CRAFT OF MAINE - JAN/FEB 2008
Photography Scott Dorrance
On Collaboration: “We
both draw and paint, and our works are executed by either one of us or as a
team—each work continues our visual conversation. We first worked together
screen-printing and assembling fabric at the
On Influences: “Medieval manuscript illumination, the Hudson River School, Surrealism, the graphic design and meaning of flags, textile design, and, of course, the rich history of quiltmaking—we combine both literal and symbolic elements, and merge handcraft and fine art practices.”
On Roots: “
On Technical & Aesthetic Evolutions: “We
screen-print some repeat patterns and have also worked with digitally printing
the dyes on fabric. Our early work focused on a view of the world framed through
ornamentation: decoration, and architectural context, such as over porch
railings and out of windows, place defined through the lens of a man-made
world. Our current work continues to pursue the relationship of humanity and
nature in a more subjective manner.”
For more Frass and Slade:
Sallie Findlay
On Real
Education: “With
art, I am one who self-learns, using books and experiments. My true education
comes from opening my eyes and letting images, smells, sounds, and beauty enter
my soul and come out my hands and fingers.”
On
On One
State & Two Artists: “The greatest influence on my work is the beauty of
On
Progression: “I
began my life as a fiber artist for pleasure and as an antidote to a stressful
life in business. Today, my confidence as an artist has evolved: my stitches
are more sure and even, my color sense takes ever stronger cues from the
seasons, the lines I make now define space and feelings more effectively, and
my spirit speaks in a creative language with greater consistency, complexity,
and range.”
For more
Chris Leith
On
Arriving: “For
15 years, the private girl’s school I taught at in
On
Working: “Most
days begin with working in the dye studio, followed by weaving on my two
Macomber looms from
On
Surprises: “Although
years of working with dyes has given me a certain knowledge of what might
happen colorwise, it’s the surprises produced by pushing things that don’t
necessarily belong together that often results in the most interesting pieces.”
On
Sharing: “One
of the great treasures of living in
For more
Leith: Eggemoggin
Textile Studio, Directions Craft Shows on Mount Desert Island and
Sarah Haskell
On Making The Spirit Seen: “My
woven textile artwork is inspired by the human spirit. I strive to give a
visual image to my emotions and my reactions to world events.”
On How Our Children Change Us: “My
early work was landscape imagery. After the birth of my children, my work began
to be more abstract and focus on the themes of family and community.”
On Coming Home: “I
come from a long line of
On Influences: “Textiles
from other cultures, the use of textiles in spiritual practices throughout
history (i.e., Tibetan prayer flags), myths and stories, and both environmental
(Andy Goldsworthy) and minimalist art (Agnes Martin).”
On the World: “After
the devastation from the tsunami in 2004, I felt compassion and sadness for the
thousands of people that had lost everything dear to them and created The Village series. Then, my Spinning Houses series was created in
response to the two devastating natural phenomena that occurred in the fall of
2005: Hurricane Katrina and the earthquake in
For more Haskell: Sarah
Haskell Studio, group shows at the Kittery Art Association, the
Elizabeth Busch
On Education & Feeling at Home: “I
have a BFA in Painting and Art Education from the Rhode Island School of
Design. Though I’ve lived in
On An Unexpected Inspiration: “The
architect Eaton W. Tarbell greatly influenced my work. Eaton became a mentor
for me, encouraging and supporting me in all my artistic endeavors. He saw
things in my work that I could not and instilled a confidence in me that had
not existed before I worked as a designer for him.”
On Sharpening & Sharing: “
On “Of Course”: “Of
course ideas and imagery evolve with time. I let the process guide me to what
is next to come.”
For more Busch: The Museum of Art and Design,
NYC; the International Quilt Study
Center, Lincoln, Nebraska; quiltstudy.org/quilts/quilt_of_the_month.html;
public and private collections throughout the U.S., Canada, Europe, and Japan;
and elizabethbusch.com.
Katharine Cobey
On Starting Young: “My
knitting career started when I was eleven. A few summers later I used some of
the money I made by my first job to buy yarn. I decided that there was no good
reason why we were not knitting as expressively and creatively as we worked
with other disciplines. I have consciously been knitting sculpturally since
then.”
On the Inside of What’s Outside: “Experience
taught me that if I could knit a glove, I could do a hand.”
On Books, Books, Books: “The
great technical knitting books by Elizabeth Zimmermann, Barbara Walker, Mary
Thomas, and June Hiatt have been my faithful guides and companions as I
discovered some of what knitting could do.”
On Place & Influence: “My
husband and I came to live in Cushing in 1992. Having lived in cities in
Africa,
On What Changes & What Doesn’t: “I
work more abstractly and sculpturally now than I did when I first started
knitting, but it is always human experience and the body that grounds me.”
For more Cobey: Katharine
Cobey studio, special installations at the Portland Museum of Art, the



