This blog is assigned to exploring my world of textiles.
I visit this world episodically as the shape of my life allows.
At this period in time I am very engaged with my woven tapestries as the final stages of preparation for my retrospective show of Woven Tapestries and Damasks at Hawera's Lysaght Watt Gallery. This show is installed on the weekend and will be viewable until the 26th July.
In preparation for the hanging I am reviewing all the works, checking they are ready for viewing and perhaps more interestingly for me, going back into my very poor and scattered records to find the support material.
Over the next little while, I am going to post this material along with some associated images onto this blog site so viewers of the show can access the info at their leisure and those who can't see the show can get the nuts and bolts of it virtually.
So initially I am preparing the Biography and CV to accompany the show. The CV is going on a blog page as support material but I am posting the biography here.
I visit this world episodically as the shape of my life allows.
At this period in time I am very engaged with my woven tapestries as the final stages of preparation for my retrospective show of Woven Tapestries and Damasks at Hawera's Lysaght Watt Gallery. This show is installed on the weekend and will be viewable until the 26th July.
In preparation for the hanging I am reviewing all the works, checking they are ready for viewing and perhaps more interestingly for me, going back into my very poor and scattered records to find the support material.
Over the next little while, I am going to post this material along with some associated images onto this blog site so viewers of the show can access the info at their leisure and those who can't see the show can get the nuts and bolts of it virtually.
So initially I am preparing the Biography and CV to accompany the show. The CV is going on a blog page as support material but I am posting the biography here.
Biography
Davy grew up in the working class environment of 1950's New
Zealand where everyone "made do". The household's textile items were
home sewn from the bed sheets to the dance frocks with all the hand knitted
sweaters and gloves in between.
Not only were textile skills a domestic necessity in this
era, they were also the established, albeit unacknowledged, female art form.
Techniques, pattern reading and material knowledge were learned from an early
age, passed down through the generations. Davy's very talented Mother, who
clothed herself and five children with her trusty Singer sewing machines and
her knitting needles, gave a love of fibre and its special qualities to her
daughter.
On establishing her own family, Davy went beyond the private
domestic textile practicalities to initially explore hand spinning, then
weaving, developing a boutique weaving studio producing custom yardages for
clothing and upholstery, floor rugs, wall hangings and other accessories. Teaching
the skills to others was always an important part of this business.
Emigration to Canada triggered a deep desire for Davy to
communicate her diaspora experiences and for her, weaving was the natural
vehicle. Studying under the Master Tapestry Artist Helen Francis Gregor and
Senior Multi Harness Weaver William Hodge at The Ontario College of Art, Toronto,
Davy discovered the powers firstly of tapestry and then of damask weaving.
This was the springboard for exploring more intimate
messages in thread, to push the boundaries of these two traditional techniques,
to convey the complexities of life as a constantly evolving passage. The normal
grid format of the woven expression has lent itself to challenging - conveying
life's irregularities and unpredictability, while responding to the organic
environment of the living world.
The two different woven formats - tapestry and damask -
respond to differing aspects of Davy's life. The scale of the tapestries is
mostly small, intimate. They are woven on very basic portable frames that move
with the shifts of life, allow for transporting through many changes. On the
other hand, the damasks are woven on a very large, traditional, complex Swedish
Draw Loom that takes weeks of work to assemble then thread and requires a large
designated space to be set up in. These works can only be created in times of
being 'settled'.
In common both woven expressions use very fine natural
threads predominantly silk, often hand dyed by Davy. Cotton is the warp thread
for the tapestries. Using such fine materials Davy can build intricate details
into her work so they resemble woven thread drawings. Working within the
geometrics of the woven structure the fine scale of the weave enables the
creation of optically curving and fluid lines - the hallmark of Davy's work.
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