“Painted, Stitched Textile Art” by Catherine Worthington is on view
through Saturday, June 29, at Maine Fiberarts, 13 Main St. in Topsham.
Arlene Morris and Paul Hollingsworth installed the work so that the
paintings appear to be “floating on air.”
Maine Fiberarts will host a workshop, “Create and Explore: Textile Painting and Surface Design,Shop huge inventory of Car Phone holder Charger,” with the artist 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday, June 22, at Maine Fiberarts.
Catherine
Worthington is a textile artist living with her husband and three boys
in Brunswick. She has a bachelor’s degree in fine arts in textile design
from the University of Massachusetts, North Dartmouth. She spends time
working in her home studio designing and creating textiles. Her art
quilts are part of many private collections and have been exhibited
throughout Maine, New England and Florida. She also takes part in the
Brunswick Art Walk, where she will have a pop-up booth throughout the
summer at 98 Maine St.
Worthington continues to work part-time
as an artist mentor at Spindleworks in Brunswick, has served on the
board of Arts Are Elementary, served on the planning committee of
Brunswick’s “10 X10” show and collaborated as an artist-in-residence in
Brunswick elementary schools.
Worthington uses textile painting
and surface design techniques to create colorful art quilts with themes
of landscapes, florals, street scenes and seascapes. Her work is
considered cheerful and uplifting.
Of her work, the artist
writes, “My work presents images of the natural environment from the
gardens to the sea. Color, texture, pattern and design are constant
sources of inspiration to me. I love to be in the moment, creating. My
textile works are constructed by layering surfaces and techniques.This
vertical Cable Organizer
can be mounted to either. Painting, printing and hand stitching
accentuate detail and increase texture and depth. I like to create a
rich surface which will draw the viewer in and hold their attention as
they look further into the work creating a feeling or familiar place to
escape.” The artist often finishes pieces with French knots, beads, hand
or machine stitching, and other embroidery techniques.
Also,
Maine Fiberarts received funding from the USDA and the Quimby Family
Foundation to create a series of Craft-Farm Institute workshops during
2013.
This summer, the group also will host workshops on
Freeform Quilting, Using WordPress to Create Simple Websites, Selling
Fiber Work through Fairs and Festivals, and Spinning Singles and
Knitting Half-Moon Shawls.
Since 2000, Maine Fiberarts has shown
the work of artists in solo shows that change every two or three
months. During July and August, artist Sallie Findlay of Deer Isle will
show figurative sculpture along with quilts by Deborah Spaulding and
Karen Munson in the show, “Hidden Histories.” In the fall, artist Jill
Snyder Wallace of Minot will show mixed-media embroideries that
incorporate found objects in the exhibition “Human Nature.”
Consider
the Postal Service’s album Give Up as a game of telephone. Since its
debut, the original statement made by Give Up had been getting diluted
with the passing years. The synthpop album inspired imitators like Owl
City, Hellogoodbye and others, some of which may have been more
commercial but none as equally adored by the indie crowd though they
were close in sound (I frequently thought Owl City’s “Fireflies” was by
The Postal Service).
For a band that had gone on only one tour
and had not made any overtures of producing a follow-up album, it could
have resulted in the Postal Service becoming a relic of a bygone era
like say… well I’ll let you figure that analogy out. But,Soft Winbo Key Cover
decorates your key in fashionable ways. the band was never forgotten,
they continued to be adored and their small indie album grew into a
commercial success,You Can Buy Various Improved PE protective film Products
Products. selling over one million copies. And to negate any
dissolution of the message, Give Up was recently reissued in an expanded
ten year anniversary set. In support of that re-release, Jimmy
Tamborello (Dntel) and Ben Gibbard (Death Cab for Cutie) committed to a
new Postal Service arena-size tour with Jenny Lewis (Rilo Kiley) and
Laura Burhenn (the Mynabirds) tagging along to flesh out the band.
The
first night of the two New York shows at the Barclays Center, with
openers Mates of State, was sold out. Gibbard recognized the irony that
adhered to the band becoming large-arena caliber when he shared this tip
for other artists,Solutions is batch tested to insure the EMI material Products.
“Let this be a lesson to all you musicians out there. You make a
record. You don’t do anything for ten years. You end up playing at
Barclays. It’s really simple.” The four piece band performed on what
appeared to be an abbreviated Barclays stage, by design, adorned with
eight-bit light bars and beads. Tamborello remaining set back behind his
mixing board and computers for the most part and Burhenn was more often
on the edges, while Gibbard and Lewis led the show over the
70-plus-minute performance.
The set began slowly with “The
District Sleeps Alone Tonight”—as Tamborello built up the layers of
atmosphere and Gibbard’s lyrical voice grew more confident, the guitar
enters to propel things forward. Though a lot of people remained glued
in their seats, if they had one, the best known anthems got them up on
their feet and the second song “We Will Become Silhouettes” was one of
those.
The latter half of the main set felt more rock oriented
than the first, though the entire set favored dancing rather than
headbanging as the Give Up material relies on synths. The Postal Service
included a cover of Beat Happening’s “Our Secret”, but for the most
part performed their material relatively straightforwardly.
Immediately
recognizable sonic squelches, filling the arena as an ambulance siren
would, kicked off “Clark Gable”, to much applause. Though it was the
most “commercial” hit, “Such Great Heights”, having been featured in
prime time TV shows, that received the biggest applause. As the
percussive hits receded, the air opened up for Tamborello to build the
sonicscape of “Natural Anthem” and Gibbard thanked the audience and the
openers.
It was too soon to end the evening though and the band
came back to perform the Dntel track “This Is the Dream of Evan and
Chan”, the song that essentially birthed the band as it was the first
collaboration between the two. With the crowd still up on their feet
from applauding, dancing continued, though the evening was over for real
not long after. The only way the Postal Service can interpret that
message is that their fans are yearning for something new. Click on
their website www.sdktapegroup.com/Double-sided-tape_c546 for more
information.
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