TSWG Newsletter Sept 2016

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TSWG Newsletter Sept 2016 October 2016 Tzouhalem Spinners and Weavers Guild Newsletter Hello Spinners and Weavers, With a winter of woolly adventures before us, Toni Gatland wanted to share this beautiful whimsical little video “Revolution”, created by Hansen crafts on the evolution of spinning. Just follow this link: http://hansencrafts.com/a-revolution- in-handspinning/ Hansen Crafts LLC, 710 E Park Avenue, Port Townsend, WA 98368 Enjoy! Cynara 1 October Show and Tell Sandi D’s woolly woodpecker and turtle, and Carol A’s nuthatch. 2 Carol A, Marion and Tammi shared results of indigo dyeing workshop in Cynara’s kitchen. 3 More indigo adventures: Shibori from Jill who attended the Natural Dyeing workshop at Jane Stafford’s. Below, Kazuko’s purchased shibori purse. 4 Lois finished this lovely child’s cardigan from leftover yarn. and Marion is knitting a remake of a favourite hat that had a bit of mouse damage. 5 Jill and Cynara brought fabric woven with plans to sew clothing. Jill’s lovely green striped project will be inspired by the knit wear book - a great publication. Cynara wove two pieces of linen on the same block twill threading to build an interesting top. The green silk was the result of fresh indigo leaf dyeing. 6 Evid took Val Galvin’s rug braiding workshop, and is loving it. Here she is modeling her basket. Marion shared her Krokbragd woven sample Gudrun is working on an interesting crochet scarf using specific lengths of coloured yarn. Carol brought two lovely skeins of her handspun which she will donate to Providence Farm. 7 Kazuko shared a fun assortment of bags all made from recycled clothing which she purchased in Japan, as well as the beaded crayon bag that she bought from a Shawnigan Lake artist. Evid shared a beautiful knitted wire belt that she found. 8 America shared this interesting tapestry from Bolivia. It appears to be woven, but is actually dyed roving placed between warp threads and machine stitched down in horizontal rows. She also shared the pieces she has woven and knit to make a pair of slippers - woven toe and sole, and knitted heel. 9 Tammi shared with us a photo of the amazing tapestries which she went to see at Coventry Cathedral, England.. Coventry Cathedral Tapestry The Christ in Glory, Graham Sutherland’s iconic masterpiece at Coventry Cathedral, is 75ft-high and is one of the world’s largest tapestries. Weighing just over a ton, Christ in Glory was over 8 years in the making and took 10 weavers more than two years to complete. Artist Graham Sutherland was invited by Basil Spence, the architect of Coventry Cathedral, to design the tapestry - which he accepted in 1952. By early 1958, the design was accepted by the church authorities and sent to France, in preparation for the weaving. Making a tapestry that big required a loom 40ft wide and only a few workshops could accommodate a work of this size. The firm of Pinton Freres in France was chosen for the enormous task. The loom used to make ‘Christ in Glory’ consisted of two large tree trunks. It was set up in a room allowing only 2 inches to spare either side. Most of the wool came from Australia and photographic enlargements were made of the design so that the weavers could have a pattern to help with the hand dyeing of more than 900 different colours. Coventry Cathedral’s world famous tapestry has 7,000 warp threads in the 38 feet width, giving about 15 threads per inch, and about 144 stitches per square inch. It was flown to England and hung on large bronze bails 12 inches from the wall before the consecration of the new cathedral in May 1962. The tapestry was hung away from the wall to allow for the effect of atmospheric changes on the wool. It is guaranteed fade-proof and moth-proof for 500 years. 10 Coventry Tapestry The 'Coventry Tapestry' is the highlight of the historic collections at St. Mary's Guildhall, and is widely recognized as one of the rarest and most important examples of this art in the country. Manufactured around the years 1495 to 1500, its significance lies not just in its age and remarkable state of preservation, but also in the fact that, incredibly, it remains hanging on the very wall for which it was created more than five hundred years ago. At more than nine metres wide and three metres high, this magnificent artwork dominates the north wall of the Great Hall, and is testament to both the skill of its Flemish weavers, and the wealth of the city of Coventry at the end of the fifteenth century. The scene portrayed includes seventy five individual characters, principally members of a Royal court, angels, saints and apostles, with an image of the Virgin Mary at its centre, and incorporates numerous examples of symbolism and hidden meaning, some of which remain unexplained. It has even been observed that light from the west windows specifically illuminates the head of the Virgin Mary at certain times of the year, either a strange co-incidence or an inspired feature of the original design. 11 Evid always finds interesting books at the library to share. 12 Textile Evening October with Val Galvin Val Galvin aka the happy hooker (Renditions in Rags) gave a tremendously inspirational overview of her hooking and braiding artistry. 13 Fleece and Fibre Festival Joanne R shared this pre-chaos photo of the TSWG booth. The Festival is so well attended that it’s fairly impossible to see anything except the frenzied fibre fixated shoppers. Despite the stormy weather, the event was well attended. 14.
