Showing posts with label textile art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label textile art. Show all posts

Wednesday, 31 May 2017

Local yarn bombing

There’s been much to enjoy outdoors recently and not only naturewise. For the two last weeks in May, a stretch of the downtown riverbank was once again adorned with a Knit ‘n’ Tag event. This time the theme was ‘My Finland’ to celebrate the centenary year of our country’s independence.








In addition to knitting and crocheting, diverse other kinds of handicraft techniques were also presented in the creations mounted on the trees: weaving, sewing, quilting, appliqué, even macramé and felting.









I couldn’t help feeling some of the pieces had been just patched together out of a pile of random items, which is of course a perfectly valid way to demonstrate each contributor’s individual relationship to crafting. However, I always prefer those with a more tight-knit approach to the theme, especially those designed to the finest detail taking every lump and bump on the tree trunk into account.






My favourite creation entitled The Landscape of my Childhood was one of those holistic pieces of art. The swellings on the trunk had become clouds. An orange sun was resting where the trunk branched out into three.  There was even an owl sitting in a hollow.











My other favourites included a couple of striped pieces just because of their colourful beauty, the wrap of crocheted portraits because of the brilliant idea, and the piece with a string of lemons because of the positive message. When life gives you lemons use them to make lemonade the last one was indicating. Some optimism would certainly be welcome for a nation with ‘a brutal sense of realism’ as Jared Diamond characterises our people. It is naturally a strength in our kind of a big picture, but many of us could use a generous dose of joviality in the less grave things.









I didn’t know about the event beforehand and will try to keep better track in the future to consider reserving a tree for myself next time. I took most of the photos around mid-May when the riverside lindens showed hardly any shoots yet. Now the scenes are completely transformed into an intoxicating greenery, my favourite season under the sun.

Have a look also at my post of the previous yarn bombing event in 2015 here.





Tuesday, 15 April 2014

Out of jackets and shirts

'Sometimes Life is Beautiful'; men's jacket and shirts.




Textile enthusiast as I am, some time ago I made the 45-min drive to Helsinki for the sole purpose of seeing some pieces of art created out of second-hand garments. Well, there were some errands to run but they could have waited unlike the exhibition of the Finnish artist Kaarina Kaikkonen that was closing soon at the Galerie Forsblom.

'Night Hawkmoth'; men's jacket and a hook.
'As a Birch I was Calm'; a series of seven works out of men's shirts.
During her 30-year career, Kaikkonen has grown into one of brightest stars in the Finnish art world. Her impressive and thought-provoking site-specific works installed outdoors or in other large public places most often using hundreds of recycled pieces of clothing have brought her wide international acclaim.

'Whereabouts'; men's jackets.


Probably the most beloved of her works has been the ‘Way’, a powerful installation of 3000 men’s jackets on the stairs to the Helsinki Cathedral she made in 2000 (photo here).

'Time for the Last Waltz'; men's shirts.


The latest one of Kaikkonen’s public projects, a couple of dozen long colourful ‘clothes lines’ with all kinds of shirts hanging on them, was installed in the hall of the CentroCentro exhibition space at the Palacio de Cibeles, the current city hall of Madrid, in connection with the ARCO Madrid International Contemporary Art Fair in February. The work entitled ‘Touching the Sky’ will stay there until August (some photos here).

Six works of the 'Time to Sprout' series of seven sculptures each made of a men's jacket and shirts.


Last October when we spent a few days in Arezzo in Tuscany (I must post about that one day) we had no idea two clothing installations by Kaarina Kaikkonen had been adorning the old town centre there through the summer. She was one of the 40 female artists invited to the first ICASTICA international art exhibition held in Arezzo where she was awarded the first prize (photo here).


The seventh piece of the 'Time to Sprout' series,
The sculptures and installations on show at the Helsinki exhibition were naturally more modest. Nevertheless, to me most of them were similarly multi-dimensional and philosophical as Kaikkonen’s monumental environmental art projects.



'Special Personality'; pressed jacket in frames.
There were sprouting garments, flowering garments, framed garments and packed garments, each one relating to the spectrum of human life in one way or another. There were also a few pieces with clothes of a little girl. By the look of it, the artist (born in 1952) is grandmother now. 

'Don't Leave me'; a girl's dress rotating on air.


'Snow White'.


I felt she was saying it is time for us all to grow, even if it were difficult and painful. I felt this exhibition expressed, in addition to her respect for those that have already gone, her hope in the coming generations. Out of our jackets and shirts could sprout something more reasonable and just, something more humane. I do hope so.


Apologies for the quality of the photos. When away from home, I am still at the mercy of my point-and-shoot camera.

Detail of 'Hope', made of a men's jacket, shirts and a dress.