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May 5, 2015

embroidered books.

Hi there! Back after a little break, and I would just like to say Happy Cinco de Mayo, Happy Taco Tuesday, etc. A heads up--we will not be talking about last night's Met Ball. So, let's move on to what we are talking about--embroidered books.

If you've been reading this blog for any length of time, you know my loves include: 1. Embroidery and 2. Books transformed into wild pieces of art. I've always revered books--the printed pages were not to be messed with, never for anything other than reading. So, I guess I admire how artists flagrantly disregard that reverence, tearing apart and transforming texts into entirely new creations, in the process creating new meanings, interpretations and yes--stories.

I never realized book art is such a thing, but I'm always stumbling upon incredible ways artists are making pages their canvas. Let's take a look at three visionaries who are using books as a backdrop for their intricate threadwork.

Mireille Vautier is a French artist and designer living in New York City. In addition to books, she embroiders on fabric and plastic, almost exclusively in red thread. Says the artist,

"To embroider, for me, is a means of reflecting on memory, 
such as families’ memories...I use most of the time a red thread. 
This choice of the color is instinctive. Red is very powerful...
Embroidery is also a commentary on time, it is an anachronistic 
and inconceivable thing in today’s world where taking one’s time 
is a luxury. It is going against the grain, asserting the necessity 
of slowing things down in order to look at them."

From the Haley Institute of Contemporary Art.



All art and photos (c) Mireille Vautier

Like many women, artist Lauren DiCioccio remembers watching her mother embroider, started her own with simple cross-stitching on cloth, which somehow developed into these marvelous creations. In her artist statement, she says:

"In learning a skill or craft like this, the common rules insist that 
the student seek perfection- every stitch in line, every knot tied, 
the back of the embroidery as tidy as the front. I think the actual 
perfection in the material is found in exactly the opposite of these 
standards- when the thread tangles or becomes matted and overworked, 
or where the basting stitch is left to stand on its own; when the fabric 
wrinkles and twists rather than ironed flat and taut—those moments 
end up being the most beautiful parts in a piece. The mistakes and 
the looseness show the human hand and reflect the human spirit, and 
that’s the perfection."



From Cross-Stitched Books, 2007-2012 by Lauren DiCioccio

Whether she's sewing or collaging, everything Lisa Kokin creates blows my mind. From her series Altered Books, she states:

"I alter, appropriate, and combine text from books about 
religion, history, self-help, business and sociopolitical 
ideology. I am fascinated by the random juxtapositions 
of words that occur when parts of text are removed to 
create other stories, or when texts from two sources 
such as business and religion are combined. It gives 
me great pleasure to subvert the original meanings of 
books which were written to keep people in their place, 
and to do it with humor and levity."



Sew Not in Anger (c) Lisa Kokin

That's all for today, but I'll be back tomorrow with move to love.

xoxoLexa

1 comment

Connie said...

I am IN LOVE with these.

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