Home Is Where the Art Is
Home. It's a nebulous concept, one that's been on my mind a lot lately. These mini quilts are an expression of longing, rootlessness - perhaps "home" is a part of us that we always carry, though it may drift to the bottom with the kleenex and loose change.
[The Home quilts were created for my top-tier Patreon patrons in 2016. I closed my Patreon page in 2022.]
Following is a more detailed look at the quilt construction process:
Notes on construction, quilting patterns.
Drawing a general outline onto the batting.
Sewing the pieces directly onto the batting, as part of a quilt-as-you-go technique.
The first one with all three layers (top, batting backing) assembled and quilted.
Quilting lines look so cool on the back.
Moving down the assembly line...
Finished blocks, photographed on a convenient hedge.
Quilting creates such wonderful textures.
More stitches. I'm not a fan of stitch-in-the-ditch, but I love getting right up toward those ditches.
home-blocks-closeup-3-500
Hand-finished binding, always perfectly imperfect.
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Pivoting
This post first appeared on my Patreon page. Join today to see everything first!
"Whatever happened to Spweet?* Are they still aggregating Kuhfwangles?" "No, they pivoted."
In the tech startup world, pivoting is "a structured course correction designed to test a new fundamental hypothesis about the product, strategy, and engine of growth." (source)
Or to paraphrase Steve Blank: Fire the plan, not the CEO.
I painted so hard in 2016. And 2015, and 2014, and on back. I love the paintings I painted. But I'm tired of painting.
They Grow Around Roads. Acrylic on canvas, 24 x 24 inches, 2015 by Sarah Atlee. Available at Ro2 Art.
I've been a painter for 20 years. It's been my pastime, my course of study, my profession, and a big part of my identity. It's been easy to answer the question,
"So, what kind of art do you do?"
Well, that's a good question. Right now, I'm not interested in making paintings. So how can I tell people I'm a painter? You know what I'm doing now? I make quilts.
Why Make Quilts?
Quilts inhabit an interesting space between two and three dimensions, comprising both image and object.
Quilts are largely functional works of art, meant to be touched, used, and worn over time. I make quilts that should be used - no hands-off museum mentality here.
Across cultures worldwide, quilts are created to mark time and record history, both public and private. We make quilts to commemorate birth, marriage, transition, sickness, even death. A quilt can simultaneously signify the history of one person and an entire people.
Quilts are a way to make old materials new again. They embody the age-old practice of making do, ever more relevant in our consumer culture.
Are quilts art? The debate plods along. I have the opportunity to expand the conversation about “craft” or “functional art” in “fine art” spaces. As one educated in the traditional art school system, making quilts feels at once radical and yet completely appropriate. Of course quilts are art!
Have I hung up my paintbrushes for good? Certainly not. I need some time to create in this other vein. I think I will return to painting through some side door that I can't see just now. It's going to take new practices and strategies to continue my art business with this new hat on. I'm definitely up for the challenge.
So now, when someone asks, "What kind of art do you do?" I tell them: I make quilts.
I'm a quilter, y'all.
* Okay, you would not believe how many nonsense words I auditioned for this sentence, but it turns out they are already in use, most of them as tech startups. Rejected words include: sploof, tweenge, treeve, alboo, florp, gloove, traeve, fween, spang, splot, ofen, crangle...
Lap Work
Lap Work. Acrylic on canvas, 20 x 16 inches, 2016 by Sarah Atlee. $895
For purchase inquiries, contact Cerulean Gallery at 214.564.1199 or caroline@theceruleangallery.com.
Note: This entry first appeared on my Patreon page. Join to see the newest news and receive art rewards!
What is this a painting of?
Well, it's my lap. My lap while I was working on hand-binding a quilt. See the pins? Can you spot the needle and thread? That's the back of the quilt I was finishing.
The burgundy in the upper left is my yoga pants'ed leg. (I'm wearing those pants right now. How about that?) Below that, the hem of a sundress. The lower portion of the painting is dominated by my 100% cotton, Fair Trade, hand-woven-in-Guatemala apron. (Thanks, Mom!)
Did I paint all those little squiggles by hand? You bet I did. Here's a close-up:
I'm very pleased with how this painting turned out. Some of them just come out right on the first try - this is one of those.
Coming Soon
Lap Work will be in my next major exhibition at Cerulean Gallery (Amarillo, Texas) which opens on September 16, 2016. I'd love to see you there!
Making Hay
Let us make hay while the sun shines.- Miguel de Cervantes, Don Quixote de la Mancha
So I had a pile of reds, golds, and browns, culled from the donated fabric bin at the meeting of Community First! Quilters. The fields are ripe, they said - it's harvest time.
The front and back are both improvised strip-piecing. The emerging pattern reminded me of aerial photographs of farmland.
See the burgundy? It was in my fabric stash for ages. It was just waiting for that exquisite harvest-gold botanical print to pair with.
Like, hey, what's up cheese? I'm that wine you've been thirsting after.
This spring-green patch was left over from a previous quilt.
Making Hay was my first ever longarm quilting experience. Many thanks to Jessica and Ellie at The Cotton Cupboard for their patient teaching!
What is Modern Quilting? Learn more about Mobile Loaves & Fishes What is the Community First! Village? Contribute your quilting skills to the Community First! Quilters
As the Bat Flies
As the Bat Flies
Improvisational patchwork quilt created for Community First!
Sarah Atlee, 2015
What is Modern Quilting? Learn more about Mobile Loaves & Fishes What is the Community First! Village? Contribute your quilting skills to the Community First! Quilters
The Community First! Quilters group relies heavily on donated fabrics. I love the challenge of taking colors and prints that don't look like they should go together... and making them go together.
This is my variation on the traditional Flying Geese quilt block. I call it Flying Bats. See the grey print with the little insects? Bats eat insects. There you go.
Do you know about Austin's bat colony?
I was surprised at how difficult it was to make these blocks come out how I'd imagined. After a lot of trial and some error, I settled into a method.
The back.
Stitching detail. This was my second-ever quilt finished on a longarm machine. While I don't yet feel entirely adept at the process, I enjoy the speed and flexibility of free-motion quilting.
Whee!