• Home
  • Work
  • Artist
  • Exhibitions
  • Press
  • Blog
  • Representation

Teresa Cole

Hoop Skirt Press

  • Work
  • Artist
  • Exhibitions
  • Press
  • Blog
  • Representation

Blog

too busy

February 6, 2010 Posted In India

Sorry to have fallen behind, Between the crazy installation schedule and my bout of illness I have had difficulty posting as often as I would like.

The end of last week I completed curling all the prints backed with fabric (all 400 of them and poking holes to thread the string through. I was able to collect my fabric from the printers store and start to tailor the pieces to be a bit wider at the bottom, baste them together and then send them of to a seamstress to sew. Most of my days were spent in the studio so not much opportunity to explore.

Fabric Work at Khoj

 I have gone back doing my own cooking which here is a bit like camping out. Khoj has a cook top burner attached to a gas tank. When it runs out you just get a new tank. The kitchen has a sink and a microwave. So I can do must of what I need to do. Although once we started installing on Tuesday the Gallery fed us all.

cooking Dal in the kitchen

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Categories

  • Art
  • India
  • Japan
  • New Orleans
  • Papermaking
  • Prints
  • Travel

Archives

Search Tags

Art Australia Impact 7 installation Japan Louise Bourgeois Melbourne new orleans papermaking pattern patterns printmaking Prints public art screen print screen printing snakes Teresa Cole twilight saga UGA Whitespace woodcuts

Links

  • BibliOdyssey
  • Dieu Donné Papermill
  • Harrington Street Art Center
  • Khoj Kolkata
  • Kunal Basu
  • Sarah Amos

From the Blog

Cicadas, Paper Pulp and a typhoon

December 13, 2014 Filed Under: Art, Japan, Papermaking, Travel Tagged With: Japan, papermaking

The word washi translates as Japanese paper, and contrary to popular belief Japanese paper is not made from rice. Most sheets are produced from the inner bark of Mulberry trees, that are grown as large shrubs and harvested once the Read more…

© 2023 Teresa Cole.