Rhythm of Light
Pacific Northwest Quilt and Fiber Arts Museum, La Conner WA
July 7 - October 10, 2021
Evette Allerdings Port Angeles
eallerdings@gmail.com
808-397-6040
33” x 26 ¼”
2021
$950.00
Fracking, the word itself sounds offensive. I met 2 elderly women who were complaining that they were experiencing multiple earthquakes in their respective towns, in different States. They had previously never had earthquakes. They suspected it was from Fracking. I used colored resist, dyes, and salt techniques to create different layers and to differentiate the disturbed rocks from the sediment. The depiction of the seismograph is machine embroidered. It is based on a real earthquake caused by fracking. Rhythm can destroy.
Evette Allerdings Port Angeles
eallerdings@gmail.com
808-397-6040
43” x 26 ¾”
2021
$2,000
Makani, a young man who is passionate about propagating native Hawaiian plants. He is so gifted and shares his love of nature generously. This silk painting is inspired by a lei he made as a gift, using leaves. So much work to collect the leaves, cut them to size, then weave them together, to create this rainbow. So much Aloha. I am touched by his light.
Evette Allerdings Port Angeles
eallerdings@gmail.com
808-397-6040
28” x 33 ⅜”
2021
NFS ($1,400)
How much longer will earth survive. Will the ripple effect be gentle like dipping your finger in a quiet pond or jarring like a strong earthquake? Juxtaposing silk painting with Sashiko embroidery, I painted dying hosta leaves, to represent earth, still beautiful in the autumn of its life. The embroidered ripples are not meant to be even. Each stitch represents earth’s inhabitants intersecting and connecting. All will be affected, at different times and in many ways; rhythms of life.
Jeri Auty Port Ludlow
jeriauty@gmail.com
360-390-8170
44” x 51.5”
2021
NFS
The sun shines brightly in my Fantasy Forest. This piece was inspired by a workshop taught by Hilde Morin called “Your Own Forest.” At this workshop I first learned curved piecing and became hooked. My wonky, colorful trees are like no trees I have ever seen, except in my dreams. They emerged and grew. This piece also gave me the opportunity to use my tabletop quilting machine for the first time, and again, I am hooked!
Jeri Auty Port Ludlow
jeriauty@gmail.com
360-390-8170
30” x 14”
2021
$75
The heart, the rhythm of life. I was diagnosed with Atrial Flutter and Fibrillation in March of 2020 just as the pandemic was starting. During this last year I have developed a greater appreciation for life and the heart, especially mine. A year later, with some new meds and a procedure to rewired my heart, I am mostly back in sinus rhythm. This quilted piece is a homage to the many EKGs I have had and what sinus rhythm looks and feels like to me, rhythm and light.
Jeri Auty Port Ludlow
jeriauty@gmail.com
360-390-8170
55.5” x 72”
2013
NFS
This was one of my first pieces and was inspired by a selection of hand dyed color fabrics I received as a gift from my first quilt teacher. I carried these 8 fabrics around for years, basically afraid to cut into them. This pattern seemed right and by the time I was finished, only scraps remained of the dyed fabric. This pieced quilt was custom quilted by Gretchen Monti of Flower Mound, Texas who quilted each star with matching thread, the colors showing through on the back of the quilt as well.
Linda Carlson Sequim
lindacarlson@earthlink.net
(360) 504-3498
60” x 56”
$182
Light is both literal and figurative: it reveals strength as well as weakness, compassion and love as well as hatred, and truth and goodness as well as the evil in our part of the world and in society as a whole. Light can inspire us to relieve darkness. Encircle this piece, allowing your steps, even the wave of an arm, to give the light-filled fabric its own rhythm and consider how you can be a source of light, or share the light that others create.
Kathie Cook Sequim
kathie.l.cook@gmail.com
907-978-7030
34” x 47.5”
2021
NFS
I was excited about moving into 2020. Like they always say, “Hindsight is 2020.” I challenged myself to take one memory from each month and translate it to fabric, using a variety of surface design techniques. (Piecing, appliquéing, painting with acrylic, hand dyeing fabric, painting on fabric with dye) No one knew in January that we would be crashing into a global pandemic. Regardless, as the year progressed, I continued to be focused on the light and the hope of this new decade. Light, both metaphorically and literally. I hope you enjoy my look back at 2020.
