Showing posts with label thread. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thread. Show all posts

Sunday, 21 October 2012

SORRY, I AM RIGHT-BRAINED!

This work answers the questions I posed in my previous post

I have stitched a self portrait using what seems to be a juxtaposition of two different techniques, however, the red paint-like-drops sit on what was the actual back of my initial piece, which has now become the front. Here, the black thread draws a very sketchy line, but in fact the other side shows the opposite: a very controlled pointillist contour. 

By doing this, I want to bring together the two methods, the unconscious and the conscious stitching, both on the same surface. This allows me to enhance the texture and colour of the upper right hand side of my face and, therefore, draw attention - in a symbolic way - to the functionality of that same side of the brain, where any creative process begins. 

In this case, the eye itself has a very important relevance, for it is, in philosophical and pictorial terms, the connection to the soul; it also places an emphasis on the actual observational process related to creativity. 

VoilĂ !


Thread on linen (work in progress), thread on linen, 6" hoop
- front -


'La CreativitĂ ' (finished), thread on linen, 6" hoop


- back -


Please see my: 'You are two-faced...' post.


Sunday, 5 August 2012

'BLUE MEDAL'

This is the documentation of my latest stitching work. It is not finished yet, but what I want to show here is the small embroidery hoop which stretches the fabric and leaves it in place. It frames the piece and also makes it ready for hanging:




Saturday, 30 June 2012

YOU ARE TWO-FACED...

These are images of the reverse of some of my stitching works. I think they are visually very interesting considering that the patterns created are unintentional.








Sunday, 29 April 2012

STITCHING DROPS

My aim is to mimic pictorial accidents, or occurrences, by replacing altogether the most fundamental medium; in my paintings, in fact, there is no trace of paint yet its presence is still traceable. The explanation to this lies in the long process of combining and then eliminating, one by one, all the media involved in my work at a particular moment in time, until paint itself was no longer needed, for its essence had been transposed onto the other compositional elements of my work, most of all: thread.

'Zeffiretto', thread on linen, 20 x 20cm, SOLD


'The way I see it, if you want the rainbow, you have to put up with the rain', 
Thread on canvas, 92 x 92cm


As an important and foremost contingent aspect of my practice, time is essential for the development of my ideas of imitation, however, it becomes the contrasting element of my work, for the execution of a paint drop, which is normally created in seconds, takes much longer when reproduced by stitching its features on canvas. 


'The Fountain of Good', 
Thread on canvas, 
20 x 20cm, SOLD


I wanted to use paint's density and texture, but without actually painting.