I'm fangirling on a zillion different levels right now! WOW! (Are we allowed to say whimsical again?) Jeila Gueramian is a Brooklyn-based artist who has has done major installations around the USA and I absolutely love them. Below are a few examples of her work and you'll definitely want to visit her web site for
i'd devour you whole if you'd let me 🩸🫀 hand knit and crocheted, words by me
Rachel Clark is an amazing fiber artist who combines quilting techniques with garment sewing. For over 25 years she has traveled teaching others.
Alison Altafi creates circular fiber art masterpieces by seamlessly weaving multicolored and multi-textured yarn over large hoops.
* “HeeChan Kim was born in 1982 in Seoul, Korea and received a BFA in metal craft from Seoul National University in 2006. Soon after, he immigrated to the United States to continue studying a…
Peu d’informations circulent sur Ana Teresa Barboza sur internet si ce n’est qu’elle est née en 1981 à Lima, au Pérou et qu’elle s’intéresse depuis déjà quelques années à l’utilisation …
Sheila Hicks is a yarn spinner, a textile artist who for more than five decades has straddled the disciplines of architecture, design and art. She has a masters in fine art from Yale University and a 42-page curriculum vitae boasting group and solo shows staged in cities across the world.
Anne Bothuon
I saw this amazing piece of textile art at an exhibition last week. Layers of thin fabric and embroidery . Look at the shadows and the cobblestones !
Ian conjures remarkably detailed portraits and urban landscapes using nothing more than discarded jeans. Over many weeks he cuts, stitches and glues using only the varying shades of the fabric to provide contrast and shadow. The effect is extraordinary. Ian’s denim epiphany came during a trip back to his childhood home in Huddersfield. During a big clear-out session, Ian found himself staring at a big pile of unwanted jeans destined for the charity shop. Affectionate memories came flooding back, along with a wave of tactile enthusiasm for the fabric. At that point, he knew he’d found the key to his artistic career. Ian began his artistic experiments with denim while working as an art director in London and Sydney. Despite building a successful career and creating campaigns for brands such as Nissan, Guinness and Talisker Whiskey, the call of the rivets and seams was too deafening to ignore. Eventually, the public caught on and Ian enjoyed enough commercial success to devote himself full time to his art. He had two near sell-out shows in Sweden, his new adopted home, and also showed in the US and Portugal. His work has since sold across Europe, America, the Middle East and Australasia to private, public and corporate collections, and has been featured in innumerable art and fashion magazines from Elle to Playboy and interviewed on Swedish TV.
divaneee:Underwater World | fiber art installation by Sayuri (via Pin von Imola Grácia Marjai auf „MY weakness“ | Pinterest)
amazing !… exhibit in melbourne, australia by fiber & textile artist, annette fitton aka ‘nini’ of nini & wink … ~via nini & wink, facebook
Anne Bothuon - Sculpture Textile art fullscreen Anne Bothuon - Sculpture Textile art ...
Leeds-based artist Mister Finch (previously) thrifts scraps of brocades and cottons to shape into fantastical creatures that are both whimsical and slightly unnerving. His recent pieces include a series of oversized spiders that the artist photographs suspended from the ceiling or scaling his workshop wall. “The past few years my work has become more sculpture-based with my creatures pretty much all stood up and attached to bases.” Finch writes. “I love the way this looks and enables me to dress and humanize them, which is something I’ve always wanted to do.” Although the ongoing pandemic has stifled the artist’s foraging of fabrics and other materials in recent months, Finch notes that he’s been pulling textiles from his home stash and occasionally visiting fairs and markets. More
Choi So-young enjoys painting urban landscapes of Busan where she lives on with pockets, seams, belt loops, buttons of second-hand denim. She has become an internationally famous artist since some creative paintings were sold at Christie's auction a high price in Hong Kong. I love her works in the snug with a soft shade of blue because they are not esoteric like other modern art. ▲ After the Snow (112 × 162 cm, 2010) A Sightseeing City, 2011 ▲ Laundry on Rooftop (97 × 97 cm, 2010년) Sanbongno, 2005 ▲ Snow Scene 2 (162×130cm, 2011) ▲ Tourist City (80.5×80.5×6.2cm, 2010) ▲ Snowy Village ▲ Busan Harbor (217.3×287cm, 2006) ▲ From the Woo Po Swamp, 100x65.5x6cm, 2010 ▲ London at Night ▲ Brick House in London, 72.5x100x6cm, 2010 Exotic Korean paintings of Kim Hyun Jung Lee Ufan's 'Correspondence' introduced in 'Non-Summit Witty Korean paintings of Sin Sun Mi Creative Denim Artist Choi So-young Ha Jung-woo transformed himself from an actor to a painter Pen and Ink Drawings of Lee Me-kyeoung
About Salley Mavor “My aim is to breathe life and emotion into embroidery, an art form that is often perceived as purely decorative.” Salley mavor A needle is my tool, thread is my medi…
One can only imagine the time it would take to create such beautifully delicate sculptures such as this. Korean artist Keysook Geum blends, twists and
Emilie Faif : Red, 2011, window displays for Printemps Haussman, Paris, textile sculpture http://www.emiliefaif.com/
Explore Julia-in-nz's 337 photos on Flickr!
Bound with loose threads and inscribed with sinuous lines that crawl across the page, the textile works created by Tennessee-based artist Rima Day evoke the Japanese good luck charms called sennibari. Translating to “thousand person stitches,” the Japanese amulet was developed during war times when women would ask friends, family, and even strangers to make a knot on a piece of fabric, which was then gifted to a soldier for protection. More