Recommended publications
  • The Art Collection of Peter Watson (1908–1956)
    099-105dnh 10 Clark Watson collection_baj gs 28/09/2015 15:10 Page 101 The BRITISH ART Journal Volume XVI, No. 2 The art collection of Peter Watson (1908–1956) Adrian Clark 9 The co-author of a ously been assembled. Generally speaking, he only collected new the work of non-British artists until the War, when circum- biography of Peter stances forced him to live in London for a prolonged period and Watson identifies the he became familiar with the contemporary British art world. works of art in his collection: Adrian The Russian émigré artist Pavel Tchelitchev was one of the Clark and Jeremy first artists whose works Watson began to collect, buying a Dronfield, Peter picture by him at an exhibition in London as early as July Watson, Queer Saint. 193210 (when Watson was twenty-three).11 Then in February The cultured life of and March 1933 Watson bought pictures by him from Tooth’s Peter Watson who 12 shook 20th-century in London. Having lived in Paris for considerable periods in art and shocked high the second half of the 1930s and got to know the contempo- society, John Blake rary French art scene, Watson left Paris for London at the start Publishing Ltd, of the War and subsequently dispatched to America for safe- pp415, £25 13 ISBN 978-1784186005 keeping Picasso’s La Femme Lisant of 1934. The picture came under the control of his boyfriend Denham Fouts.14 eter Watson According to Isherwood’s thinly veiled fictional account,15 (1908–1956) Fouts sold the picture to someone he met at a party for was of consid- P $9,500.16 Watson took with him few, if any, pictures from Paris erable cultural to London and he left a Romanian friend, Sherban Sidery, to significance in the look after his empty flat at 44 rue du Bac in the VIIe mid-20th-century art arrondissement.
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  • THE CHURCHILLIAN Churchill Society of Tennessee June 2019
    THE CHURCHILLIAN Churchill Society of Tennessee June 2019 th D-DAY 75 Anniversary June 22, 1944 Winston Churchill visits the beaches of Normandy Inside this issue: Upcoming Events: Churchill’s Tour of the Normandy Beaches Summer Tea on July 20, 2019 and D-Day announcement to Parliament September 28, 2019 - Fall Session and Banquet, From the President - Jim Drury At the Brentwood Country Club Behind the Photo – Churchill’s Iconic Photograph The Graham Sutherland “Churchill Portrait” by Celia Lee Book Review - Robin Sinclair The Churchillian Page 1 Churchill’s visit to the Normandy beaches on June 22, 1944 pictures from “World War II Today” Churchill and Monty on the beach at Normandy Lighting up and rolling out! FM Sir Allen Brook, Mr. Churchill, FM Montgomery LTG Simonds, LTG Dempsey, Churchill and Monty Churchill boarding HMS Kelvin off the Normandy Coast Churchill and FM Sir Allen Brook The Churchillian Page 2 This is Prime Minister Churchill’s announcement to members of Parliament that the D-Day invasion had begun. I have to announce to the House that during the night and the early hours of this morning the first of the series of landings in force upon the European Continent has taken place. In this case the liberating assault fell upon the coast of France. An immense armada of upwards of 4,000 ships, together with several thousand smaller craft, crossed the Channel. Massed airborne landings have been successfully effected behind the enemy lines and landings on the beaches are proceeding at various points at the present time. The fire of the shore batteries has been largely quelled.
