Oakville Beaver Artscene
Wednesday February 28, 2007
By Krissie Rutherford, Oakville Beaver Staff
Festival Exhibits Share A Common Thread
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Oakville Beaver Artscene
Wednesday February 28, 2007
By Krissie Rutherford, Oakville Beaver Staff
Festival Exhibits Share A Common Thread
World Premiere: Liz Benneian talks about her never-before-seen collection of embroidered postcards, which were very popular during the First World War, at Friday's opening of the Festival of Textile Arts at Sheridan College. Benneian's exhibit is one of several on display across town for the Festival, which features nine exhibits at five venues. Threads of all kinds are all over town.Wedding dresses through the ages, clothing, framed embroidery, quilted chairs, hats, sculptures and more are all part of the fifth biennial World of Threads Festival.
Nine exhibits are up across Oakville for the Festival of Textile Arts, including a world premiere: Threads of Remembrance. It's a never-before-seen collection of embroidered postcards courtesy of collector Liz Benneian. "They're hard to find," Benneian said of the postcards, a collection she's been able to grow to hundreds thanks to eBay. "Why I liked them was because I knew immediately women had made them. I liked the fine stitching."Her interest was piqued after finding four of the silk postcards framed at an antique shop. The postcards were at the height of their popularity during the First World War and Benneian, a reported for the Canadian Forces from 1985-1990, was drawn to the cards because of her interest in the military and its history.While most make no mention of the war and instead have embroidered messages like Happy Christmas, To My Sister and Good Luck along with embroidered pictures, a few of the cards do shed light on war time experiences. "You can read between the lines how scared to death he was and what was going on," Benneian said of one card sent from a soldier to his mother. One card reads, "Terrible. It was like a smack of thunder and I thought I was gone. I shut my eyes and lay still."
"Those are unusually graphic," Benneian said. Another sent from a soldier named Pete says, "Cheer up old kid. Not dead yet." The cards also shed light on the war through the changes to certain buildings, Benneian says, depicted in the embroidery."Before everything was bombed you have pictures of buildings. Later on in the war it was bombed and you get pictures of them burning up and in ruins." The cards were popular souvenirs during the First World War but rare by the time of the Second World War, Benneian said, adding their production ceased around the 1950s. Her Threads of Remembrance is one of a number of exhibits at Sheridan, including thread works courtesy of Sheridan College textile students - everything from lamp shades, boots and hats to a laptop cover and a spine made of felt - and a Common Threads international juried art show."And for the first time," said festival steering committee chair Jane Coryell, "We're also displaying what the jurors turned down."
That's in the Salon de Refuses, also at Sheridan College. The five venues housing the festival's exhibits - Sheridan, Town Hall, Abbozzo Gallery, Ristorante Julia and Oakville Museum at Erchless Estate – include the works of six local guilds: weaving, lace-making, embroidery, quilting, hooking and knitting. Mayor Rob Burton cut the red ribbon Friday to officially open the World of Threads Festival while Oakville MPP Kevin Flynn unveiled The Sixteen by 18, a thread work created to celebrate Oakville's 150th Anniversary. It will be sold for $500 as a fundraiser to help with the next year's festival. The show boasts works including a painted and quilted chair made by mother and son team Dawne Rudman and Gareth Bate, collages of fabric, quilts, hats, coats, vests and more. "It's definitely our biggest yet," said Coryell, who was putting finishing touches on some of the displays Friday to prepare for the opening.
FIBRE OPTICS: Sheridan student Miranda Thomas walks by Dagmar Korar's Evolution of Silence during the opening of the Festival of Textile Arts at the college's Oakville campus last week. The festival features nine exhibits at five different venues in town.
The festival also has a stronger partnership this year with Sheridan College, which houses five of the exhibits this year compared with one two years ago. Exhibits up until March 9 at Sheridan College, 1430 Trafalgar Rd, include Common Thread, an international juried exhibition, Guilded Threads: Part 2,New Directions, New Ideas and Threads of Remembrance. Salon de Refuses runs at Sheridan to March 2. Guilded Threads: Part 1 is on at Town Hall, 1225 Trafalgar Rd., to March 8. Confluence: Streams and Strands, runs at Abbozzo Gallery, 179 Lakeshore Rd. E., to March 4, and FibrElements-The Four Elements, runs to May 1 at Ristorante Julia, 312 Lakeshore Rd. E. Old, New, Borrowed and Blue: 150 Years of Wedding Attire runs at Oakville Museum at Erchless Estate, 8 Navy St., from Feb. 27 –Sept. 30.