Monday, September 3, 2012
Dr Annette Gero 11th September Talk at Penrith Booked Out
Unfortunately, the talk that Dr Annette Gero is giving at the Penrith Civic Centre on Tuesday the 11th of September 2012 in conjuction with the Nepean District Historical Society's Library History Week display was booked out 2 weeks ago. There are currently no places left nor is there a waiting list.
Thursday, August 30, 2012
Updated details for Dr Annette Gero and Karen Fail talk on 12th September 2012
The Powerhouse Museum is organising to have Aunt Clara's quilt and their military
quilt at the the How the Power of Quilting Connects
Communities seminar on the 12th of September 2012. They are the subject of talks that Karen Fail and Dr Annette Gero are giving at the Powerhouse Discovery Centre at Castle Hill.
See the previous entry in May 2012 for details of this event. The programme is available at
http://historycouncilnsw.org.au/history/post/how-the-power-of-quilting-connects-communities/
See the previous entry in May 2012 for details of this event. The programme is available at
http://historycouncilnsw.org.au/history/post/how-the-power-of-quilting-connects-communities/
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Annette Gero talk for the Nepean District Historical Society on 11th September 2012012
In conjuction with the Nepean District Historical Society's Library History Week display Dr Annette Gero will be giving a talk on Australia's quilt heritage and exhibiting some of the antique quilts featured in her book "The Fabric of Society: Australia's Quilt Heritage from convict times to 1960".
As part of their Antique Quilt Roadshow, they invite participants to bring along their own antique quilts, which Dr Gero will be happy to assess on the day.
When: Tuesday 11th September 2012
Where: Library Theatrette Penrith Civic Centre
Cost: $5 including light refreshments.
Bookings essential on 4732 7891
For more details see http://www.nepeanhistoricalsociety.org.au/imgedit/show_news1.php?id=1
As part of their Antique Quilt Roadshow, they invite participants to bring along their own antique quilts, which Dr Gero will be happy to assess on the day.
When: Tuesday 11th September 2012
Where: Library Theatrette Penrith Civic Centre
Cost: $5 including light refreshments.
Bookings essential on 4732 7891
For more details see http://www.nepeanhistoricalsociety.org.au/imgedit/show_news1.php?id=1
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Dianne Finnegan QSG of NSW talk on Saturday 15th September at Elizabeth Bay House
This talk for the Quilt Study Group of NSW will take place at 2pm on Saturday the 15th September 2012 at Elizabeth Bay House, 7 Onslow Ave, Elizabeth Bay.

Dianne Finnegan has made quilts for nearly thirty years and along the way has been
president of The Quilters' Guild NSW for the Bicentenary, exhibited
internationally, curated exhibitions, explored the history of Australian quilts,
written books and articles, fundraised, and travelled around the world
teaching.
Currently, she is working with the Historic Houses Trust on their Soft
Furnishings Project, restoring and replicating textiles at Elizabeth Bay House.
For this event, Dianne will give her presentation on the Soft Furnishings
Project followed by afternoon tea. Then there will be a guided tour of the
house by one of the regular guides and a tour of the textiles with Dianne.
Entry to Elizabeth Bay House will be half price for this event - $4 or Concession - $2; Members of HHT-
Free. There is also a fee to the Quilt Study Group of NSW for the talk. This is $5 for Quilters' Guild of NSW Inc. Members and $15 for non-Guild members.
BOOKINGS ARE ESSENTIAL. Please email Karen Fail at karenvfail@gmail.com to secure a place at this event.
You are advised not to bring your car. For details on how to get to Elizabeth Bay House, see http://www.hht.net.au/museums/ebh
Friday, July 27, 2012
Report on Margaret Sampson George’s QSG of NSW talk on Medallion Quilts
On Saturday the 21st of July 2012, Margaret Sampson
George spoke for the Quilt Study Group of NSW about Medallion or Frame Quilts. There
were 68 in the audience in the Target Theatre at the Powerhouse Museum who came to hear
Margaret Sampson George talk about her introduction to sewing and quilting, her love of medallion quilts, examine some quilts in detail and then to see examples of her work and
her students’ work. Margaret discovered quilt making through her contact with the
craft magazines that her US
service wife friends read when living in Alice Springs.
After making her first quilt, a log cabin, and then moving to Penrith, she and
a friend enrolled in a patchwork class run by the Embroiderers’ Guild of NSW. The teacher, Audrey
McMahon, allowed them to make 4 blocks, instead of a glasses case, and introduced them to Avril Colby’s “Patchwork” (her bible still) and the
Lady's Circle Patchwork Quilts magazines and the Quilter's Newsletter Magazines.
A year later, she started teaching but saw there was a need
for commercial suppliers of metal templates and quilting frames. She encouraged
a local company to make these – thus beginning the successful start of JH
Bonwick & Co’s quilting products manufacture. Now Margaret teaches whatever people want
to do – “repeat blocks are not me”, she said. This is why medallion quilts have
interested her – they are quirky, eccentric and traditionally are not made from
a pattern but evolve. Her detailed examination of Joanna Southcott’s quilt (http://www.rammtimetrail.org.uk/#/period-17//object-1011)
which was stitched in the centre with her own hair, best exemplifies what
attracts Margaret’s interest.
