Yesterday's guest was great fun,
She's another of those artists who's traveled all over the world, following her husband's work, so there are the traces of many cultures in her work, which is playful and thoughtful at once.
Originally a painter, she works in soft sculpture, and has taken lately to photographing her figures and photoshopping them into images she prints out.
But she still makes found object boxes of hand stitched figures, one of which was selected for the annual Handweavers guild small works show.
She's also collaborating on a picture book with a writer. I can definitely see her work there.
She commented that what she's making is something like decorative art, something like craft, but neither really. So finding venues is tricky. Our passion for labeling leaves her in limbo.
This is her resume. She just couldn't write the usual artist one, had to illustrate it.
Anyway, here's some of her work. She freely acknowledges she's a beginner in embroidery, being more interested in the hoop as a stand for figures. I noted that! About using hoops, yes, great idea. She uses embroidery to stitch messages into the work.
In the past she's made full-size figures which have appeared in stores as part of the decor. But the ones you see in these pictures are largely no more than maybe 15" tall.
And she reawakened a literally lifelong plan if mine, to make lifesuze soft sculptures. To wear my clothes. I can construct them using my Sonya Phillips pattern for pants and my own pattern for tops... Magpie was quite right when she said watching this series is enough to send you off in all directions!
This is how I know Loren's good -- it's a sure sign when someone else's art triggers an urge to run and make your own.
I hope you enjoy these images. It was a very fast hour.
Some of the posted questions were interesting, one asking if she was influenced by Joseph Cornell's boxes, and she said she needed to find out who he was! Her art history had missed him. If yours has, too, check him out. Not as playful but powerful.
When she mentioned having more boxes and raw material than she could ever get through, another questioner mentioned her SABLE.
At this it was the host's turn to look baffled, showing she's not a knitter! And had it explained to her: Stash Acquisition Beyond Life Expectancy! She's a weaver and some of the guests outrun her knowiedge of textiles.
Worth going to Lauren's website to see more. I find more and more that textile people seem approachable and fun.
When I started saori, spontaneous, weaving years ago I thought traditional weavers would disapprove of the homemade looms, wild colors, any old thing used for the weft, wavy selvedges. But the largely Indian ones who'd seen them were hugely supportive and really kind to my efforts. So there's that.
Nice to assume the best of each other!
Speaking of which, Gary's over soon to replace my ceiling light and hopefully make my worktop less gloomy. He had a couple of my blueberry muffins for breakfast to give him energy.











