Seasons Outside and in the Studio

When we moved last year, I unofficially gave myself a year to experiment in my studio to see what would happen. I felt the urge to bring something new to my work. I was in search of something with little clue as to what it might be and where I would find it. I trusted (most days) that I would find it by working. For many months I would make something, sample, sketch and then chuck the work aside. Nothing had legs to move me forward. I would get really interested in a material or a technique and suddenly that excitement would just die. I kept working and trying to find that compelling thing to take hold. A few weeks ago, I drug out a bin of handmade papers I made my first semester of graduate school. I loved making paper. The process was compelling for me, hands immersed in water, the feel of the fibrous pulp flowing through hands into sheets of paper and the resulting soft deckled edges. I kept a few of my paper supplies with the move. I’m so glad that I did. I was ruthless in my pre-move purge and I’m sad to say that I did donate a few things that I wish I’d kept. I really never imagined that I would work with paper again.

A variety of handmade papers - layers of ideas and samples that I made long back in 2015.

At the end of May, I opened that bin and selected a few sheets of creamy paper and tore them down to roughly 9” x 9” squares. I then selected a few pieces of handwoven linen cloth. This cloth was the first that I had painted as warp, woven in my new space, on my new loom and I had cut it up bent on an idea that died. I appliqued this fabric onto the paper squares and soon I was off into a new body of work and into a new series. I’ve been stitching one almost every day and so far I’ve completed six of the planned nine from this series. I love the interaction of paper and weaving. I plan to explore this combination more.

The sixth piece of the series. Once the series is complete, they will be mounted and framed.

One of the most difficult parts of being an artist is the uncertainty that sometimes lingers. There are so many questions that are hard to ask, let alone answer. Most of the time the answers are within. I find answers through working, even when it isn’t going well. I find answers in following urges.

One of the urges I’ve been feeling is to introduce seasonality into my work. I want to bring the strong flow of the seasons in Minnesota to my studio work. What could I mostly do in the summer? My first inclination is to make paper outside, where I can be as messy as I please. This summer, I plan to set up some papermaking spaces and experiment. I also plan to visit the Minnesota Center for Book Arts and perhaps take some classes.

This work that I’ve began will likely launch me into work for the Art for Water project. I’ve completed the training for the MN Water Stewards, and my art proposal has been approved. I’ll show the work at the members’ spotlight space at the Hopkins Center of the Arts in October. While that seems like a far-off deadline, my work is slow and filled with the unknown. In the meantime, I’m continuing my education about water issues, water policy and learning more about wetlands. As I’ve been thinking about my growing relationship to the surrounding lands, I discovered a podcast called The Watershed, production of We are Water MN. The podcast tells stories of water and people throughout Minnesota. It covers everything from the Mississippi river, how we use and enjoy water, how artists respond to water, and ways communities and cities are protecting resources. It is a rich resource for thinking and education. It is exactly what I’ve been wanting since moving here.

A ship heads out into Lake Superior from Duluth in the early morning light.

Speaking of waters, in early May, I climbed down a ladder into the cold waters of Lake Superior as part of a Nordic sauna and cold-water experience. Superior’s waters are very cold. My body reacted the way I was warned it would – a sharp intake of breath and then hyperventilating. I held to the ladder and slowly immersed myself, the took control of myself and regulated my breathing. I told myself aloud, you are okay. It is okay. When my breathing leveled out, I began to understand that I was immersing myself into the knowledge of my Finnish ancestors.

The ladder into Lake Superior at Cedar and Stone Nordic Sauna.

The world has recently discovered the benefits of cold-water swimming. It is everywhere – TikTok, Instagram, YouTube. They did not read it in a trendy magazine, or a short video, rather they took part of cold water because that was what our culture told them to do. Sauna and then cold. One of the few stories I was told of my Finnish family was how they would jump in the lake after a sauna or roll in the snow in winter. My first sauna experience was amazing, and I am so glad that I didn’t shy away from the lake dip. There are many practices that I have learned over the years to teach mindfulness and to be in the body. Going from the steam into the lake really honed into that practice. I was in my body fully and I am looking forward to the next opportunity.

One of the saunas at Cedar and Stone in Duluth, MN.

 

 

One Year Later, Now What?

“What part of Missouri are you all from?” 

