Solenne Jolivet: Thread becomes art

Drawing on a background in fashion and embroidery Solenne Jolivet’s supremely tactile, geometric and ordered pieces bring focus to the thread. She tries to make the supporting structure disappear and allow the thread to take centre stage, sometimes mixing in paint or dye bringing the interwoven threads even further into the foreground.

After her education in Fashion, Design and Embroidery the fashion industry called. For several years Solenne worked in Italy and France for the companies Taroni, Hermes and Carven. In 2017, she became fuelled by a desire to produce art showcasing the thread, rather than simply being satisfied with using embroidery as a decorative technique. She took the leap and became a freelance Textile Artist and Embroiderer, working on projects with haute couture clients including Louis Vuitton, Dior, Yves Saint Laurent and Schiaparelli, while also developing her own body of work.

Her recent exhibitions in Paris include “Graphic design in Textile Art” at the Fibery Gallery in 2019, the ‘Falls’’ series exhibited at the Gentilly Biennale Festival (Contemporary Art Fair) in 2019 and ‘‘Between embroidery and lace’’ samples exhibited at Interfilière, International Fair of Lingerie in 2018. Solenne also exhibited during ‘‘FashionTech’’, City of Fashion and Design, Paris in 2017.

In this interview, find out how Solenne found that in the fashion industry drawing precedes embroidery and is fundamental in guiding decorative stitch work. Discover how, as a textile artist, she has been able to explore how drawing and embroidery can build on each other, and how to use light and colour as essential components of her work. Solenne also shares her love of research and sampling as a way to define her own style.

Joetta Maue: Stitching Ordinary Beauty

Pam, the Office Administrator in the American version of the TV show ‘The Office’, is said to have uttered the best line in any series finale: There’s a lot of beauty in ordinary things. Isn’t that the point?

Whether or not those final lines are indeed the best in TV history, American textile artist Joetta Maue offers definitive proof the statement itself holds true through her imaginative embroidery pieces. Joetta believes in the power and beauty of the ordinary, and she combines photography, drawing and stitch to help us all see what she sees.

Whether cuddling a baby whilst making dinner, staring at a broken window shade or even the simple act of getting up in the morning…all are honoured through her use of stitch on found linens. Even dust is celebrated!

Joetta offered us an insider’s look into both her philosophy and techniques. Her route to textile art is quite interesting, and she explains how drawing and photography inform her work. She also shares her thoughts about sprinkling text in her work, and the new directions in which ‘the ordinary’ is taking her.

Patricia Brown: From rags to stitches

Eighteen years’ worth of old artist’s paint rags and a camper van were the stimulus for Patricia Brown to find a new craft that she could do in a small space.

Having purchased the whole gamut of colours in the DMC embroidery floss range, Patricia spent several weeks merging with the essence of her rags and then set off on her travels, with an eagerness to stitch, despite many years of absence from the craft.

With inspiration along the way from different stitching styles, artists and even a spiritualist choral group, Patricia taught herself to integrate her gestural approach to abstract painting into her hand stitchery. It resulted in her Remnants Series of stitched textiles.

Patricia is an Artist Member of State of the Art Gallery in Ithaca, New York and is known for her exhibitions of drawings, paintings, collages and mixed media assemblages in galleries and museums across New York. She taught visual art in New York State public schools where she was awarded Art Educator of the Year. She has co-authored a book, Traveling Through Glass, with her close friend and poet, Lisa Harris.

Lindsay Olson: Soundscapes in stitch

Lindsay Olson jumped at the chance to take part in an ocean acoustics science expedition and then explore the project’s science and technology concepts through her art. After three weeks on the Research Vessel ‘Endeavor’, she returned home and started to figure out how to use the collected data as inspiration for her project ‘The Art and Science of Sounds in The Sea’.

This body of work highlights the research conducted from the University of New Hampshire’s Center for Acoustics Research and Education. Her artwork is currently touring in Europe and the US in numerous science outreach exhibitions.

Lindsay’s artistic practice has developed out of her intense curiosity about science and its relationship with society. She was chosen to be the Fermi National Accelerator’s first artist in residence at CERN and has worked with the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago, the Field Museum and the Chicago Botanic Garden. Lindsay currently teaches textiles at Columbia College Chicago.

In this article, we explore the art of incorporating scientific data into your work. Lindsay shares with us the excitement of being part of a research team working on a scientific research vessel and shows us in detail how she went on to develop her artwork for this project.

Agnes Herczeg: Thoroughly modern lace

Delicate, intricately crafted lace pictures – with a modern take and framed with carefully selected small knotty branches – have brought Hungarian artist Agnes Herczeg international recognition.

Her fine, detail-oriented artworks range from a petite 5cm up to 18 cm for the taller pieces. They often depict peaceful scenes of domestic chores and bucolic landscapes and portray women as introspective and resting, showing their connection with nature.

It was at the Hungarian University of Fine Arts, where she studied textile restoration, that Agnes first discovered her love of the “almost forgotten” techniques of fine embroidery and, in particular, lace-making. Through her own diligent practice, learning from her array of specialist needlework books at home, Agnes developed her exquisite and meticulous skills.

The ethereal pieces often portray traditional women’s work in the garden or countryside. Threads of blue, green, orange and brown entwine to form fruit trees and figures. The pieces convey a striking visual juxtaposition between the looseness of the lace and the solidity of the wood and her determination to push the boundaries shows in each and every piece she makes.