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Archive for March 13th, 2008

textile artist: anne clarke

Thursday, March 13th, 2008

Anne Clarke, a knitter who creates one-of-a-kind wearable art—primarily coats, jackets, and hats—using wool yarns that are knitted, felted, pieced together with hand stitching, and embellished with needlepoint details, will speak about her work at the March meeting of the Textile Study Group of New York. (Thanks Marci)


image caption: (wall hanging) Peony etc Fulled wood, 36″ x 24″

Location: Community Church of New York Unitarian Universalist, 40 E. 35th St. betw. Park and Madison, New York City : Date: Wednesday, March 19, 7 pm : More: Ann will be teaching “Experimental Intensive in Machine Knitting,” Aug. 8–12, at Peters Valley.

After finishing her art degree and no longer having access to a large studio space she started to “shrink” her work and began incorporating handwork and stitching as a drawing technique. This allowed her work to fit into her life both in scale and in portability—she could cram it into a bag and do it everywhere. She then learn’t to knit and started making one-of-a-kind garments.

Anne tells stories with her work using image and color in the form of heavy wool garments. Her main themes are family history, nature, literary references and the news.

Ann is interested in teaching students to see fiber as the vehicle for their communication. Knitting utilizes the vocabularies of surface design and weaving. It is a language of pattern, a language of color, or hand, of surface.