Jenny Hart's embroidered pieces combine old school Americana arts and crafts and the modern world we live in today seamlessly and literally. Her work is layered in cultural references, from the actual embroidered stitches to the subjects that she covers; musical icons, tattoo flash, and eras of America gone by. Jenny has stitched portraits of such musical heavyweights as Iggy Pop, Dolly Parton and Edith Piaf. Her pieces are dynamic and inviting, attracting a broad audience because her stitchery has no limits. She has taken a traditional craft and brought it straight into the twenty first century. Like Sublime Stitching's motto says: "This ain't your gramma's embroidery!"
Between her super busy life as an artist, a writer, heading out on book tours, hosting openings and running her company Sublime Stitching, Jenny took a minute out of her dynamic life and sat down to do a Q&A with ML4U.
You've
single
handedly brought embroidery into the twenty first century. I was
surprised to learn that you only began embroidering ten yrs ago...were
you always creative and artistic before that?
Well, I was always drawing since I was really little. My mom began
sending me to art classes when I was five and I loved it. I was very
excited about drawing. My dad had been a photographer and industrial
filmmaker and my mother had been an art teacher before I was born. They
were very encouraging. I never did any needlework though. Not really. I
did some knitting when I was in high school, around 1988. That was my
first real foray into experimenting with crafting and needlework.
Comics, illustration, painting, collage and photography were my big
interests, though.
One of the things I love about embroidery is how easy it is, and how
quickly it can make something so rad. Can you tell us a little bit
about how and why you fell in love with embroidery?
For
all of those same reasons you just named. I just loved the look of
colorful, American hobby embroidery -the kind of stuff you'd see on
pillowcases and tea towels. I wondered what it would be like to use it
as a medium for art and more ambitious and alternative themes. It was
so pretty, but I wanted to stitch nudes, vintage tattoos anything you
didn't typically see it used for or associated with. I guess I should
point out now that this was about ten years ago, and that was simply
not happening. There was very little "happening" about embroidery or
any idea of "crafting" then. It sounded so beautiful to me, and I
had never seen embroidery used like that before. Trying to picture what
that might look like in my mind, really inspired me to try and create
it. But, I was very reluctant to try embroidery, because I had no idea
how to do it, and I really thought I would never have the patience for
it. "Embroidered Portrait" sounded like a never-would-be finished
project that I spent years not even bothering to start.
But I did try it, and I became addicted to it.
What
do you say to people that think embroidery is dated and old fashioned?
"Embroidery is what you make it."
One of my very favorite pieces of your's is "This Work, Never Ends."
It reminds me of samplers I have inherited from my Great aunt. Can you
tell us a little bit about your motivation and inspiration behind that
piece?
I
made that piece for myself. It was two rectangular doilies, and I
stitched "this work" on one and "never ends" on the other. They sat for
a long time on the back of my armchair where I used to do a lot of
embroidering. It was kind of a message with multiple meanings to myself
about how work is never done no matter how you try, and also how
embroidery lives on forever and grows and changes.
What are some of your favorite embroidered pieces/objects that you've collected over the years?
Oh gosh. I think my long-standing favorite is
a hand-embroidered pillow that says "Hello Guest and Howdy Do. This
whole room belongs to you. If the temperature displeases, try a couple
of our breezes. If that should chill you, later, sit upon our radiator.
Help yourself to books and blotter, easy chair or teeter-totter. Hello
Guest and Howdy-Do." I have no idea who made it or where that rhyme
came from!
When you meet women from other generations whom have been
involved with embroidery forever, how do they react to what you are
doing?
They seem to always love it (or
maybe they're just being polite). Over the years, these needleworkers
are the ones who have been the most supportive, in many ways. They're
generally always thrilled to see something new being done with it. In
any case, I'm always greatly relieved whenever a more experienced or
needleworker enjoys what I do, because I am a pretty heavy-handed
embroiderer.
Do you have
any pointers for beginners starting out with embroidery?
Don't
get stressed out about it being perfect or "doing it wrong." You have
to try it first and get a feel for it. No one is perfect when they
start anything for the first time, and it's the imperfections in
embroidery that often give its charm.
Your new book Embroidered Effects is a comprehensive guide to embroidery. Why did you decide to write it?
I
really wanted to create a unique embroidery book that shared some of my
personal techniques and what I've learned about embroidery over the
last eight years. It's what I've learned, how I understand it, and my
best attempts to explain it. And, I wanted it to be a little bit of
everything: clear basics, lots of stitches, new projects, ways to
creatively combine stitches...I have been trying to cast people under a
hand-embroidery spell for years. It seems like it's working! You want
to try embroidery..
What's coming up in 2010 for Sublime Stitching and your personal art?
More better embroidery.
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