"The real subject of every painting is light." Claude Monet
Kathie Cook Sequim
kathie.l.cook@gmail.com
907-978-7030
38.5” x 27”
2020
NFS
One of my favorite composers is John Williams because of his use of tonal layering and interesting rhythms. I thought about him during the construction of this quilt. The layering of colors, juxtaposed to give pops of rhythmic accents like Williams does with the different timbre of instruments and syncopated rhythms.
The inspiration for my quilt came from the ever-changing colors of the spring and summer skies and the words of Henri Matisse:
"Color helps to express light, not the physical phenomenon, but the only light that really exists, that in the artist's brain."
Leslie Dickinson Port Townsend
Ldakm@msn.com
503-705-1497
20" x 26"
2021
$400.00
This Lighthouse tower first exhibited its fixed white light, which could be seen for up to 13 miles, on December 15, 1879.
Hand dyed cottons, collaged, fused and stitched.
Leslie Dickinson Port Townsend, WA
Ldakm@msn.com
503-705-1497
42" x 54"
$225.00
2021
Statement: Sun dyed blocks combined with commercial cotton solids. Improvisational piecing and stitched.
Leslie Dickinson Port Townsend
Ldakm@msn.com
503-705-1497
10.5" x 45"
$225.00
2021
Botanical printed silk, framed with commercial cotton fabric and Juncos printed with Artist Transfer Paper
Donna Lee Dowdney Bainbridge Island
donnaleedowdney@gmail.com
(360) 490.0176
20” x 24”
$700.00
“Entering the Vortex” began as a fractal image I generated on a computer and transferred to fabric. The embellished design reveals a spinning, turbulent flow of colors rotating around the center.
Donna Lee Dowdney Bainbridge Island
donnaleedowdney@gmail.com
(360) 490-0176
39” x 29”
$1,800.00
"Every sunset brings the promise of a new dawn.” — Ralph Waldo Emerson
Donna Lee Dowdney Bainbridge Island
donnaleedowdney@gmail.com
(360) 490.0176
24” x 30”
$1,000
Wandering Microcosm explores simulated microscopic shapes, textures, intricately layered networks, and nuances of colors. Organic growth fascinates me as I view designs exploding, imploding, spiraling, branching, and wandering. My designs simulate the universe at a microscopic level.
Liisa Fagerlund Sequim
fagerlund@hotmail.com
360-460-8527
59" x 26"
2018
$1800
Patches of bright paint, brushed on to cover graffiti, combine with the patina of decay and growth to adorn the luminous walls of historic Fort Worden. Hand-dyed and commercial cotton, hand embroidery, free-motion stitching.
Liisa Fagerlund Sequim
fagerlund@hotmail.com
360-460-8527
59" x 26"
2018
$1800
With peeling surfaces and weathered layers, fortification walls are revealed and concealed. Hand-dyed and commercial cotton, hand embroidery, free-motion stitching.
Caryl Bryer Fallert-Gentry Port Townsend
caryl@bryerpatch.com
360-385-2568
64” x 84”
2015
$18,000
This quilt is a celebration of pattern and color. The design grew out of a series of abstract sketches, loosely based on some original, spiral quilting patterns that I have used in many of my quilts. Some of the fabrics were hand dyed in gradations. Others were painted in gradations, resulting in more visual texture. The free-motion quilting was all done freehand, in many different patterns and dozens of different thread colors, matching the background color in some areas and adding contrast in others.
Caryl Bryer Fallert-Gentry Port Townsend
caryl@bryerpatch.com
360-385-2568
48” x 48”
2016
$14,500.00
This design was inspired by a small photo of a green moth which I had saved for many years in my “inspiration” file. Rather than copy the photo, I studied the colors and patterns of the moth, analyzing what had made me want to save the photo in the first place. Then I used some of these patterns and colors to create a completely abstract design. Some of the fabrics were hand-dyed. The rest are from various collections I have designed for Benartex. The quilting creates additional patterns and shading to complement the overall design.
Caryl Bryer Fallert-Gentry Port Townsend, WA
caryl@bryerpatch.com
360-385-2568
49” x 49”
2016
$6,400
This design grew out of a series of sketches I made in Corel Draw, using crescent shapes and ellipses. I chose the colors to create the illusion that the shapes were partially transparent. The background is divided into light in the top right corner and dark in the lower left corner. I decided that my usual, elaborate, decorative quilting might detract from the design, so I quilted the whole thing very simply with curving parallel lines using dark purple thread in the dark area and light purple in the light corner.
