In Hawai‘i we just don’t do things the way everybody else does. We actually give a wave, thanks! when we change lanes. We let people cut in to improve the whole flow. We hold the door for those behind us and yes, we do still smile at strangers on the street. In the world of textile art, HPR’sNoeTanigawa found that, we’re doing it again, forging an impressively inclusive fiber art show of our own.
The Fiber Hawai‘i show continues at the Honolulu Museum of Art School through September 10. A wearable art fashion show begins at 7 tonight, Tuesday, August 23, 2016, as part of opening festivities. Meet the artists and enjoy a walk through the gallery with Glen Kaufman at 5, then the reception from 5:30 to 8 this evening.
Honolulu Museum of Art School
1111 Victoria St.
Opening Reception Tuesday August 23rd 5:30pm-8pm
Programming for the evening will include ‘Fibermorphic Fashion Show’, the 2nd wearable art fashion show featuring Hawaii fiber artists and fashion designers. Show starts at 7:00 pm
This exhibit features works “in, of or about” fiber art. Entrants may use any media as long as it incorporates a fiber or textile technique or sensibility. Woven glass, clay or wire, handmade paper, traditional weaving, batik, and fabric painting are some possible techniques that would be eligible. Approximately sixty works were chosen from about one hundred fifty entries.
“I found this one a mind blowing use of library cards, from what I can figure out.” Glen Kaufman, artist, educator, authority on surface design, is the juror for this year’s Fiber Hawai‘i show.
Remember index cards? Go back, further, to the same size cards with author, title, publisher, the Dewey decimal system number, imagine these "library cards" held together in threes by a copper brad in a corner.
“It’s very inventive here because it adds this little bit of bling to the hundreds of cards she has used.”
Sheanae Tam bradded the cards together fto make a swanky designer gown, generally of the period when library cards and copper brads were in their hey day. “This garment here with a combination of different fabrics and the really brilliant pink is also a kind of knock out.” Kaufman is motioning to a hot pink neoprene and scuba net superhero tunic made by Irina Razuvan. There will be a runway show at the opening by the way. The requirements for this show were only that, whatever medium, the work must simply suggest fiber.
“Usually things are more closely defined as to what fiber should be. But I like this openness, I don’t know if it’s unique…” But it certainly makes for an interesting show. Here’s a piece of coconut trunk carved into a swooping bowl.
“This kind of texturing reminds me of fabric, and also, we have this fibrous quality around the edge, which is the outer bark of the coconut. It’s weird. I love it. This is really something I find uniquely in this exhibition. Using something about the aspect of what fiber can be, but exploring it in a different material.”
Perhaps Kaufman’s best known piece is based on stone sculptures of a Mesopotamian sheepskin garment from about 2500 BC. Kaufman’s piece, Kaunakes: Ghosts of Mesopotamia, consists of fifty garments made of bright red recycled plastic bags, and involves a butoh dancer animating the space.
“I find really interesting concepts here, as well as high
level of craftsmanship in many cases. Initial impact, for me, is the key to pursuing and looking more carefully at something. Then a closer look is important because it may be not the best technique. So, visual impact, that’s the first thing. Others are more subtle, you take more time with them, but that initial impact is usually what I go with in selecting something for an exhibition like this.”
Kaufman described how fabric art is being displayed these days, not stretched tight over bars, but hung, draped or allowed to billow.
“That’s very important, I think, to understand the nature of fabric. Just fabric by itself, not necessarily embellished, dyed, printed, stitched, anything, just the nature of fabric. Sometimes in quantity, building up layers and layers and layers, flexible, drape-able, has wrinkles, has folds. Think of all the things that a soft, pliable material can do. Some people explore those possibilities.”
That’s what you can see at the Honolulu Museum of Art School through September 10, 2016, in glass, wood, clay, and yes, fiber!