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  • Graham Sutherland (1903-1980) Biographical Notes
    Graham Sutherland (1903-1980) Biographical Notes Graham Sutherland was born in London the son of Vivian Sutherland, a barrister who later became a civil servant. Around 1910 the family moved to live at Sutton in Surrey and Sutherland became a pupil at a preparatory school there before attending Epsom College. During 1919-20 he studied mathematics at Battersea Polytechnic with a view to training as an engineer and in 1920-21 duly became an engineering apprentice at Derby with the Midland Railway Company. However Sutherland really wished to become an artist and between 1921 and 1926 was a student at Goldsmith’s College of Art in London where he specialised in etching. He quickly became an accomplished etcher and his first one-man exhibition of engravings and drawings was held at the Twenty-One Gallery, London in 1924. He was made an associate member of the Royal Society of Painter Etchers & Engravers the following year. His early etchings, such as Lammas (1926), were clearly influenced by the idyllic, visionary rural landscapes of Samuel Palmer (1805-1881). In 1926 Sutherland converted to Roman Catholicism and the next year married Kathleen Barry who was from a catholic family. The couple went to live in Kent and around that time Sutherland commenced teaching for two days a week at Chelsea School of Art, a post he held until 1939. Initially Sutherland had made a reasonably comfortable living from selling etchings and teaching but demand for the former greatly diminished during the worldwide economic depression around 1930. Consequently he had to find fresh commercial outlets for his art and he was greatly assisted in this search by the business contacts of his lifelong friend, the graphic designer, Milner Gray.
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  • Student Handout
    Open Arts Objects Open Arts Archive http://www.openartsarchive.org/open-arts-objects Presenter: Veronica Davies Object: Catalogue - War Pictures at the National Gallery (1942) Dr Veronica Davies examines a catalogue produced for an exhibition of war artists' work at the National Gallery in 1942 This video will help you think about art in wartime, how works of art are exhibited, and what a catalogue might tell us about a historical exhibition, the circumstances in which it was produced and the kind of art that was on show. Before watching the film Before you watch the video, think about and discuss the following questions: 1. What do you know about the period of World War Two (1939-45) in Britain? 2. What do you think would be the difficulties faced by artists employed as war artists? 3. What do you think would be the difficulties in putting on an exhibition during war time? After watching the film 1. Questions for discussion and debate The War Artists’ Advisory Committee (WAAC) was part of the wartime Ministry of Information, which, among other things, was tasked with raising public morale and providing propaganda. a. Are these appropriate roles for art? b. Should art ever be censored? 2. Looking closer a. The two works highlighted in the video are both now in the Imperial War Museum, which was given a large proportion of the output of the WAAC when the war was over. Kenneth Rowntree CEMA Concert, Isle of Dogs http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/23463 Michael Ford War weapons week in Country Town http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/9684 Choose one of them, and find out what you can about it from the linked web page.
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  • Tambimuttu: Re-Inventing the Art of Poetry Illustration
    Tambimuttu: Re-Inventing the Art of Poetry Illustration Sandra Boselli In 1939, Meary James Thurairajah Tambimuttu, a young poet from Ceylon1 who had recently arrived in London, founded the journal Poetry London, which quickly became ‘the most important poetry publication’2 of the war years. Four years later, in 1943, with the financial backing of the publishers Nicholson & Watson, he launched his book imprint Editions Poetry London (PL). A characteristic feature of both his magazine and poetry books was their inclusion of bespoke illustrations – commissioned from established or emerging artists of the day – that went beyond mere decoration. In the most successful pairings of poet and artist, the combination of word and image achieved a unified purpose despite the apparent mismatch between poems and illustrations, consonant with his credo that ‘it is contrast that teaches us the nature of truth’.3 Tambimuttu’s thought-provoking choice of poems and visual works combined with his belief ‘in the unity of the various arts’,4 enabled the editor to offer his readers first-rate poetry set within aesthetically pleasing books and a periodical in complete contrast to the prosaic-looking literary magazines of the 1930s. Yet, little has been written on this prominent wartime editor who gave so much pleasure to his readers and who was, undoubtedly, an inspiration to other contemporary editors.5 The objective of this article, therefore, is to examine the innovations introduced by Tambimuttu in his publications and to address influences that would have shaped his editorial policy. Much has been written about the controversies that arose in the wake of his departure from Britain in 1949, but little on the nature and scope of his achievements during the ten years spent in London as a successful editor.