Mark and I were sitting in the hotel breakfast area quietly discussing plans for our new life when a very tall and surly man stopped in front of our table and asked the question without preamble. We just stared at him, frozen in place by his audacity. “I saw your cars, your plates,” he shrugged. “My kid is graduating from college, and we are moving back to Springfield. I’ve had enough of this place.” His visible displeasure turned fully into disgust when we informed him that we were moving to Minnesota. I don’t know why people are like this.

At the beginning of May, we will have been in Minnesota for a year. We survived our first winter and we thrived. The Twin Cities had the third snowiest winter on the books. The benefit of beginners’ mind is you don’t know what is unusual. We enjoyed winter and we expect to enjoy future seasons as well.

“Rag rug” sampling on the loom. Experimenting with the structure of a rug as a base for embroidery. Lots of color mixing and using scraps and random bits.

My studio work lately has been a lot of sampling and trying new things. Before I packed everything up I had some ideas that I worked on and I left those fabric samples to rediscover on the other side. I’m glad that I did that as I wasn’t starting from zero. I also had a sense that for the next year, I would sample, experiment, and see where things led me. I miss making my work and yet the work that I made before seems to have quieted within me. I have mostly gracefully allowed that to just be and to not pick at it. There are other times though where the inner quiet is interrupted by my own inner voice asking, now what? What will I make now?

I was finally able to voice what I’m thinking and searching for on a walk to our lake this week with my husband. All this time my work has been about an imagined place or places that have left imprints on memory—the places that I longed for. Now that I’ve discovered that place that I imagined, what does that mean for my work? My husband suggested that I still long for that place. I long for the place that I have. It was a subtle shift and a wise suggestion.

Early spring at the lake

The places that I long for are now here. There are many of them – some are a block away, some a thirty-minute walk away, and many I haven’t seen yet. Spring has come to the north, and while the earth is slow to wake up, the creatures here are announcing the changes. The osprey are back, we see eagles almost every day again, and my long held wish to see a loon has been granted. We have seen about six of them now. The landscape here touches the small curious child that I once was and I can’t seem to get my fill of it. No matter the season. I just love being outside here, even if only in the driveway.

Loon spotting!

In Other News

I recently had an article published on the Norwegian Textile Letter, an interview with artist, Soile Hovila. Weaving Light and Meaning: A Conversation with Artist Soile Hovila

My piece This Land recently was given Award of Excellence at the Hopkins Center for the Arts. The Spring Members Show runs until May 14, 2023.

This Land

On Being at the Great Northern Festival

The Great Northern Festival in Minneapolis is a two week annual winter festival to celebrate the cold, dark times in the north with programming about art, creativity, food, culture and to spotlight climate concerns.  Yesterday as part of this festival, I had the chance to attend a live podcast recording of On Being with Krista Tippett. Tippett was interviewing biologist, writer and consultant Janine Benyus. I wasn’t familiar with Benyus before this event and I’m surprised that I’ve missed her work. Benyus popularized the term “biomimicry,” a discipline to use nature as a mentor to create designs and processes to create a more sustainable planet. You can watch her excellent TED talk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k_GFq12w5WU to learn more. I plan on reading her book Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature. 

The conversation took place in an intimate auditorium at the Minneapolis Art Institute. Folks braved our latest air blast to attend the hour and fifteen minute conversation. I took notes throughout and I’m still processing the conversation. It is one that I won’t soon forget. 

Sunset in the city through the window of the MIA.

Benyus spoke of a childhood spent observing her neighbors, the non-human neighbors, on the “wild edge of the suburbs.” I’ve heard similar statements from other biologists and artists. This is certainly true in my own life. She offered up the concept of nature as a mentor. This statement caused a murmuring in the group. It certainly resonated with me as well. Nature as a spiritual place, as mother, as mentor and as a home.

So much of the conversation reminded me of the work of Robin Wall Kimmerer who was also a guest on On Being. I’ve been following Tippett’s early radio show, Speaking of Faith, that evolved into On Being and is now a podcast for as long as I can remember. She has interviewed so many artists, scientists, writers, and thoughtful people. Some of them I knew and many of them I discovered through Tippett’s thoughtful questions. I’ve often wondered how she is able to draw people into rich conversations? Tippett is able to link a lifetime of work into a conversation that seems to at least touch on everything, but highlights the through line that connects it all. I think this simple complex answer is that she researches deeply into people she interviews. Benyus wasn’t the first person to express surprise at what Tippett had in her notes to ask about.

A few other On Being episodes that have impacted my thinking and my studio work - not a complete list: