World of Threads Festival
Blog Archive: Fibre Artist Interviews
Since the series was launched in 2011, Dawne Rudman and Gareth Bate have been interviewing local, national or international fibre artists. We have published over 137 artist interviews to date. Join us as we create a comprehensive archive of some of the most exciting fibre artists in the world. People have subscribed from 96 countries.
Artist Interview 21: Judy Martin
Tell us about your work? Artist Judy Martin. Photo: Ned Martin. Previous World of Threads Exhibitions Light of the Moon. Acrylic paint, wool and cotton threads, canvas, paper. Stitched Collage. 36″ wide by 41″ high. 2009. photo J Martin. I think of my fibre artwork as poetry. Why did you choose to go into fibre…
Artist Interview 20: Gordana Brelih
Tell us about your work? Artist Gordon Brelih in her studio. Previous World of Threads Exhibitions Circle of Memories 2, 2009, 10″x42″, machine and hand-stitched felt. I begin with an idea and it carries me far into the night. Where do you get your inspiration? The Beast, 2006, stitched bubble wrap machine and hand stitching,…
Artist Interview 19: Mary Karavos
Tell us about your work? Artist: Mary Karavos – The Girls in the Heather – Imported Papers -2010 – 30 x 60 photo: Monica Sanago Previous World of Threads Exhibitions The Beauty of Youth – Imported Papers, 2010, 30 x 30, photo: Dean Palmer Photography The creative language has many sources for inspiration. Where do…
Artist Interview 17: Judith Tinkl
Cyclops, 2005, 84″x 65″, textile hanging/quilt, machine pieced, hand quilted. The design derives from only two shapes, one equilateral triangle and a square with the same dimensions, divided into two or four smaller triangles. The geometric patterns generated using these shapes are infinitely variable. Colour, both hue and light/dark contrasts can cause particular shapes or…
Artist Interview 16: Joanne Young
Tell us about your work? Scrapyard Couture by Bertolt of Kitchener, assorted fabrics, paper pulp, wire, found object, wrapping, appliqué hand stitching, 14″x22″x14″, 2011, photo: Joanne Young Previous World of Threads Exhibitions Scrapyard Couture by Bertolt of Kitchener, detail, Joanne Young Detail: Scrapyard Couture by Bertolt of Kitchener, assorted fabrics, paper pulp, wire, found object,…
Artist Interview 15: Allyn Cantor
Tell us about your work? Artist Allyn Cantor Previous World of Threads Exhibitions Caverns and Corridors Where do you get your inspiration? Deliverance, 38″ x 48″ I realized that textile techniques could be used to create art rather than just being applied to design or function. Why did you choose to go into fibre art?…
Artist Interview 13: Barbara Wisnoski
Tell us about your work? Barbara Wisnoski in her Montreal studio with a work in progress. Photo: Brooks Yardley Previous World of Threads Exhibitions Where do you get your inspiration? Field, detail Why did you choose to go into fibre art? Earth (repetition of an act of mourning), 68 x 76 inches, fabric, thread; machine-pieced.…
Artist Interview 12: Robert Davidovitz
Tell us about your work? Artist Robert Davidovitz Previous World of Threads Exhibitions Orange Grove Zig-Zag, Acrylic on Panel. 19×16″, Weaving, July 2010 “What if I tried this with paint instead of icing, a canvas instead of a cake?” A Midsummer Nights Dream, Acrylic on Panel. 12×12. Weaving. August 2009 Where do you get your…
Artist Interview 11: Amy Bagshaw
Tell us about your work? Artist Amy Bagshaw Previous World of Threads Exhibitions I have spent much of my life deep in the Northern Ontario forests. Where do you get your inspiration? Unravel and Thaw (Penelope’s Shroud), 2006, Burlap, multiple video projections, chair, rug, bucket, ice, Stony Brook, NY Why did you choose to go…
Artist Interview 9: Emma Nishimura
Tell us about your work? Artist, Emma Nishimura Previous World of Threads Exhibitions An Underlying Sadness, 2010, Photogravure etching and thread, 20″ x 25″ x 1″ Where do you get your inspiration? My grandmother was interned in Slocan, an internment camp for Japanese Canadians in the interior of British Columbia, from the spring of 1942…