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  • “Just What Was It That Made U.S. Art So Different, So Appealing?”
    “JUST WHAT WAS IT THAT MADE U.S. ART SO DIFFERENT, SO APPEALING?”: CASE STUDIES OF THE CRITICAL RECEPTION OF AMERICAN AVANT-GARDE PAINTING IN LONDON, 1950-1964 by FRANK G. SPICER III Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements For the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Dissertation Adviser: Dr. Ellen G. Landau Department of Art History and Art CASE WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY May, 2009 CASE WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES We hereby approve the thesis/dissertation of Frank G. Spicer III ______________________________________________________ Doctor of Philosophy candidate for the ________________________________degree *. Dr. Ellen G. Landau (signed)_______________________________________________ (chair of the committee) ________________________________________________Dr. Anne Helmreich Dr. Henry Adams ________________________________________________ Dr. Kurt Koenigsberger ________________________________________________ ________________________________________________ ________________________________________________ December 18, 2008 (date) _______________________ *We also certify that written approval has been obtained for any proprietary material contained therein. Table of Contents List of Figures 2 Acknowledgements 7 Abstract 12 Introduction 14 Chapter I. Historiography of Secondary Literature 23 II. The London Milieu 49 III. The Early Period: 1946/1950-55 73 IV. The Middle Period: 1956-59: Part 1, The Tate 94 V. The Middle Period: 1956-59: Part 2 127 VI. The Later Period: 1960-1962 171 VII. The Later Period: 1963-64: Part 1 213 VIII. The Later Period: 1963-64: Part 2 250 Concluding Remarks 286 Figures 299 Bibliography 384 1 List of Figures Fig. 1 Richard Hamilton Just What Is It That Makes Today’s Homes So Different, So Appealing? (1956) Fig. 2 Modern Art in the United States Catalogue Cover Fig. 3 The New American Painting Catalogue Cover Fig.
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  • Graham Sutherland (1903-80)
    Coventry Cathedral Schools Team Resources GRAHAM SUTHERLAND (1903-80) LIFE Sutherland, born in London, trained initially as a railway engineer; and then as an artist (in etching and engraving) at Goldsmith's College, (1921-6). From 1928-39 he taught at Chelsea School of Art. His experiences during the war as a war artist altered his style. He moved from romanticism (he had as a student been heavily influenced by Samuel Palmer) to a harsher, spiky approach reflecting the horrors of war. He undertook several religious paintings (see below) before he accepted the commission for the Coventry Tapestry. He had strong links with Pembrokeshire (which influenced his work) and with France (where he bought a house in 1955). COVENTRY TAPESTRY – 1962 74'8" x 38' Basil Spence had included a tapestry depicting the Crucifixion to go behind the altar in his initial designs for the new cathedral at Coventry. He had seen (and bought) Sutherland's tapestry Wading Birds and liked his Northampton Crucifixion and so invited Sutherland in 1951 to undertake the Tapestry for Coventry. Sutherland worked (intermittently for he had many other commissions) at the tapestry for ten years. BRIEFS / INFLUENCES / SOURCES Briefs Sutherland had to work within guidelines provided by Spence and by the Cathedral authorities. Both wanted a design which would speak to the ordinary person and not something highly abstract. Spence told him he wanted the tapestry to depict Christ in glory in the Tetramorph (four forms) with the marks of suffering (ie. the wounds from the nails hammered through Jesus' feet and hands) visible.
