wilbur will be teaching an all day Shibori Dyeing class at Meraki Studio in Warren, RI on Friday, March 15, 2019 from 10:00 am  - 4:00 pm. Shibori is an ancient Japanese art of dyeing using indigo dye combined with various folding, clamping, stitching and pole wrapping methods which creates beautiful geometrics and organic patterns. Spend a day learning how to create several patterns as well as how to mix the dye vat.

To sign up, contact Meraki Studio at https://www.merakiatcutler.com/product-page/shibori-dying-with-allison-wilbur.


Hanabi (Fireworks) by Allison Wilbur

Wednesday, October 3, 2018

Explorations: Journeys in Creativity: Inside the Quilt Artist's Studio Opening

Explorations:  Journeys in Creativity:

 Inside the Quilt Artist's Studio

SAQA MA/RI Regional Exhibition

October 3 through December 30, 2018

New England Quilt Museum, Lowell, MA

Exhibition Opening October 13, 2018 at 1 pm


The MA/RI Regional exhibition, Explorations: Journeys in Creativity: Inside the Quilt Artist's Studio, Part 1, will debut on October 13, 2018 at the New England Quilt Museum (NEQM), 18 Shattuck St, Lowell, MA at 1pm in the Genre Gallery. A MA/RI meeting is planned at NEQM prior to the opening at 12 noon. PLEASE NOTE THIS CHANGE IN MEETING TIME!  The Museum closes at 4 pm. All are welcome to the meeting as well.

This exhibition is a two-part juried show on display from October 3 through December 30, 2018, featuring New England SAQA members focusing on art quilting techniques. The twelve artists in Part 1 have created a piece for the exhibit highlighting chosen techniques, and each piece is accompanied by a banner detailing their process.  Five of the twelve artists from Part 1 will give Lightning Talks about their creative process as part of the opening reception/meeting on October 13.

Lightning Talks will be given by:

Agusta Agustsson (MA) Intuitive Quilting
Madalene Murphy (MA) Leading Questions: How Did I Get From There to Here?"
Susan V. Polansky (MA) The Many Layers of Photoshop, Quilts, and Meaning
Catherine Whall Smith (CT) “How a Multi-Tasking Fiber Artist Really Works” or, “Getting the piece ready for the Hand Quilting seems like a sedentary activity - BUT IT’S NOT!”
Nancy Turbitt (RI) Solving Problems with Technique

You won't want to miss these interesting Lightning Talks!

Timna Tarr will be giving a Brown Bag Lunch talk at NEQM on Thursday, November 1 at 12:30 pm on “Cloth Cartography: Making Map Quilts”.

Susan Polansky will be giving a Brown Bag Lunch talk at NEQM on Thursday, December 6 at 12:30 pm on “Fused Applique Collage”.

Also showing at NEQM will be Susan Carlson, including her amazing crocodile, in the Main Gallery and Salley Mavor's exhibit, "Liberty and Justice: New Artwork by Salley Mavor". Many of you will not want to miss this amazing opening day at NEQM.

The Explorations catalog is finally complete, and it is marvelous! The full color catalog for "Explorations: Journeys in Creativity: Inside the Quilt Artist's Studio" can be purchased at the opening reception at NEQM. The 160 page full color catalog is priced at $24.95 and includes a 6-page section for each of the 24 artists detailing their chosen technique.

The SAQA artist's and their techniques included in the catalog are:

Agusta Agustsson - printing with gelatin plate
Sue Bleiweiss - raw edge fusible appliqué
Ann Brauer - quilt-as-you-go
Diane Cadrain - thread painting and felting
Sue Colozzi - layered fabric collage
Judy Dales - curved piecing
Janis Doucette - eco printing
Diane English - improvisational piecing
Janice Jones - surface embellishment
Mary-Ellen Latino - digital image manipulation and shibori, discharge & vat dyes
Marya Lowe - improvisational piecing
Jeanne Marklin - fabric dyeing
Valerie Maser-Flanagan - improvisational piecing
Sharon McCartney - printing and image transfer
Suzanne Munroe - painting/portraiture
Madalene Murphy - fabric manipulation
Susan V. Polansky - photoshop composition and fabric collage
Wen Redmond - digital photo manipulation and paste mediums
Cheryl Rezendes - surface design and hand embroidery
Diane Sheckells - applique and perle cotton embroidery
Catherine Whall Smith - hand quilting from reverse
Sarah Ann Smith - fused collage
Timna Tarr - applique and machine quilting
Nancy Turbitt - surface design with markers

Sales of the catalog will support future programs and exhibitions in the MA/RI region. Catalogs will also be available through the New England Quilt Museum gift shop during both segments of the exhibition in Fall 2018 and Spring 2019, and part of the proceeds will go to help the museum.

