Yvonne Porcella: - Quilters Newsletter
Transcription
Yvonne Porcella: - Quilters Newsletter
Yvonne Porcella: Defining Why Yvonne Porcella – weaver, quilter, designer, author, founder of Studio Art Quilt Associates (SAQA), Quilters Hall of Fame inductee – has been a fiber artist for more than 50 years. In 2014 she published Yvonne Porcella A Memoir – Defining Why, which she started writing after being diagnosed with ovarian cancer. As she wrote in the Foreword, “The plan for the book is to cover the decades of my life which in my humble opinion have been guided by a higher power.” In her Editor’s Note, Rebecca Phillips Abbott said, “The story of Yvonne Porcella’s life and career is told here in her own words with a spoken cadence that makes ample use of commas or none at all, one thought cascading into the next. As a result, her storytelling skills and charm shine brightly through for a fuller understanding of her art works in the end.” 40 AUGUST/SEPTEMBER 2015 What follows are excerpts from her memoir that offer a glimpse into Porcella’s pursuit of expression, color and life through her art. The Challenge and the Challenger To move from garments to two dimensional art work designed for the wall was a big leap for me. To this day, my interest in patchwork does not include all the complex geometric patterns. I am not interested in “Burgoyne Surrounded” or “Hole in the Barn Door” and repeating these blocks. I love traditional and classic quilts but they are just not on my list of things to accomplish. I began and continue to work with color first, as evident in my 1980s kimono titles, such as Red, Hot, Cool Kimono. W W W . Q U I L T ER SNEW SL ET T E R .C O M When I stopped weaving in 1980, I sold most of my weaving equipment and spools of yarn knowing I had to invest in a palette of cotton fabrics. I found an ad for a mail order company and called them to order one yard of 150 different colors in the owner’s choice of colors in stock. I still have some of these fabrics, nicely stacked on shelves, available if needed. My first quilt Takoage initiated the use of my colorful stash with cut strips of fabric 1˝, 1H˝ or 2˝ wide by 45˝ long. Using scissors, I cut many strips and stitched them together, adding black and white to break up the long strips. I laid the stitched strips on my studio floor, rearranging them according to color flow. When I liked what I saw, I stitched the long strips together. I continued to make quilts in this style, using only strips of fabric, sometimes adding a diagonal line. Titles again reflect color, Homage to a Rainbow Maker, freely using yellow which I had avoided in patchwork clothing lest it draw attention away from the wearer. ABOVE Early weaving, circa 1975 LEFT TO RIGHT: Hot Kimono back, 48˝ x 60˝, 1982 Cool Kimono, 48˝ x 60˝, 1982 Red Kimono back, 48˝ x 60˝, 1981 Takoage, 72˝ x 82˝, 1980 WW W . Q U I L TERS NEW S LETTER.C OM AUGUST/SEPTEMBER 2015 41 Meeting Someone Famous In the mid-1990s Girls, Inc. of the Bay Area had a wonderful idea to pair a famous quilt artist with a famous woman chef to collaborate on an exhibit titled Women of Taste. Each artist would meet the chef, work with her in her kitchen or restaurant, meet on the phone, explore the chef’s cookbook, or do a design based on a specialty food. I was invited to partner with Julia Child. “Here is her phone number, call her!” I purchased a book, Appetite for Life, by Noel Riley Fitch to learn more about her. Born in Pasadena, CA, she went on to lead an exotic life – what she said was the life of a secretary during World War II in China and Burma. Her job included making eight carbon copies of information obtained by her team and getting it back to headquarters. She married Paul Child, a fellow worker, and after the war she and Paul were stationed in Paris. Julia, who was very tall and always hungry, fell in love with French food. She broke tradition by enrolling in the formerly all-male Le Cordon Bleu in Paris, guardian of French culinary technique. She and Paul would entertain American visitors in Paris, Julia delighting in using her new culinary skills to entertain. When I called she was visiting her home in California and was aware of the project and was very cordial on the phone. Would I like to “come to Santa Barbara and have lunch” so we could “discuss our bright colorful quilt?” Reading the book gave me insight into Julia and her business relationship and devotion to her husband Paul. I thought it would be appropriate to have my husband with me when we met her at her home. Julia wanted to have lunch at a local restaurant and made reservations. She positioned my husband beside her with me across the table. The chef came out to our table, knelt on the floor next to her while she and he arranged our meal. Much of the lunch conversation was between Julia and my husband; finally I asked if we could talk about the quilt. My suggestion of putting her name on the top of the quilt was met with outrage, “I am not a celebrity; I am a teacher.” My plan was to make an irregular shape to the quilt, she was unique, so too the quilt. She agreed to putting Bon Appétit at the top of the quilt, and then proceeded to describe exactly what she envisioned – a nice Salade Niçoise, everything fresh and beautifully arranged, boiled potato, green beans, Niçoise olives, tomato slices, hard boiled eggs, tuna on a bed of Boston lettuce with lemon juice and oil dressing. My mind was racing, what is Boston lettuce? And thank goodness we are eating a salad for lunch, suppose she LEFT Yvonne Porcella, 1972 CENTER Yvonne working on Answering the Riddle, 109˝ x 112˝, 1997 RIGHT Yvonne Porcella, 2013 Photos courtesy Yvonne Porcella 42 AUGUST/SEPTEMBER 2015 W W W . Q U I L T ER SNEW SL ET T E R .C O M Bon Appétit, 49˝ x 62˝, 1994 had ordered bouillabaisse? I suggested a grilled fresh tuna, oh my, she raised herself up out of the chair and said a resounding, “NO.” Auguste Escoffier who developed the Salade Niçoise would only have used a nice oil-packed tuna, fresh indeed, it would have spoiled in the heat of the south of France. Besides, she said, oil is good for your skin. We went on to discuss how we both liked eggplant although it was not included in the salad. Then she asked if I could put two cats on the quilt, she and Paul had two cats and they were a big part of their lives in filming the cooking shows and at home. When we took her home after lunch she offered to pose for a photo with me. Paul had passed away and she had a small home in a senior facility where she planned to retire after giving up her Cambridge, MA, home. “They have a dreadfully small kitchen here but if I need to I can go to the dining room for meals and there is a place for me here when I go bonkers.” Her parting remark to me was to visit her in Cambridge sometime. I was able to do that when I escorted a grandson to Harvard, she again answered her phone, was happy to meet for lunch after she attended the funeral of her favorite butcher. She suggested the Hasty Pudding Restaurant at 1:00 p.m. The cooking staff all came out to meet her and she again ordered our lunch, encouraging my grandson to order dessert. He declined, she insisted, and then took her spoon and helped herself to a taste off his plate. Gratitude I have enjoyed a life of travel to exotic destinations, meeting extraordinary people, experiencing more joys than sorrows. After reading this book I hope you understand how I work and Why. … I am forever grateful to those who made it possible for me to live life to the fullest. T Visit www.yvonneporcella.com to view more of Yvonne Porcella’s work. Yvonne Porcella A Memoir – Defining Why is available at QuiltAndSewShop.com WW W . Q U I L TERS NEW S LETTER.C OM AUGUST/SEPTEMBER 2015 43