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  • British Neo-Romanticism 10 June – 24 September 2017
    PRESS RELEASE 2017 A Different Light: British Neo-Romanticism 10 June – 24 September 2017 In summer 2017, Pallant House Gallery will present an exhibition on British Neo-Romanticism, exploring the lyrical, mystical and often poetic work of a group of young artists during and just after the Second World War. This exhibition explores the personal and artistic journeys taken by Paul Nash, John Piper, Graham Sutherland, Prunella Clough, Robert Colquhoun, John Craxton, , Robert MacBryde, and Keith Vaughan. The display draws from Pallant House Gallery’s permanent collection of 20th century Modern British art and coincides with a major exhibition on John Minton, a contemporary and friend to many of these artists . The term ‘Neo-Romanticism’ was first used in the early 1940s to loosely define the work of a group of artists who had a personal and often poetical identification with nature. Although never an organised movement there was a shared interest in the work of Romantic British visionaries such as William Blake (1757 – 1827) and Samuel Palmer (1805 – 1881) especially amongst the older generation of artists; Paul Nash (1889 – 1946), Graham Sutherland (1903 – 1980) and John Piper (1903 – 1992). Along with a number of younger artists including John Craxton (1922 – 2009) and Keith Vaughan (1912 – 1977) they also responded to the work of modern European art movements such as Cubism and Surrealism. Graham Sutherland, Two Trees, 1947, Ink and wash with black chalk on paper, Pallant House Gallery, Chichester During the long, culturally isolated years of the Second (Hussey Bequest, Chichester District Council, 1985) © The World War, these artists drew inspiration from a estate of Graham Sutherland romantic spirit found within British art.
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  • Stephen Ongpin Fine Art
    STEPHEN ONGPIN FINE ART GRAHAM SUTHERLAND, OM London 1903-1980 London Teeming Pit Charcoal, black ink, watercolour, gouache and pastel on paper, laid down on board. 510 x 385 mm. (20 1/8 x 15 1/8 in.) Provenance Anonymous sale (‘A Collection of Works by Graham Sutherland, O.M.’), London, Sotheby’s, 5 April 2000, lot 95 Peter Nahum, London His sale, London, Christie’s South Kensington, 15 November 2006, lot 196 Private collection, London. Literature Roberto Tassi, Sutherland: The wartime drawings, Milan, 1979, p.127, fig.122 (with incorrect dimensions). Colin Harrison et al, Great British Drawings, exhibition catalogue, Oxford, Ashmolean Museum, 2015, p.258, under no.100, note 3 (entry by Katherine Wodehouse). Exhibited London, Olympia, Graham Sutherland: Olympia Loan Exhibition, February - March 2003, no. GS188. In 1938 Graham Sutherland’s friend and mentor Sir Kenneth Clark was appointed head of the War Artists Advisory Committee, and he engaged Sutherland as an official War Artist from 1940 to 1945. Sutherland first depicted scenes of bomb damage in London, then turned his attention to studies of industrial production on the home front; tin mining in Cornwall, blast furnaces in South Wales, open cast coal mining and limestone quarrying. Most of his works from this period were acquired by the War Artist’s Advisory Commission and presented to museums around the country. At the end of September 1941 Sutherland was sent to make drawings of the large blast furnaces at the Guest, Keen and Baldwin Steel Works in Cardiff. The artist was fascinated by the almost alchemical processes in steel manufacturing, and by the huge furnaces and crucibles, the molten steel and the red and yellow glow of the huge flames.
