Activity
In this class we will create a long spiral-shaped book using playful and unusual textile materials to transform fabric into a colorful and soft artifact that will allow us to write and illustrate narratives inspired by the cyclical quality of this book.
Along with the creation of this book, students will learn about color properties, lettering and embroidery techniques to enhance text legibility and composition in small format works.
Date & Time
Friday, September 13th 2024
3 pm – 5:30 pm ET
Location
Zoom, a link will be sent to participants the day before class.
If you cannot attend the live session, the recording will be available to you for one month after the live session.
Cost
$65
Class Materials
Please gather the following materials before class. Creativity in material gathering is encouraged! This could be a great opportunity to use your studio scraps.
- Assortment of sewing threads
- Assortment of cotton color fabrics or light weight canvas with patterns or without patterns (preferable if these fabrics are on the longer side to tear into longer strips)
- White cotton fabric (preferable if these fabrics are on the longer side to tear into longer strips)
- Pins
- Sewing and embroidery needles
- Embroidery floss
- Assortment of colored pencils
- Shears
Our Teacher
María José Durán is a Chilean Fulbright alumni, visual artist, textile researcher, and art teacher with an MFA from the School of Visual Arts. She explores embroidery and natural dyes on fabrics to create landscapes and fabric books of poetic, playful and painterly sensibility that reflect on the natural world. She has guided community and female collective projects funded by Fondart and the FNDR funds in Chile as well as projects funded by private local and foreign commissions. Her researched-based embroidery workshops aim to rescue women’s memories around local ecosystems, rural living and traditions. Her work has been exhibited at museums and galleries in the US, Colombia, Canada and Chile and it has been published in magazines and film. Her textile work is part of private collections in New York, Miami, Vancouver, Berlin, Beirut, Mexico City and Santiago.