A big shout out to all of those who have helped create “Explorations”.  Curators Nancy Turbitt and Allison Wilbur formulated the Prospectus and Call for Entry and worked with the artists to gather the many elements that went into making this a multilayered exhibit.  The twenty-four artists devoted six months of their time pushing their techniques and documenting their process to share with their audience.  A thank you to the artists for their patience with the process of this exhibit, and to those doing extra work in the form of Lightning Talks, Brown Bags, and lectures.  Allison Wilbur created the banners and catalog (no minor accomplishment!), giving selflessly of her time, with tremendous support from Dixie Walker (photo management and editing) and Jeanne Holtzman (editing and technical support).  Nancy Turbitt kept this entire enterprise on course, dealing on a daily basis with every aspect of the exhibition. Karen and Bud McCann and Allegra Printing in Providence, RI did a beautiful job printing the banners that accompany the art work.  Janice Jones wrote an excellent Press Release.  Sue Polansky organized the Lightning Talks and assisted in hanging the show. Suzanne Munroe helped with publicity, and Margaret McGrath helped with publicity and file storage.  Special thanks go to Vicki Jensen and PRO Chemical and Dye in Fall River, MA, who provided much appreciated sponsorship for the banners and the catalog to accompany the exhibit.  Thanks to the volunteers who came out and helped to hang the exhibit:  Agusta Agustsson, Diane and Sara Sheckells, Janice Jones, Tricia Deck, Sarah Ann Smith, Sue Polansky, Nancy Turbitt, and Allison Wilbur.  A big thank you to the jurors of “Explorations”, Pamela Weeks and Jane Davila, for so carefully choosing the artists. And most of all, thank you to Pam, Nora and the staff of the New England Quilt Museum for inviting our regional group to create this two-part exhibit.

We hope you are as excited as we are about this amazing exhibit and catalog. Please use social media or your blog or website to get the word of the opening reception and catalog out. See you at the opening!

Please join us for our October 13 regional meeting at the New England Quilt Museum (more information below) at 12 noon, and the opening at 1 pm.

Saturday, July 7, 2018

AllisonWilbur at the Brush Gallery

Congratulations, Allison Wilbur

 on her acceptance into the

"Something Boro'd, Something Blue" Exhibit

 at the Brush Gallery in Lowell, MA




Tsukimi (Moon Viewing) by Allison Wilbur


"Something Boro’d, Something Blue”


The Brush Gallery

304 Dutton St, Lowell, MA 01852


August 4 to September 15, 2018


Reception: Sat, August 11 from 2 to 4 PM


Allison Wilbur (AllisonWilburQuilts.comwill have two pieces in this exhibit of quilts influenced by the Japanese Boro traditions and techniques of layered and stitched patchwork. Both pieces are part of Wilbur's series of quilts focusing on fabric and design traditions of Japan. Tsukimi (Moon Viewing) was created with two styles of shibori dying - stitching and pole wrapping, and is quilted with large, boro-style stitches.  Enso (Zen Circle) incorporates the patching and layering of vintage and antique indigos and large stitching. 




 Enso (Zen Circle) by Allison Wilbur

Friday, October 27, 2017

October 21, 2017 MA/RI Regional Meeting

October 21, 2017 MA/RI Regional Meeting

Held at Allison Wilbur's Studio in Bristol, MA

Topic of Discussion:  Home Studio vs Remote Studio - Pros and Cons


Fifteen members attended a regional meeting held at Allison Wilbur's sunny studio in Bristol, MA.  Located in the classroom of an old decommissioned school, the large space holds Allison's long arm, examples of Allison's artwork, books, supplies, and places to sit and enjoy the inspiration of a dedicated art space.  Attendees enjoyed a lengthy discussion regarding the home art studio versus the remote art studio.  Members shared their experiences with both.  Practical setup and organization of the studio was also addressed.  Following lunch and a short business meeting, show and tell was held.  A review of the "Explorations" call for entry helped the attendees understand in greater depth the details.











The next MA/RI regional meeting will be held March 24, 2018 at Franklin Mill Store in Franklin, MA from 10 am to 2 pm.  The topic will be "Exhibiting Your Work and the Jurying Process".  A mock jury will be held to acquaint attendees with the details involved in choosing artwork for an exhibit.

Please email Margaret at mamcgrath27@gmail.com if you have any news or information on an exhibit that you would like to share in this blog.  Profiles of individual members are always welcome!