Caryl Bryer Fallert-Gentry Port Townsend
caryl@bryerpatch.com
360-385-2568
24” x 39”
2021
$3500.00
In my ongoing effort to simplify my work, I decided to design a series of pieces that combined freeform zigzags, circles, and a few freeform curves. I drew the whole design in Corel Draw and had it printed by Spoonflower.com. I chose to limit my palette to cool colors, green, blue, purple, and a little chartreuse. As I arranged the shapes in the design, I made the areas where they overlapped into separate shapes and chose duller colors in those shapes to create the illusion that all the shapes are transparent. I quilted the black lines, and the lime green shapes with a regular sewing machine foot using heavy, #30 top-stitching thread. In the rest of the quilt, I used free-motion quilting with many different colors of thread and several different patterns, including circles combined with meanders, zigzags, and pebbles.
Sue Gale Port Townsend
msgale63@gmail.com
(530) 941-4242
16” x 18”
2020
$275
Ice dyed and commercial fabric pieced and stitched. Hand sewn beadwork.
Sue Gale Port Townsend
msgale63@gmail.com
(530) 941-4242
25.5” x 22”
2014/2021
NFS
Original piece was inspired from taking a Jean Wells class. Always felt it needed a little something more. Added background pieces for a more visual effect. Commercial fabric pieced and stitched.
Sue Gale Port Townsend
msgale63@gmail.com
(530) 941-4242
20” x 20”
2021
$275
Ice dyed and commercial fabric. Hand sewn beadwork.
Joyce Brustad Gordon Nordand
2swedishchicks@gmail.com
503-869-2773
18” x 18” x 6”
2021
NFS
The change of seasons in the Salish Sea with its cycles of nature are observed and determined by the rhythm of the light. Salish Sea Trio explores that rhythm of light with Pacific Coast Oysters, Spot Prawns and Dungeness Crab.
Dungeness crab take cover in the kelp, affected by the rhythm of the tide, emerging only in the slight ripple of light to feed.
Spot prawns living in the shadows in the darkest depths of the sea receive a rude awakening as they break the surface in a chaotic reaction to the light.
Oysters revealed in shallow water are easily retrieved and featured as “oysters on the half shell.”
Joyce Brustad Gordon Nordand
2swedishchicks@gmail.com
503-869-2773
60” x 40”
2020
NFS
Under the surface of the Salish Sea lie tangles of kelp responding to currents with a rhythmic dance; their fronds catching the silvery light of the moon and sun. No one views the dance of fronds and stipe until a storm tears the holdfast anchor from its perch and presents the hidden beauty onto a sandy beach.
Erica Iseminger Chimacum
eeisemi@gmail.com
360-732-0562
22” x 14”
2020
$300.00
While walking at the beach as the tide went out, the patterns made in the sand by the flowing water became the inspiration for this shape resisted indigo piece.
Pat Herkal Port Townsend
patherkal@gmail.com
360-821-1087
12" x 12"
2020
$400
The Crack that Lets the Light In - an homage to Leonard Cohen whose words have resonated with me for many years. Discharged silk velvet, upholstery fabric, embroidery, beadwork, Swarovski crystals on paper on canvas. Hand Stitched.
Pat Herkal Port Townsend
patherkal@gmail.com
360-821-1087
13" x 13" x 13"
2020
$470
A friend found this cormorant skull on the beach close to our home. Cormorants are iconic birds sunning themselves and drying their wings on piers throughout the northwest. I love to create “critters,” particularly birds. He is pieced from men's wool suiting, embroidered, beaded and stuffed. All stitching is done by hand.
Barbara Houshmand Port Angeles
barbarahoushmand@gmail.com
360-808-5525
44” x 65.25”
2021
NFS
This piece reflects my feelings about the racial injustices which have embroiled our nation and are tearing us apart. The black and white pieces represent the stark contrast in appearance between equally beautiful fabric in black and white.
Black and white kimono silk and machine quilted
Barbara Houshmand Port Angeles
barbarahoushmand@gmail.com
360-808-5525
26.5” x 27”
2021
$400
Working with vintage Kimono to re-create my version of a “contemporary” pod made of silks. These beautiful, simple and unusual-shaped pods are everywhere, and in many sizes.
Barbara Houshmand Port Angeles
barbarahoushmand@gmail.com
360-808-5525
13.75” x 47.5”
2021
$700
Politics, environmental disasters, epidemic and racial discrimination of the past few years have fractured America. “Fractured” represents my fear of this disunity and the fragility of the world as I see it.
