User:Artful inquiry/sandbox/ArtandCraftWomen
Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red
Wikipedia:WikiProject_Women_in_Red/Crafts
Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Art
Resources for Art Project
This is a book I found in Ebsco that might have some of the redlinked artists. Texas did a special project at museums, interviewing contemporary artists
Record: 1
[edit]Title: | The Art of Found Objects : Interviews with Texas Artists |
Series: | Joe and Betty Moore Texas Art Series, number eighteen |
Authors: | Bunch, Robert Craig |
Publication Information: | Ed.: First edition. College Station : Texas A&M University Press. 2016 |
Resource Type: | eBook. |
Description: | In this first book of interviews with visual artists from across Texas, more than sixty artists reflect on topics from formative influences and inspirations to their common engagement with found materials. Beyond the art itself, no source is more primary to understanding art and artist than the artist's own words. After all, who can speak with more authority about the artist's influences, motivations, methods, philosophies, and creations? Since 2010, Robert Craig Bunch has interviewed sixty-four of Texas'finest artists, who have responded with honesty, clarity, and—naturally—great insight into their own work. None of these interviews has been previously published, even in part. Incorporating a striking, full-color illustration of each artist's work, these absorbing self-examinations will stand collectively as a reference of lasting value. |
Subjects: | Artists--Texas--Interviews
Found objects (Art)--Texas |
Categories: | ART / Mixed Media
ART / American / General ART / Individual Artists / Artist[a-zA-Z]'\sBooks |
Related ISBNs: | 9781623496043. 9781623494087. |
OCLC: | 935784556 |
Accession Number: | 2222190 |
Publisher Permissions: | Print/E-mail/Save 100 Pages
Unlimited Copy/Paste |
Persistent link to this record (Permalink): | https://umasslowell.idm.oclc.org/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=nlebk&AN=2222190&site=ehost-live |
Cut and Paste: | <a href="https://umasslowell.idm.oclc.org/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=nlebk&AN=2222190&site=ehost-live">The Art of Found Objects : Interviews with Texas Artists</a> |
Database: | eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) |
Merrill Commeau, fiber artist, Massachusetts
textile study group of new york
Infrastructure supporting the recognition and development of fiber arts has increased over the 20th century. Fiber arts study groups have proven to be particularly important in this regard. Two groups of note include: 1) the Textiles Study Group located in the U.K.; and 2) the Textile Study Group of New York. Members associated with both groups have made significant contributions to the field as artists, teachers, and authors.
https://textilestudygroup.co.uk/ -established 1973, began with a focus on embroidery and expanded to a wider focus on the fiber arts, particularly the delivery of education, membership is highly selective, requiring close scrutiny of each applicants work; maintains a core group of about 25 teachers
https://www.tsgny.org/ has a broader mission of promotion of appreciation of fiber arts and support of artists working in this area; established in 1977; meets monthly during the academic year in the NYC area; broader interest in serving to inspire artists and afficionados and to support networks that will build fiber arts opportunities.
Shelley Rhodes, author of Sketchbook Explorations for Mixed-Media and Textile Artists (2018) Batsford Press. Artists who contributed to her book and have photos and references:
-Jan Miller (This is not Jan D. Miller--engineer)
-Sally Payne (this is not the american actress)
-Jane Smith (this is not the footballer)
-Helen Terry (this is not the British Singer)
Katherine Cobey (American knitting artist)
Lillian Elliott (fiber artist) (1930-1994), American textile artist
Virginia Harvey (1917-2001), American weaver
Ana Lisa Hedstrom (1943-), fiber and shibori artist
Pat Hickman (1941-), teacher, artist, textile designer, and curator
Jane Lackey (1948-), American fiber artist and educator
Gyöngy Laky (1944-), Hungarian-born textile artist
User:Artful inquiry/sandbox/ArtandCraftWomen/Gyöngy Laky
Alma Lesch (Fiber Artist from Louisville; good article ranked "S")
Rebecca Medel (194-), American fiber artist and educator
Dorothy L. Meredith (1906-1986), American weaver and educator
Norma Minkowitz (1937-), American fiber artist
Jane Sauer https://americanart.si.edu/artist/jane-sauer-27809 (Fiber Artist-Basketry/Mixed Media)
Sherri Smith (1943-), American weaver, textile designer and educator
Textile arts [Strong list of artists in this area--all highly recognized, many men]
Felt [There is nothing here about art felt, and contemporary art felters--no names are listed]
Felters of note[edit]
[edit]Barbara Poole
Marjolein Dallinga
Inge Evers
Linda Lammerts
Elis Vermeulen
Catherine O'Leary (there is a Catherine O'Leary who started the great Chicago Fire--not that one)
Jenny Cowern (YEH!! she has a page)
Janice Arnold
Jorie Johnson
Claudy Jongstra (YEH!! she also has a page)
Francoise Tellier-Loumagne
Christine White (There are three other people with this page in Wikipedia--not one is the felter)
Chad Alice Hagen
Pat Spark
Polly Stirling
Andrea Graham
Sharon Costello
Mehmet Girgic
Teresa May O'Brien
Lisa Klakulak
Jeanine ? (German felt artist lives in Scotland now; has done hats, costumes, landscape pieces)
There is the Korean artist that I had an article on.
Also, the African/Dutch felter who focused on dresses and taught at Felter's Fling.