Wednesday, June 8, 2016

Quilt Day in CT

Quilt Day at the Windham Textile & History Museum

June 11, 2016


The Windham Textile & History Museum will be host to a textile festival in June and the first of three days is Quilt Day. On June 11, 2016 from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm there will be demos, lectures, a vendor mall and art displays. Artwork will be on display by Melanie Johnston, Joan Blade JohnsonCatherine Whall Smith and Barbara Barber.



Melanie Johnston
Melanie is an artist working with textiles. Her subject matter ranges from the realistic to collage and abstract. She uses commercial and hand dyed cotton and silk as well as any other interesting fabric that strikes her fancy. She particularly enjoys dyeing and painting her own fabric using a variety of techniques from ice dyeing and shibori to gradation and whole cloth.




Joan Blade Johnson
Joan is a fiber artist who has long been interested in all things fiber. In the last several years, she has become fascinated by the entire creative process involved in composing fiber art pieces using non-traditional methods and materials to achieve her artistic vision, most often inspired by nature and her original nature photography.



Catherine Whall Smith
Catherine is a quilter living in Chaplin, CT. She designs her quilts through the process of discovery; discovery of the relationships of fabric, pattern, color and a limited variety of shapes. All of her art quilts are traditionally hand quilted.

Here is what is happening throughout the day:

VENDORS
Allison Wilbur                  Vintage Fiber Art Embellishments
Carol R. Eaton                 Unique Hand-Dyed & Painted Fabric
Michele Palmer                Vintage Fabrics & Textile Books
MJ Fiber Art                    Hand-Dyed Silk Scarves & Fiber Art
Schillers Sewing Circle     Sewing & Embroidery Machines Demo
Stitch Chicks                   Quilting Fabric & Notions

MUSIC
Heartstrings                    Melanie & Mack Johnston
                                      Mountain Dulcimer, Mandolin & Guitar
Sally Rogers                     Folk & Mill Music

DEMONSTRATIONS 
(ongoing)
Schillers Sewing Circle      Sewing & Embroidery Machines
Carol R. Eaton                  Designing a Quilt
(scheduled)
12:00 pm  Catherine Whall Smith                                    
                Hand Quilting
 1:00 pm  Sally Rogers                                                    
               Folk & Mill Songs
 2:00 pm  Catherine Whall Smith & Joan Blade Johnson     
               Printed Images on Fabric
 3:00 pm  Stitch Chicks Quilt Shop                                   
               Working with Pre-Cut Fabric

LECTURES & TRUNK SHOWS
Main Building, Second Floor
11:00 am  Hope Barton          SAQA Trunk Show
11:45 am  Rita Hannafin        Modern Quilting
 1:15 pm  Allison Wilbur         Quilts for Change
 2:00 pm  Barbara Barber       Mill Girls Painted Quilts
 2:45 pm  Lois Palmer            Anatomy of a Quilt Appraisal
               Certified Quilt Appraiser

The Museum is located at 411 Main St. in Willimantic, CT, 860 456-2178. There will be food available for purchase at the museum. 

Friday, March 25, 2016

Member Profile: Allison Wilbur

We have a new co-rep for our region! Allison Wilbur recently answered a few questions so we can all get to know her better. You can also visit these two websites to learn more about Allison: AllisonWilburQuilts.com and QuiltforChange.org.


Allison Wilbur


When did you start making art quilts?
My earlier quilts were definitely traditional and based on my love of quilts formed as a child sleeping under my great grandmother’s flower garden quilt. She had made one for each of her grandchildren and had them hand quilted by her church group. Quilting seemed a natural outlet for me - my mother was a painter and my father a cabinet maker, so it felt like a comfortable combination of color and geometry. I soon found that I changed patterns, then began to make my own patterns, then gradually began to move away from traditional pieced quilts. My first art quilt was in response to a challenge where we had to take a quote and change it and then incorporate it into a quilt. I used a line from Emily Dickinson’s poem, “Hope is the thing with feathers, that perches in the soul,” and changed feathers to butterfly wings. I still love this quilt and it hangs in my bedroom, a good wake up sentiment to greet me each morning.




