An arch is two weaknesses which
together make a strength, Leonardo suggested when talking about buildings,
but I think we can apply it to an idea of friendship.  When you look at an arch – the forces that
compress need to hold together in a state of equilibrium.  Great and sustainable friendships are like the
arch.  You will probably find that when
one puts more weight in than the other does, that either one or the other or
both, will collapse.
Sure, it is an ideal but we need not
have to relinquish parts of ourselves to be in relationship with another, and
we need not have to give more than the other is prepared to give.  Equal weight, balance, and negotiating the
spaces between until that is achieved.  That in between space where the two weaknesses come together, where the compressive forces meet, the
‘third space’ (what theorists nominate as intersubjectivity), is actually a place where we find nurture and where we can birth
and nurture something ‘other’ - be it our 'self' or a work of art.  Often it
is the place where love grows.  I tried
to capture this experience in a simple drawing some time ago – visually it captures an impression
of what I mean.
|  | 
| Comfort (2002) | 
I bring up the idea of friendship or relationship as an
arch, as a justification for my penchant for working collaboratively.  In collaboration, I either find or remember
an aspect of myself or find a possibility for re-invention.  This is the way I have experienced that most primal of relationships - with my mother, who is my best friend.  She has always been a fabulous storyteller and
our engagement through conversations now that her best
friends have passed, have allowed her to continue with her story telling.  I've even been compelled to write down these stories before they pass with her.  In between, in the ‘third space’ is the
expressive woman, which we both share.
What came to be called the ‘Friendship Scarf’ happened
accidentally.  Fabienne Dorsman- Rey had
sent me a few eco-dyed samples after I’d packed her an envelop full of eucalyptus leaves
found in Sherbrooke 
 Forest 
‘But I don’t want to part with it,’ I told
him.  If I did part with it, it would go to Fabienne.  Then I thought if I priced it highly
enough no one would buy it – even though priced, as it was, it was still a
bargain given the hours of labour in the scarf and its psychological
significance.  The theme of the festival
was ‘the rhythm of my day’, and serendipitously it fitted easily with Facebook
being a part of my day, and where I’d encountered my friends and been enriched
both creatively, and personally.
| The Friendship Scarf I | 
| Detail of the back showing a piece dyed by Fabienne, and a sari remnant bought from Glitz & Pieces | 
| You can see various bits were sewn together | 
| The wrong side of the fabric | 
I wrote as my caption for the exhibition: 'The rhythm of my day – FaceBook and
friendships forged with artists on-line. 
An eco dyer in Amsterdam ; a seller of
sari remnants based in India 
I considered the scarf as a co-creation, in which not only bits and pieces from others came together to make one work, but as well, those bits enabled me to approach felting in a different way to what I would have normally. For me it inspired love - love of the materials, the process, and the people involved.
The scarf was subsequently bought by a woman who fell in love with it. 
The full quote from Leonardo's Notebooks is 'The arch is nothing else than a force originated by two weaknesses, for the arch in buildings is composed of two segments of a circle, each of which being very weak in itself tends to fall; but as each opposes this tendency in the other, the two weaknesses combine to form one strength.' http://www.fromoldbooks.org/Richter-NotebooksOfLeonardo/section-13/item-779.html
 
 
Joni your work is devine!!
ReplyDeleteThanks Carolyn means a lot coming from such a wonderful felt maker, as you.
DeleteOh, Joni, our lives are so enriched by your friendship, your words and your art. You are a gift.
ReplyDeleteYour mom must be so proud of you, her daughter, for all of the gifts that you possess, many passed down from her...and the greatest of those, the shared bond of your story telling. That you've been able to use that in your art is truly beautiful. Your words and your art always touch my heart.
Hope that the person who bought your scarf knows what a treasure she possesses. Did she know the story behind it?
I did have that brief description and I was limited by how much I could describe Dawn. She did tell me that she could see how much time and love went into its making.
DeleteWell, that's good Joni, though you're much nicer than I. I'd have made it so expensive that even Donald Trump wouldn't have been able to afford to purchase it!!! ;-)
ReplyDelete