Sue Stone: Faith, 2017 (mixed media, hand/machine stitch, acrylic paint)
Sue Stone: Displaced
April 28 - May 28, 2017
Owen James Gallery, Brooklyn, NY
Time, memory and family are at the heart of Sue Stone’s mixed-media
works. She merges the past and the present to connect personal histories and
local identities through dream-like narratives. Starting with old family
photographs, she interprets and transforms them through techniques that include
hand & machine stitched embroidery, fabric collage, writing and painting.
Stone is also deeply influenced by the history of her native Grimsby,
England. For many years, Grimsby supported a major seaport and fishing
industry, and where Stone’s father was fish merchant. The industry declined
over time, but allusions to it remain in her work. Stone started sewing
early on, learning from and working with her mother who was a tailoress until
her early death. This sense of loss, and of displacement, in both emotional and
economic terms, is an ongoing theme for the artist.
Sue Stone: Fate, 2017 (mixed media, hand/machine stitch, acrylic paint)
Sue Stone: Hope, 2017 (mixed media, hand/machine stitch, acrylic paint)
While she will often make preparatory designs and studies, Stone “draws”
her figures by directly stitching on fabric. At times she will use odd swatches
from a piece of clothing once worn by the figure she is creating. At other
times she carefully creates the figure’s clothing through a series of exquisite
stitch techniques. We see parts of the unadorned base fabric come through, an
indication perhaps that what lies beneath is as important as what is above.
Hand-stitched text, relating a certain figures’ story, will sometimes also be
added into the background.
Sue Stone: Remember Me Study #7, 2014 (mixed media, hand/machine stitch, acrylic paint)
Sue Stone: Study for The Boys Go Down To London Town, 2014 (mixed media, hand/machine stitch, acrylic paint)
The figures that populate Stone’s imagery waft back and forth through
time. In some works she shows several generations of relatives, all at once but
at different ages. For example, in The Boys Go To London Town (2014) we
see the artist’s father-in-law, along with his own father and uncle. They are
dressed for a jaunt about Grimsby, with a classic car from the period. However,
they are standing in a present-day London street. Interestingly, sometimes the
location is Grimsby Street, in London’s East End. Sharing the same name as her
home town, the area in London has also seen seen better days in the past, but
is now currently undergoing gentrification as one of the city’s more
interesting artistic hubs. Stone photographs graffiti during her travels, and
has recently been incorporating it into her works. Graffiti can serve as a
liberating symbol, a statement of fact to the world that an artist once existed
in a certain place at a certain time. In this same way Stone often incorporates
the image of a fish, a personal symbol of Grimsby’s economic past, and of her
own. This combination of the real and the unreal, and of the then and the now,
is also a balance between playfulness and intimacy.
Sue Stone: Study For The Unknown Statistic (Never Forget), 2014 (mixed media, hand/machine stitch, acrylic paint)
Sue Stone: The Boys Go To London Town, 2014 (mixed media, hand/machine stitch, fabric paint)
Sue Stone is
currently the chair of The 62 Group of Textile Artists, an international select
membership of textile artists. She studied fashion at St. Martins School of Art
and embroidery at Goldsmiths College, London.
Check the Owen James Gallery for more details of this exhibition, and much more.
All imagery and text were kindly supplied by the Owen James Gallery.
Sue Stone: When Will This Ever End?, 2014 (mixed media, hand/machine stitch, acrylic paint)
Excellent information and pictures.
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