My second project based on the menhirs (standing stones) of the Carnac alignments is taking shape. I'm thinking of a very large piece centered on four stones. Here's a small sketch of the configuration that is my starting point.
I put this photo into Photoshop Elements and then traced the outlines of the stones to get a simple drawing:
So, I am now in the midst of working with these shapes. I have enlarged the drawing so that the whole piece will be about 7 feet high. I've pulled some hand-dyed fabric in stone colors to see how these large shapes might look in fabric. I am making progress, but don't yet have anything to show. Perhaps in another couple of weeks.
As I looked at, thought about, and read about these stones, I came to think of them as embodiments of the dead. So I was very glad to come across this statement by Chris Scarre, author of Landscapes of Neolithic Brittany, speaking about the possible meaning of some short alignments (from 3 to 7 stones) at Avrillé: "If these are commemorative or mortuary monuments, they may represent select groups of the deceased, perhaps family or related kin, lined up in rows to face the rising sun." Yes, that's what this new piece is about.
We will never know what was intended by the people who raised these stones, but I have come to accept that it's OK to go with the resonance that the stones have for me, hoping only that my meaning is at least in some consonance with the original practice.
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As I was putting together this post, I looked back at some earlier works of mine that take on new meaning in the context of my thinking about Neolithic stone monuments. Here's a small work I made in 2018, cutting out and piecing together fabric that I had stamped with bowl shapes. Looking at it now, I see a dolmen, a kind of monumental tomb found at some Neolithic sites.
Stones (Trapezoid) 2010, Hand-painted and commercial cotton and linen, hand-appliqué, machine pieced, hand-quilted, 14.5"x13" |
Two Stones (2016) Hand-dyed linen, couched silk-wrapped paper thread, 22"x11" |
This photo is from this website, where you can also click through to other photos of the piece. And there's a very moving photo of the work in a blogpost by Judith Martin, here.
This looks like it will be a challenge!!
ReplyDeleteIt’s lovely to see the process of this project in the context of your earlier work.
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