ORBS!

AH! Cool air!  I came inside under the guise of posting a message about our installation  – man is it hot!

 And so it the orb work!  Can’t do any picture uploads at the moment, but let me give you some visuals.

– The entire bed of a full size pick-up truck was full of willow rods, with their leaves – which were then off loaded/strong armed/carried/drug to our work spot along the sculpture garden path.

– The orbs already woven add up to 75 in various sizes of zero to eight. Most are willow, some are rattan, one is chicken wire, one is barbed wire, a couple have copper wire, some have gut.

– The sculpture garden path wiggles along a stretch of trees, some big old ones, some young saplings, various kinds (walnut, oak, maple, redbud, tulip, others that I can’t recognize at the moment.

– Our work spot is in the range of the daily irrigation system – misty water is wonderful! And this afternoon when the sprinkler system was not due to be on, the groundskeeper brought out a hose and sprayer. He gets to water some plants and we benefit from the spray.

-Yesterday it was Bonnie and I and one of Bonnie’s students, Cindy. The biggest thing we did was to determine how many and what sizes of orbs we already had plus what trees and notches we would use and how many more orbs we would need. While Bonnie and I did the determining and walking around, Cindy got started on lacing monofilament through the orbs to give a bit of added strength.

-Today we have additional crew of another student, an intern and a half from the Indianapolis Art Center and a gourd artist, Nancy who have been stripping the leaves from the willow rods all day.

-While the crew has been stripping and chatting – someone likened it to a quilting bee – Bonnie and I have started the gigando mundo piece that we want to place between two prominent trees on the sculpture lawn. Reffered to as ‘the VW bug’ piece, it will be close to that size by the time it is finished. We have it propped between the base of the chosen trees at the moment, knowing that it needs to be bigger than that since the trees spread apart farther up and we want to be able to have it wedged between the trunks. We are closing one end of the piece right now – hoping to fnish the basic structure tonight so that our helpers can do the filling in tomorrow.

I better get back out to help since Nancy invited us over for drinks, maybe dinner, tonight! The sweat has cooled and dried sufficiently, I think I’m ready.

Cookies… and not cookies

I’ve been up to my elbows today in cookie and brownie doughs and gut.  Not at the same time, mind you.  That conjurs images of a very sloppy mess.  Although, I bet you could stuff casing with cookie dough and then bake it, and wind up with a tube of cookie! With the gut so well cleaned out, I bet you wouldn’t tase it.
The cookies and  brownies are part of my contribution to our parish festival, St. Aloysius in Shandon – desserts for the chicken dinner. I don’t do cakes or pies well, so the brownies and cookies cover that gap. The folks running the festival are actually very happy for whatever dessert shows up!

The gut has been going on orbs of various sizes and shades of brown. These will be taken to Indy Art Center first thing on Monday for the start of our installation in the sculpture gardens behind the Center. I had a piece of gut earlier today that was yards long!  Filled the entire plastic container I was using. Other than being a pain to rinse out due to its getting tangled upon itself, it is great to have such length, even though I wind up cutting it into smaller pieces. Will take some gut with me, just in case…

I’m hoping to report on the progress of the installation while in Indy – and include pictures.  I’m sure I’ll have a raft of pics when I get home, too.  Thinking cool weather thoughts for next week… but expecting hot and humid while we climb in and among the trees.

Looking behind – ahead

Last week was full!

Had the house to myself, no schedule to adhere to and a ton of things I wanted to accomplish. The only thing that disrupted plans was the inability to fall asleep most nights. Oh, well, work happened in the dark of night instead of daylight.

And then the weekend was given over to the road. Friday night was an exhibit opening in Indianapolis with a stayover in Knightstown, Saturday morning was a luncheon wedding shower in Cleveland, Saturday night was a stay in a campground north of Columbus – home again Sunday afternoon to meet up again with my love. The best part was the seeing of family throughout all of it.

The exhibit opening was great fun – some of my recent mudcloth students showed up wearing mudded scarves. One women went home with an order from the gift shop!
This week requires no traveling, thank goodness. Focus will be on getting orbs ready for the installation at the Indianapolis Art Center next week. I want to gut a bunch of them.

Sewing, Gut and pH

First, I want to thank Dave for his concern over my finishing the sewing project the other day. I DID get it finished – the machine soldiered on. Had to slow the pace, but made it through.

In fact, I made two prototypes and let the former PCV decide which would work best. She chose the one which utilized the width of the traditional strip weaving in the shoulder strap and had a drawstring closure (thanks, Mary, for your ideas!). It is in Mali right now, but I don’t think it will find its way to the proper co-op until later in the month, towards the end of her visit. If nothing else, maybe it will give them some ideas for items to sell.

The last couple days have been spent with my hands wet with gut working on some smaller wall grids out of willow and gut. The weather has been great – not too hot or humid – for working outside and drying the finished work. Listened to two more Fforde books while working: The Eyre Affair and The Fourth Bear. Love the irony and puns!

I’m anxiously awaiting some pH test strips that I ordered – they will show all levels of alkalinity. I’ve got a spot of experimenting to do as soon as they come in – I want to check pH levels while testing my water vs distilled and muds vs pigments and soda ash in the mud vs on the cloth first. I know my water is really alkaline due to our hot tub experience; now to find out just how much so.

I hope the students I have this weekend doing mudcloth are as excited as I am about finding alternative ways of making this work!

Bench Bottles

One of my activities last week was to teach some day care kids about Mali and mudcloth. I will be going back to them later this summer and doing some basketry; while I was there I picked up a large garbage bag full of empty 2-liter plastic bottles. I will be cutting them  later, using the sides to make spokes and leaving the bottom intact. Makes for a not too difficult basketry project that any age can handle.

Well, I pulled the bottles out this afternoon and gave them a good rinsing. No need to have any stickiness hang around, even though I probably won’t get to cutting them any time soon. I left them sitting upside down on the park bench we have in the back of the house next to our ‘pond’ – perfect drying rack – and then promptly forgot all about them.

My love is a very smart man. As he was changing his clothes after work, he noticed the bench full of bottles all upside down and empty. His question was put very tactfully: “Is that an installation, or….?” img_2832.jpg    img_2831.jpg

Now that he has mentioned it, I rather like the idea of a bench installation! Have to think of a good name…