Margaret then discussed the historic reasons for the
popularity of medallion quilts, the development of fabrics from the 1500s onwards (especially
the quilt centres based on pastoral, floral, military or commemorative panels)
and the importance of medallions for commemorating important dates in the
makers’ lives (such as the New Zealand Martha Quilt – see the story of this
wonderful quilt at - http://roxborogh.com/Marthasquiltimages/565K%20Martha%27s%20Quilt%201%201%2007.pdf).
She finds it wonderful that there are no two identical frame
quilts yet found and loves the odd ones – those that are not “oversized
mathematical behemoths”. She doesn’t believe that there is a mathematical
formula applicable but can see how the Fibonacci principles could help when
designing the width of the frames. She now loves renovating her centres to take
advantage of new, brighter fabrics.
Margaret then took us through her quilts and those of her
students. She started with the One Day Quilt she made in 1992.
This is her 'Not the Levens Hall' quilt.
Here are 2 centres inspired by the Jane Pizar Irish medallion quilt which is held at the Cheltenham Museum. The original can be viewed at http://www.bridgemanart.com/search?filter_text=pizar&x=0&y=0 (Barbara Brackman has a more detailed examination of the quilt on her blog). Marg discovered the quilt when she saw an ad for the museum in an 'English Country Living' magazine. The first example was made by one of Marg's students and the second one is Marg's version.
And this is the medallion quilt she made from available fabrics and sewed under the curfew during the coup when living in Fiji.
Margaret then shared a number of quilts her students have made including some made by Gay Drummond and Maree Spencer, who were in the audience. Thank you for letting us see your wonderful quilt tops.
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Report on Judy Hooworth’s QSG of NSW talk on 26th May 2012
Judy Hooworth gave an extensive talk to the QSG of NSW at
the Powerhouse Museum in May. She broke the talk into
three topics. The first section of her talk covered the history of ‘The New
Quilt Exhibition’. The second section covered the thoughts and recent works of
selected current contemporary quilters who have exhibited their works in ‘The
New Quilt’ exhibition or its successor.
And the last part of Judy’s talk was the story of her
quilting journey.
Quilting really took off in Australia in 1981. By the time Judy
Hooworth and Anna Brown were on the Guild’s committee in 1992, they knew that recognizably
Australian quilts were being made and it was time to also see quilts as ‘works
of art’, not just as bed coverings. The committee accepted their proposal to
start ‘The New Quilt Exhibition’ to showcase such quilts, so they took some of
their own representative quilts to a list of museum and art galleries to gather
support. Michael Pursche, then director of the Manly Art Gallery and Museum (and who was also in
the audience), agreed to provide the venue for the exhibition. The benchmark
for the first show was USA’s
Quilt National, and the first catalogue produced for The New Quilt Exhibition has
ensured continuing recognition of the event. Judy showed us the cover of every catalogue
produced and took us through the themes and notable developments shown by
quilters at each exhibition. She noted that while one third of the entries in
the first exhibition had some surface design and two thirds used commercial
fabrics, in the most recent exhibition 15 of the 19 exhibitors made their own
fabrics. She encouraged all of us to submit proposals for future exhibitions
because it is important to our work to ask ourselves three important questions:
‘What are we making? Why? And what have I made before?’ There are no prizes
given but the reward is the privilege of being accepted into the Exhibition. Judy’s
final piece of advice: ‘Take courage to submit a proposal’.
For the second section of her talk, Judy approached quilt
artists who had exhibited in The New Quilt Exhibitions and asked them to
provide her with digital images of their recent and earlier works, and to tell
her what was the highlight of their career so far. It was remarkable to see how
their quilts had changed and to hear the highlights. Those who responded
included Yvonne Line, Barbara Macey, Pamela Fitzsimons, Alison Muir, Alveena
Hall, Dianne Firth, Greg Somerville, Susan Matthews, Glennis Mann, Carolyn
Sullivan, John Parkes, Anna Brown and Sue Cunningham.
In the final section of her talk, Judy took us through her
artistic journey in textiles, her awards and the publications to which she has contributed.
She started stitching with Noreen Dunn in the Cottage Quilters group in 1981.
In 1985 they joined forces to start a business, Quiltek, and had a stall at the
Craft Expos from 1985 to 1987. They both taught and sewed on consignment. Judy
said she ‘concentrated on colour, Noreen on maths’.
Judy has always worked on series of quilts and showed us
examples from every one of them. She started with her 1986 Double Homage series,
inspired by Amish quilters, which marked the start of her career as a
contemporary quilt maker.
By 1993 her fascination with the log cabin series led to her
first entry into USA’s
Quilt National.
In 1995 and 1997, the red, white, yellow and black colours in
road barriers sparked her ‘Urban Landscapes’ series.
Her move from Terrey Hills to Morriset in 2004 led to the
latest change in Judy’s work. As she initially had no studio or commercial
fabrics to use, she started experimenting with plain white fabric torn into
strips, layered, slashed and painted.
Her inspiration comes from nearby Dora Creek
and she is now back to working with simple pieced and collaged quilts. When she
lost her husband three years ago, she started work on her latest quilts – the Black
Water series – which are hand painted, monoprinted, discharge-dyed and worked
with oil pastels on the top of the fabrics.
Cancellation of Dr Annette Gero's talk on 11th August 2012 for the National Trust Parramatta
Unfortunately the 11th August talk by Annette Gero for the National Trust Parramatta on 'The Fabric of Society' and the Frederica Josephson coverlet has been cancelled. It will be rescheduled to a date in 2013.
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