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For the past week eight of Shetland College's
finest textile students have transformed a former office in a shed
in a run down corner of Lerwick into a shining display of colour and
texture. James Mackenzie
went and had a peek before their collective work was dismantled
and shipped to London for the wider world to appreciate.
Textile magic
25 June, 2007
I'M SURE that the words 'magic' and 'imagination' must have the same
ancestry. Both have been in evidence at an unassuming wooden shed in
Garthspool, Lerwick for the last ten days.
The
old Shearer's Shipping Office is where folk went to pick up their
Argos catalogue goods. Mass production and mail order. Convenience
shopping, especially if you live remote from retail parks (note: the
park is for the car and the shopping trolley, not for the benefit
our health), makes sense, and there's nothing wrong with it, but
it's at the other end of the design yardstick from what's been on
offer lately at Shearers.
Amazing, first, what a coat of white paint can do. No, that's
incorrect. Lend the redundant building (a big thanks to the owner,
Lerwick Port Authority) to a group of talented and committed art and
textile design students, and just see what they can do. THAT'S
amazing.
Is it the standard and quality of teaching, or the individual seeds
of creativity which result in this inspirational exhibition? It must
be both, a kind of dialectic process enabled by Shetland College and
the University of the Highlands and Islands.
But there is also now a refreshing fusion of imaginative art - which
traditionally used to be manifested in the two dimensions of paint
and the three dimensions of stone and metal - and craft, which,
because it was apparently a matter of a tradesperson's handiwork
rather than vision, was less exalted.
These
BA degree students have stretched and woven fabrics, used light and
space, paint, print, forms of nature, personal and cultural history,
to create new worlds. Some you could gaze upon on your wall, some
could be suspended in underwater light, others you could drape
around your neck or pin to clothing - or even be clothed in.
Even a used teabag can tell a story - a bowl of them is a pot-pourri
of reminiscence.
Feathers and the texture and pattern of (living) animal skins
transfer to both natural and artificial fibres. A comforting soft
teddy bear is contrasted with cooler and harsher textures and
shapes, which can magnify little worries into anxieties. Irridescent
sea-creatures swim in ultraviolet light. Cranes dance across a piece
of fabric. Delicate lace scarves are like magnified cell structures.
A common theme among the seven exhibitors is sensitivity to the
environment and our dependence on it, an awareness of a sustainable
use of resources. So there is an organic feel throughout, of being
rooted into a culture but being absolutely free to respond to new
techniques and influences.
The eight exhibitors - Kath Carlyle, Karen Clubb, Vaila Cumming, Jo
Jack, Nielanell Kalra, Kharis Leggate, Val Saether, and Carol Wishart - had prepared
these portfolios for their degrees, which I hope they all pass with
first class honours.
The exhibition is now moving to the Business Design Centre in
London, as part of New Designers 2007, which is described as "the
foremost event in graduate design and is full of truly fresh
creative talent."
This group of women, these magicians, from these sea-girt isles are
bound to make waves there.
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