Vintage Kimono and Sashiko stitching
Barbara Houshmand Port Angeles
barbarahoushmand@gmail.com
360-808-5525
17”x 12” x 6”
2021
$500
Made of vintage tie silks, button eyes, rhinestone collar and antique compass.
Michelle Johnson Port Angeles
mj@laughingcloudstudio.com
928-379-0475
36" x 88"
$900
For me autumn is the season of softer senses. Not only is the light changing and becoming more diffuse, but I feel the beginnings of wanting to go within preparing for winters recharge.
Michelle Johnson Port Angeles
mj@laughingcloudstudio.com
928-379-0475
23" x 29"
$750
My piece began with a reflection of how light moves in waves and how that movement can be interrupted by diffraction, refraction, or in my imagination by fracturing.
Sandee Johnson Port Townsend
artwoman6@gmail.com
11” x 14”
2019
$150
I’m working on a large series of mixed media fiber pieces on printmaking paper on which I’ve made a monoprint or dry etching on a large etching press. Then I combined a pen & ink watercolor on paper, hand-decorated paper, hand-dyed fabric and found fabric that I’ve sewn in an expressive way that resembles painting. The finished piece is mounted on a wooden panel without glass.
Sandee Johnson Port Townsend
Artwoman6@gmail.com
828-989-3359
22” x 28”
2019
$250
This pair or diptych of mixed media fiber pieces is part of a large series that I keep adding to. First, I make a monoprint on my etching press and then I add scraps of fabric that are sewn in a free expressive style, sort of like painting on canvas.
Kindy Kemp Port Townsend
kindykemp@gmail.com
360-379-3446
24” x 44”
2021
$3,600
Made with pieced and quilted cotton that I dyed with Procion, calibrated to obtain six-step value scales in a wide range of colors. Inspired by my continuing fascination with the gradation of color through the spectrum.
Donna Lark Redmond
Larkstudios511@gmail.com
734-347-9602
Mannequin installation
NFS
Shadows are ever present in the bright winter sunshine of Northern Ontario, Canada. The whiteness is expansive. Camouflage is vital to a Snowshoe Hare.
Donna Lark Redmond
Larkstudios511@gmail.com
734-347-9602
By Donna Lark-Felted work and Pat Herkal- beadwork
Mannequin
NFS
Vacationing in Mexico with the explosion of color inspired the use of bright oranges and ochres. Dreaming of tropical birds and their colorful plumes inspired the shaping of the tailed vest and headdress.
Debra E. Olson Port Townsend
debolson747@yahoo.ca
360-344-2945
20" x 22" x 4"
2020
$275
I grew up catching fireflies and being fascinated by the idea that they created light in their bodies. They always brought a smile. This whimsical quote for inspiration is from Ilan Shamir: Advice from a Firefly: Be full of bright ideas / Pulse with excitement / Have a healthy glow / Delight in Summer evenings / Keep a childlike sense of wonder / Set a shining example / Lighten up!
Debra E. Olson Port Townsend
debolson747@yahoo.ca
360-344-2945
13" x 78" x 13"
2021
Price: $290
Statement: Color and Light and Movement! Thinking about the theme for this exhibit, I was inspired by a piece of fabric given to me by a friend. I wanted to create a "floating" piece, although this may be hung flat as well. There are quotes handprinted on the back of the piece, including this from Robert Delaunay: Light in nature creates the movement of colors.
Debra E. Olson Port Townsend
debolson747@yahoo.ca
360-344-2945
26" x 9" x 6"
2020
$175 /set or $95 ea,
Thinking about created spaces and light, brought to mind containers. I appreciate the inner, quiet space created by a box or any shape, particularly if it is empty!
Barbara Ramsey Port Townsend
bramsey53@gmail.com
510-384-0713
28” x 47”
2021
NFS
The circular forms in this quilt are made of fabric designed by my friend Mary Tyler using a computer program that creates swirls of color generated by fractal geometry formulas. These fractal forms are repeated over the surface of the quilt in a not-quite-regular pattern reminiscent of syncopation, a musical rhythm that plays with our expectation of where the beat should occur. The shape of the quilt itself likewise plays with our concept of what a rectangle should be.
Barbara Ramsey Port Townsend
bramsey53@gmail.com
510-384-0713
38” x 48”
2021
$500
I am fascinated by the Austrian artist, Friedenreich Hundertwasser, a strange man whose work makes me think of Paul Klee on acid. The idea for this quilt emerged from my brain as I was looking at a book full of photos of his paintings and architectural designs. He loved windows, light, and highly saturated colors.