What is your work like? What styles or techniques do you use?
If I were to choose several key elements that characterize my art, it would be machine quilting, color and foreign textiles. Founding Quilt for Change with my husband, Dick Wilbur, has certainly led me on a path of a series of quilts that talk about the condition of women around the world and the struggles they face (to learn more about Quilt for Change, visit our website - www.quiltforchange.org - or Facebook page.)
I like to have a lighter style of working as well to balance that and so have done many pieces inspired by foreign textiles and motifs. Many of these pieces make it into my lecture “Trip Around the World,” which I share with quilt guilds in New England. I have greatly appreciated our regional SAQA discussions on finding your voice as an artist and writing an artist statement. As I have begun to exhibit more outside the traditional quilt show venue, I have had to learn to write about myself and my work, which has been a struggle. The quilt below, Gifts a Mother Passes on to Her Child, was made for the Quilt for Change exhibit in 2009.
How did you learn the techniques you use?
For at least the first decade I quilted I took as many classes as I could. I was very fortunate to have Ted Storm, the Dutch quilter extraordinaire, as one of my first teachers (hand appliqué). Even though it was a short class, it gave me an example of the art of quilting that has always stayed with me. Since then I have broadened my class selections to branch into new areas - fusing techniques with Esterita Austin, painting on fabric with different mediums with Hollis Chatelain and Jamie Wallen, indigo dying with Carol Ann Gotrian, hand stitching with Anna Hergert. I am encouraged that the large quilt shows are offering more and more classes in art quilt techniques and more art quilts in their shows. I definitely prefer to take technique-based classes rather than project-based classes and now that I am teaching classes myself, I focus on techniques as well (machine quilting and sashiko classes are my most popular). I also learn so much each time I put an exhibit together for Quilt for Change. Challenge exhibits are an amazing way to see multiple interpretations of a theme and I love the reveal of seeing the varied entries.


Are you working on a particular theme or series now?

I now seem to be in the middle of a water series as there are three exhibits calling for water themes this year. Bounty of the Seas is now being shown in Geneva, Switzerland at the Quilt for Change "Water is Life" exhibit at the United Nations. I am working on an entry for our regional SAQA “Currents" and “H2O” for the national SAQA show. Even if my pieces are not accepted, I often find that having a challenge, Call for Entry, or theme helps me work.


How do you work? What is your design process?
I gather images from Pinterest, the web, books, magazines and my own photos. I then do a small study drawing, then scale it up to actual size. I often piece the background and use freezer paper to create the details which are fused on with misty fuse. More and more I am using my own hand-dyed or -painted fabric in my work. Once the top is complete I often use trapunto on larger shapes to create depth. Finally, I machine quilt it using my longarm. I use a large variety of microfilm motifs to create texture and movement. Often I quilt words into the background.


What are your sources of inspiration?
Sometimes it is a fabric, sometimes a theme. I once bought a hand embroidered piece from India at a local thrift store and put down everything I was working on to make it into a quilt. I just felt like it was shameful to have something so beautiful in a thrift shop and not being celebrated and admired. I mixed Amish style piecing with the very non-American color choices and stitching motifs to make this quilt, "East Meets West".

What is your studio like and when do you like to work?
My studio is like a tidal pool, ebbing and flowing from neat to a wreck. We moved a year and a half ago and chose a house with what has become my two-room studio off the garage. One room holds my longarm, the other is my sewing and painting area. The woman I bought the house from had a vending business, “Nifty Thrifty Dry Goods” in which she sold vintage lace, trims, buttons, fabric and much more. She was going out of business and I bought a lot of her merchandise. My studio was therefore immediately full!!!



What are your goals or aspirations for your art?
My number one goal is to follow Cate Prato’s advice “Make good art.” I am easily distracted by everything else, and need to spend more time away from my computer and in my studio. I spend a great deal of time teaching, quilting for others, organizing exhibits, and volunteering for various quilt related groups and some days I have to remind myself to take time for my own art.

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Workshop with Timna Tarr

Timna Tarr
Workshop & Trunk Shows

Timna Tarr is a modern quilter who works with color. Her quilts have won awards at national shows and have appeared on the cover of national quilting magazines.


Trunk Show/Lecture 
Thursday, October 1, 2015 
7:00 pm - 9:00 pm

Timna Tarr will be giving a Trunk Show and lecture at the general guild meeting of Quilters by the Sea at St. Barnabas Church, on 1697 E. Main Road in Portsmouth. Guests are welcome to attend, with a $5.00 per person guest fee. 


Workshop 
Friday, October 2, 2015 
9:00 am - 4:00 pm

Timna is teaching a workshop Designing with Flying Colors, which is sponsored by Quilters by the Sea. This is a color class where Timna has everyone play with fabrics and color, then use improvisational piecing to combine them. The workshop is being held at the Portsmouth Library on 2658 East Main Road in Portsmouth. Contact SAQA member, Allison Wilbur at allisonquilt@me.com for details of how to register as there are a few spots left.

Full day workshop - Fee $40.00


Trunk Show/Lecture 
Saturday, October 3, 2015 
2:00 pm - 4:00 pm

Timna will also be giving a Trunk Show and lecture at a meeting of the Rhode Island Modern Quilt Guild at the Marian J. Mohr Memorial Library on 1 Memorial Ave, (Lower Level Conference Room) in Johnston, RI Members %5.00/Non-Members $10.00.