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Opening Reception February 4: Woodland Pattern Exhibits Works By Anne Kingsbury
by Mary Vuk
Repetition & Discipline: Life Through Lists
is an exhibition of beaded and/or quilted
work by Anne Kingsbury, fiber artist and
executive director of Woodland Pattern. The
exhibition will continue until March 15 at
the Woodland Pattern Book Center Gallery,
720 East Locust Street, with an opening
reception from 1 to 4 pm, February 4.
The exhibit consists of 10 beaded and/or
quilted works, which are accompanied by
a limited edition of 33 reproduced journal
pages written by Kingsbury over the
past quarter century. There also is some
Woodland Pattern memorabilia on display,
which accompanies the artwork and journal
pages.
The densely-filled journal pages include
drawings that sometimes served as the basis
for Kingsbury’s formal artwork, along with
daily logs of the time she spent each day
doing various tasks – relating to working on
her art, or to housework or a range of other
activities and engagements.
Kingsbury does not seem to believe in
wasting time. Or space, for that matter:
Timed entries appear side-by-side with
drawings, clothing designs, telephone
numbers, addresses, garment measurements,
and pinochle and scrabble scores. Despite
the day-to-day ordinariness of the jottings,
one finds oneself drawn in by them. Some
of the entries and drawings are in a vertical
orientation, some are sideways – others
seem to veer off in their own direction.
The edges of the entries are irregular – but
there is a compact fitting together of pieces
– somewhat like a jigsaw puzzle.
Her formal artwork is similarly complex and
tightly stitched. The beaded work is done
with small beads of different colors and
sizes. It has a rich density with respect to
the colors and shapes Kingsbury uses in her
designs and representations. This density is
intensified by the words she stitches into her
designs.
On the front of a small handbag, for example,
she beads the word LUCK, preceded by
a graphic letter P, which forms the word
PLUCK. On the top of the bag’s shoulder
strap, is the word OPPORTUNITY. On one
side of the strap, is the word TIME; on the
other, TOIL.
I asked Kingsbury if she ever dared use the
purse after all the hard work that went into
making it. She said that she did, indeed, use
it and showed me some leftover food and
beverage coupons from the 2006 Indian
Summer Festival still inside from the last
time the purse had an outing. In fact, when
I really considered it, the beaded bag looked
quite sturdy and functional, although it
seemed extravagant in its intricacy and
beauty.
On another beaded cutout, this one in the
shape of a woman, Kingsbury emblazoned
the word REPETITION on the left arm,
and DISCIPLINE on the right arm; the
word STITCHES on the left foot, the word
SECONDS on the right foot.
Repetition and discipline “seem to come into
the kind of work I like to do,” Kingsbury said.
“Beading is repetitive. Quilting is repetitive.
The repetitive motion after a while becomes
a kind of meditation.”
The relationship between work and time
is not lost on Kingsbury. A charming
beaded rabbit bears lines written by Emily
Dickinson: LUCK IS NOT CHANCE IT’S
TOIL. FORTUNE’S EXPENSIVE SMILE IS
EARNED. [punctuation added]
Despite the utilitarian emphasis on work,
time, discipline and success in the works,
there is also a storybook quality to them. For
example, in “Fairytale Quilt,” a wall hanging
with a regal red, gold and green quilted
background, a goat-headed human (made
of ceramic) is surrounded by beaded words:
ONCE UPON A TIME, TIME REWARDED
LABOR, VIRTUE EQUALLED BEAUTY,
WISDOM VALUED KINDRED AND
DAY BY DAY BECAME EVER AFTER.
[punctuation added]
In choosing journal pages to display in
the show, Kingsbury said she looked for
visually interesting pages that contained
drawings that could then be followed
into completed artwork on display.
Kingsbury said she often creates a
drawing on a blank page and then fills
in the surrounding spaces with her
daily logs and other entries.
Kingsbury likes to draw animals and
seems particularly fond of drawing
a character she calls Fairy Beaver. Fairy
Beaver has a number of different personae.
Sometimes Fairy Beaver works her way onto
the journal pages as Arts Administrator who
wears a crown, at other times she is Fairy
Beaver as Happy Homemaker, who pushes
a vacuum cleaner, or she is Fairy Beaver as
Concrete Dancer (with her feet plastered in
concrete), and still other times she is Fairy
Beaver as Artist, with a scissors dangling
from her belt and paintbrush in hand. The
exhibit features a 5x3 foot work entitled
“Fairy Beaver Cope,” which shows the fairy
beaver in three roles – homemaker, artist
and arts administrator.
Also included in the show is a beaded
representation of an entire journal page, as
well as an accordion-fold book, the pages of
which are reprints of journal pages.
Give these works close attention and they’ll
reward you twice – once with the fine detail
and again with the “Aha!” when you see the
big picture.
Ed. Note: Want to read more about Anne
Kingsbury’s art? Check out “Bead by Bead,
Stitch by Stitch,” a review of a Kingsbury
show at Milwaukee’s Peltz Gallery by Jackie
Reid Dettloff, Riverwest Currents, January
2004. Available online.
Riverwest Currents online edition - February, 2007
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