Jean-Marie Tarascio Port Townsend
jmtarascio@gmail.com
360-531-2248
17” x 22” x 7”
2021
NFS
The leaves of the 20’ Ginkgo tree in my yard lights up with little " leaf lanterns" each fall.
It is a stunning site! Created from repurposed tea bags, hemp rope and wire.
Jean-Marie Tarascio Port Townsend
jmtarascio@gmail.com
360-531-2248
18” x 12” x 6”
2021
$325
"Morning has Broken" is a celebration of new life and a favorite song by Cat Stevens.
Created with felted handmade paper, shredded bark and flax.
Mary Tyler Chimacum
tylerstudio@olympus.net
mbtyler.net
360-732-0599
Quilted by Marcia Aurdal Sequim, WA
79” x 80”
$2500
Hand Dyed Cotton
Over Dyed Cotton
Discharged Over Dyed Cotton
The moon rides among the stars and tells tales of the past and the future.
Mary Tyler Chimacum
tylerstudio@olympus.net
360.732.0599
40” x 56”
2019
$1200
The light will always pierce the darkness.
Mary Tyler Chimacum
tylerstudio@olympus.net
360.732.0599
41” x 48”
2017
$1800
The end of the day brings peace.
Mary Tyler Chimacum
tylerstudio@olympus.net
360.732.0599
31” x 40”
2021
$800
Night turns into day and day turns into night.
Mary Tyler Chimacum
mbtyler.net
tylerstudio@olympus.net
360-732-0599
Quilted by Carol Olsen Bainbridge Island WA
72” x 72”
2018
$2500
Hand Dyed Cotton
Discharged Over Dyed Cotton
The moon performs the perfect circle dance.
Cathie Wier Port Townsend
cathie.wier@gmail.com
360.202.0677
36" x 40"
$425
I love looking closely at the ripples and reflections of water. At times the reflections can be surprising - where is that bright green stripe coming from? It was the moss on the rock, with the sun shining through it. This piece was woven with tencel yarn. The embellishments are artist-made 4-ply cords of the same yarns.
Cathie Wier Port Townsend
cathie.wier@gmail.com
360.202.0677
8" x 38”
2020
$250
As 2020 came to a close I wanted to create a piece that was bright and filled with hope. I used the ginkgo leaf as a symbol of hope because of the ginkgo tree’s ability to adapt in the face of adversity and find a way to thrive. The background is shibori-stitched and dyed. The leaves are pleated and steamed to hold their shape.
Cathie Wier Port Townsend
cathie.wier@gmail.com
360.202.0677
18” x 32”
2020
$250
2020 was filled with smoke and fire, both literally and figuratively. This piece was woven using tencel yarn and then deconstructed to create some of the openings.
Joyce Wilkerson Port Townsend
jwweave@gmail.com
Website: joycewilkerson.com
360-379-4075
size small/medium, back length - 30”
2021
$650.00
Medium/Materials: linen/silk, linen, fiber reactive dyes, covered buttons
Technique: hand painting and hand dyeing with fiber reactive dyes; folding, pressing & stitching to create texture
Inspiration: The joyous color of Camellias, blooming in all their glory, inspired this piece. I brought the fallen petals into my studio and tried to match their hues. Impossible, of course. Colors are waves of light.
Joyce Wilkerson Port Townsend
jwweave@gmail.com
Website: joycewilkerson.com
360-379-4075
size medium, back length - 35”
2021
$900.00
Medium/Materials: linen, linen/cotton, fiber reactive dyes, horn buttons
Technique: pattern making, hand-dyed, hand painted, pieced, sewn
Inspiration: This piece originated with a photo taken on my iPhone. I was trying to capture lights reflecting on large glass vases. That provided a starting point. By manipulating the photo, I created a graphic image, and the resulting artwork was printed digitally onto a linen & cotton fabric. Using fiber reactive dyes, I’ve painted ombre effects on the top layer, as well as a blend from cerulean to dark navy on the underneath linen layer.
Erika Wurm Port Townsend
wurmwares@gmail.com
12.5" x 14" x 6"
NFS
This piece was inspired by my want to repurpose as much materials as possible while featuring local flora and fauna. The Sand Verbena Moth is a night pollinator that is an endangered species of the Olympic Peninsula, WA up through the BC coast.
While the ripples of moonlight and reflections of stars shine across the Salish Sea this tiny moth feeds or lays her eggs on the one host plant her species rely on; the Yellow Sand Verbena. Though a small creature, night pollinators are important in the intricate balance of our ecosystem.