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  • Visual Narratives of History a Close Reading Into the Portrayal of World
    International Journal of Art and Art History December 2017, Vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 44-105 ISSN: 2374-2321 (Print), 2374-233X (Online) Copyright © The Author(s).All Rights Reserved. Published by American Research Institute for Policy Development DOI: 10.15640/ijaah.v5n2p5 URL: https://doi.org/10.15640/ijaah.v5n2p5 Visual Narratives of History A Close Reading into the Portrayal of World War II in the Paintings of Paul Nash, Eric Kennington and Graham Sutherland: Aptitude for Report or Tendency to Mislead. Nada Ben Hammouda1 Abstract The present thesis aims at providing an insight on the extent to which official British war paintings were capable of producing a pictorial record of Britain during World War Two. Through a qualitative research approach and a comprehensive analysis of selected paintings, this dissertation will point out the strengths and weaknesses of using art as a tool of reportage. The focus will be mainly centralized on three painters: Paul Nash, Eric Kennington and Graham Sutherland who signed contracts as official artists for the War Artists Advisory Committee. A comprehensive analysis will allude to both the propagandist as well as the informative task these paintings carried on. The analysis of selected paintings will be the backbone of this dissertation. Iconology will be applied to read artworks and assess their historical value. This study will also involve a comparison between artists in terms of style, backgrounds and experiences. Similarities as well as disparities will be pointed out and their effect on the artistic output will be examined. Despite not being the focal point of this research, this comparison will highlight the reasons why some art may be referred to as a record of events and other may not.
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  • 'Kenneth Clark's Design Advocacy
    ‘The Exercise of a Peculiar Art-Skill”: Kenneth Clark’s Design Advocacy and the Council of Industrial Design Abstract This article considers the involvement of the art historian Kenneth Clark in design policy and promotion during the 1930s and 1940s, and particularly his association with the Council of Industrial Design, at a time when the role of design was particularly prominent in Britain’s war effort and post-war planning. Clark’s activities have not to date received detailed attention from either art- or design-historians. Drawing heavily on unpublished material from Clark’s archive1 and other collections, it considers Clark’s attitude and contribution to design, in the context of his own wider arts agenda, as well as the wider debates of the time about ‘good design’ and modernism. Clark’s somewhat abrupt withdrawal the Council, and from a significant engagement with design, marks a shift in his thinking about the relationship between art and design and their place in society. In November 1946, Sir Kenneth Clark, former Director of the National Gallery, London, wrote a letter resigning from his position as a member of the Council of Industrial Design (CoID), on which he had served since its establishment in 1944. The letter was to Sir Thomas Barlow, the Council’s Chairman. After the usual formalities of expressions of regret, and reference to the achievements of the Council - “I was proud to have been connected with the birth of an institution which has justified itself to such an extraordinary degree” – Clark added: “As a valediction, I enclose a quotation from Ruskin which, as usual, contains a great but unpalatable truth”.
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  • Graham Sutherland's Christ in Glory Making a Masterpiece: Graham Sutherland's Christ in Glory
    Exhibition Touring Pack Making a Masterpiece: Graham Sutherland's Christ in Glory Making a Masterpiece: Graham Sutherland's Christ in Glory Graham Sutherland is one of the most significant British artists of the 20th century. His body of work includes etchings and drawings, posters, portraits and book illustrations. He is probably best known for his imaginative landscape paintings, many of which were inspired by the Welsh countryside and especially Pembrokeshire. Sutherland was an official war artist in the Second World War painting scenes of bomb devastation and work in mines and foundries. He later moved onto religious subjects and was commissioned to paint the Crucifixion for St Matthew's Church in Northampton. This exhibition explores the creative process undertaken by Sutherland to design the monumental tapestry which hangs behind the altar of Coventry Cathedral, and tells the story of the challenges and triumphs he faced in the creation of his masterpiece. The cathedral, designed by Sir Basil Spence and consecrated by the Queen in 1962, is an icon of modern British design and Sutherland's tapestry is one of its most stunning features. The exhibition showcases the Herbert's collection of studies made by Sutherland for the tapestry design. There are four sections in the exhibition: Building the New Cathedral explores Basil Spence's vision for the new cathedral. The Commission looks at the concept for the tapestry and why Sutherland was chosen to execute it. The Design Process examines in detail the evolution of Sutherland's design for the tapestry against the background of his dealings with the cathedral authorities.
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