My first
3 posts were all related my mother’s paintings.
This final posting in the series delves into her use of different
mediums for her creations… She was always trying something new and some of her
efforts were whimsical or cute and others were true works of art.
You be
the judge…
We really
like this little wooden decoupage tray with the cone flowers… My grandmother
made quite a few things in this fashion but as far as I know, this was my mom’s
only creation of this type.
Mom
started out early on…drawing and painting from childhood. Around the the time that she met my stepfather, Hugh
Thomson, he’d been painting for some
time. My mom married Hugh in the 1947 and I was
about 4 when they met at an adult education art class in Jackson Michigan. They were part of the group that founded the
Jackson Art Club with Hugh serving as the first Vice President and Beth as the
first Secretary.
I do know
that this photo about my mom’s “Bartendas, Inc.” was taken at our house on
First Street in Jackson…and I was in the First Grade. I have vague memories of these papier-mâché liquor
bottle figures all over the house…
Mom tried
just about every artistic medium over the years. This photo from 1966 shows a head that she
decided to carve from a large piece of wood…
FYI…Beth
also wrote a couple of children’s stories that she sold to Playmate Magazine.
Another
phase of creativity were these large ‘natural’ collages constructed using
seeds, leafs, stems, weeds, little stones, etc.
We still have one of them but it’s slowly deteriorating.
Clay
became another medium… Among other things such as painted tiles, she created
these little folk-style figurines.
I think
that this owl painted on an old piece of barn wood is a little scary…
Then
there were a few works involving flattened, pounded, cut and painted tin images
tacked on a wooden board…
I think
that I was in the 6th grade when mom came up with Wee Bonnie Lass
Ready to Sew Doll Fashions. We lived at 304 Douglas Street in Jackson Michigan
at the time. It was a cute and creative
idea but it didn’t become a burgeoning business…
Dolls…
Mom made a lot of dolls. She sold a
bunch of them, she gave some out as gifts and we have still have a few of them.
Beth
drifted in and out of fabric related creations for many years. She made a lot of quilt style pillows. We still have a couple of them…
This is
one of my mom’s finest works from a couple of perspectives. Number one…she made it for me when I was
about 8 or 9. I loved the west with Cowboys
and Indians and like most boys in the early 50s, trains were a big thing!
The
second reason I know that this hooked rug is a winner involved an incident that
took place at Laurie and my former home in Mt. Prospect Illinois. We had a couple of old worn but high quality oriental
rugs that we offered to sell to a rug dealer who came our house. He didn’t want them…but he did covet this
hooked rug! (NO SALE!)
My mother
made a lot of ceramic owls… This one was far and away the biggest and most startling
of the bunch. She made and sold a lot of
small hand painted and kiln fired owls at local art fairs in Jackson and East
Lansing Michigan.
…not just
ceramic owls either. She also hand painted
and fired a number of colorful plates.
Laurie and I still use these when we serve dessert to guests.
…and as
time went on, mom got more and more into fabric art, in this case a woven cover
for a decorative pillow.
Talk
about whimsy! This chess set is about as
whimsical as one can be… Mom didn’t play chess and neither do I.
More
weaving…this time combining plant fiber with wool.
Here was
another use for mom’s kiln. She started
making jewelry…painting the metal flats and then firing them in the kiln and
attaching backs to them. Back in the
early 1960s she sold a lot of these items at art fairs.
I do
recall an Art Fair in East Lansing Michigan in the early 60’s (GO SPARTANS!)
where I helped mom set up and tend her booth.
She sold some little owls, a little handmade jewelry similar to the
earrings above and then she sold a ton of ceramic beads.
I’d convinced her to bring a bunch of ceramic
beads that she’d been experimenting with.
At a dollar apiece she sold out in about 3 hours. That night, we went home and dug up a bunch
of beads that she disposed of in the garden because she didn’t like them. She sold out again on the second day!
But, she
kept coming back to fabric related creations…like this quilt top.
It was
like a mental battle… Where would her creativity go next? This little hand painted ceramic figurine is definitely
reminiscent to her primitive folk paintings.
Don’t ask
me why…but I like this cork, chain, nail, brad and tacks with bits of ‘this and
that’ creation on a board. It now resides
at our son’s house in Omaha.
Weaving
slowly evolved as her primary artistic medium.
This is one of her earlier creations.
She even
wove this little Sherpa style jacket…
Then she
really got into weaving! Despite her new
artistic ‘love’, she still dabbled in mixed media weaving these feathers into
this wall hanging.
FYI…The
person hiding behind the weaving is my wife Laurie. This photo was taken ca. 1980 behind our home
in Bridgeton Missouri.
Mom wove
this little hanging complete with critters for her grandson David II when he
was just a tyke…
Bright
and bold… Amazingly, she preferred natural dyes. That’s one reason I cringe at the sight of
walnuts. I had to help make dye from
those noxious husks. She used a variety
of plants to create the colors she wanted so it wasn’t unusual to arrive for a
visit and be greeted by a pot of some kind of dye on the stove…
She saw
art everywhere…even in these balls of home dyed material for her weavings.
As she
progressed, her designs got more and more complex.
Eventually,
she had 2 or 3 small looms at her house plus a giant loom with a foot treadle…
After a
bit, some of her weavings became more like paintings…
…or they
became complex eye-numbing creations like this one.
I have no
idea what became of this small complex weaving…but I like it.
…still
more yarn poised (and posed) and ready for the loom. Note the woven belt. She made and sold a lot of belts!
This is another
fanciful and complex weaving whose fate is unknown to me.
These 2
large weavings (posed against a table) were unusual in that they were more basic
design-wise.
Yep…more
feathers were incorporated into this small wall hanging. I believe that she got the feathers from her
guinea fowl. She had 5 acres on Sears
Road in Jackson County for quite a number of years. She had a garden, canned some of her own
produce, raised chickens for a while and was entertained by a number of cats
and a dog.
This is a
display of my mom’s weavings at a local arts and crafts show. She did sell a lot of her weavings over the
years…
This subtle
artistic weaving is one of our favorites…an impressionistic image that I can
wrap my head around.
This very
large and colorful wall hanging is on display in our home here in East
Tennessee.
…and we love
this handsome pillow with its complex design and earth tones.
Here is
another big wall hanging… I see the beach, sea and sky. What do you see?
Finally…my
mom made this king size quilt for Laurie and me. We love the colors and the cheer it brings
into a room!
Well…this
ends the 4 part adventure that was my mother’s artistic and creative side. Thanks for coming along for the ride!
Just
click on any of the photos to enlarge them…
Take Care,
Big Daddy Dave
Is amazing all she made !
ReplyDeleteI love the dolls !!
Your mother was quite artistic, Dave! The patterns and colors in her woven pieces are great, she had a keen eye for it all. I esp. like the clay folk-style figurines, both owls and the train scene. And the 5th one from the bottom, like the colors and the way it sort of flows. I'm not so big on quilts. My mom made quite a few and I more or less gave them away years ago; sorry about it now.
ReplyDeleteThis is a wonderful tribute to your mother, you did a great job with the series, very interesting!
Dear Dave, Your mom certainly had a calling for art. It must have been wonderful to see an art design in all of the world around her. Take care. Catherine
ReplyDeleteBeautiful art, decor and creations here, Dave! Such brilliant and amazing talent! Thank you so much for sharing.
ReplyDelete