"Morning Glories for Georgia," 24 x 30, handmade by Pam Geisel, November 2016
I made this art quilt to honor American artist Georgia O'Keeffe who is best known for her large scale paintings
of flowers, New Mexico landscapes, and New York skyscrapers. By the mid-1920s, she began creating large-scale paintings of natural
forms at close range, at a time when no one else was doing this. She learned about
cropping from her husband Alfred Stiglitz' photography and used it to with her
flower paintings because she want to make sure people really saw the flower. She
even wrote of her desire to glorify flowers, “I’ll paint it big, and they will
be surprised into taking time to look at it. I will make even busy New Yorkers
take time to see what I see of flowers.”
When I drew the outline of the morning glories I did intentionally avoid any sharp edges trying to keep the shapes as organic as possible. And I focused on keeping Georgia’s intention of glorifying the humble flower.
It is machine raw-edged pieced with machine quilting along the raw edges and also in the petals and background. I couched three pieces of hand-spun yarn for the stamens. It has a knife-edge binding.
As always you can click on the photos to see them larger.
More about Morning Glories for Georgia
PS. This is my 400th blog post!
1 comment:
It's beautiful. I love the way your purples blend into each other.
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