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Cotton PDF Print E-mail
Written by Martha Marques   
Monday, 18 August 2008 10:11

 

Cotton was not only made in Arizona but is also inspired by the history of Coolidge and Randolph, two small towns about halfway between Phoenix and Tucson. We lived in Coolidge for three years when Devan was in Middle School. Coolidge is a small town who historically has made a living off of the Pima cotton that grows so well in the irrigated, sunny soil. The Casa Grande ruins are in this little town and consequently we can infer that agriculture has been a big deal in this area for about a thousand years.

Because the Arizona climate is so unGodly hot I used to run on the dirt roads beside the irrigation ditches early in the mornings before the sun got too high. When the pima cotton started to grow the fields were awash in green with delicate pink flowers. After the cotton was fully developed the farmers would cut off the irrigation and let the plants dry out because that makes them easier to pick the cotton bolls off. And during that time of the year the temperature in the region is well above 100 degrees and the air is dry, dusty and hot, hot, hot. On my morning runs I began to wonder about the people who had moved into the area, particularly in the 30's, in order to work in the fields. I went down to the local historical society to see if I could do a little research.

Evidently in the 1920s Coolidge had a bumper cotton crop and the farmers were a little concerned that they wouldn't be able to get enough workers to get the cotton in and onto the railroad cars in time. One man knew of a small town in Mississippi that was made up of share croppers who were experienced in cotton agriculture and he went back there to see if he could get workers. A deal was worked out that relocated almost the entire small town to a four corner piece of land just outside of Coolidge. The town was named Randolph and had it's own Post Office, store, and a small one room schoolhouse who's teacher was paid out of the town of Coolidge's taxes. The town of Randolph was one of the first all black towns in the West. Coolidge got its cotton picked, kept its schools segregated, and actually passed a law that required all blacks to be out of Coolidge by sundown.

By the time we lived there, of course, the schools were integrated and my daughter was going to classes with children from Mexico, the Navajo reservation and the African American children whose families used to live in Randolph. When I went into the schools to volunteer working with her classmates I was struck by the knowledge that 60 years ago those children would not only not be welcomed in Coolidge, but would have been out working in the fields in the inhuman heat of the harvest time.

 

At around this same time my friend Thelma Smith www.thelmasmith.com/blog/ asked if I would like to produce a quilt for her upcoming show at the Tubac Art Center called Wrapped in Cloth: The Human Figure in Textile Arts. And that is when the whole design of this quilt came together for me. The faces quilted into the background are inspired by historical photographs from the 1920s to the 1940s in Arizona. I intended the figures of the people to be "surprising" to the viewer and to be a strong part of the background of the quilt, the underpinnings and strength of the delicate tracery of the Pima cotton plant. My intention was to demonstrate that the strength and beauty of the cloth comes not only from the land, but from the people who worked the land. I wanted to demonstrate that beauty can only come from beauty, strength can only come from strength. Cotton is really a homage to the people who came west to find a new life for themselves and their children, and who poured themselves out in order to create that life.

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 23 September 2008 09:16 )
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The Moon Quilt PDF Print E-mail
Written by Martha Marques   
Tuesday, 23 September 2008 08:47


This is the full image of The Moon Quilt which I made for my friend Thelma Smith www.thelmasmith.com/blog/ during my chemo year. the first year I was in Virginia. She had seen images of Na Keola o' Malama which I had made for my surgeon in Hawaii and wanted a smaller above-the-headboard size quilt for her bedroom -- something serene and uplifting she said. She dyed the background hemp/silk fabric herself since she was looking for a very specific blueish purple. I dyed the midnight green foreground fabric for the branches myself just before I left Arizona and did the applique very quickly once I got moved in. But the quilting took longer. I think I was really just trying to draw the process out. The movement of the silvery thread through the silk and the image of the moon were so soothing and mesmerizing -- just what I needed as I worked through my feelings about the recurrence of cancer and plunging into the marathon of chemo that had to be run before any surgery could be done. Really, by the time I shipped this piece off to her in Arizona it had done a great deal of healing work for me as I created the small dots of seeds on the breadfruit and the rays of silvery light. And, of course, the whole time I was thinking about Thelma herself, and her unique approach to life's challenges, both spiritual and intensely intellectual at the same time. She, herself, has been a tonic in my life.

Below is a closeup of the central image of The Moon Quilt.


and yet another where you can see the detail of the dot stitches more clearly.
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 23 September 2008 09:09 )
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Devan's Thinking Cap PDF Print E-mail
Written by Martha Marques   
Friday, 19 September 2008 09:19

Devan as Russian Spy

Here is the Thinking Cap that I designed for my children.  Here on Devan it is worn inside out.  The idea came about when my son Blake wanted a plain black knitted hat for Christmas, which is the knitters equivalent of Chinese Water Torture being both interminable and ineffably boring to make.  So I made a plain black cap on the outside and then knit a lining with every wild color and pattern imaginable.  Hence the Thinking Cap.  The outside of your head may appear to be calm and collected, but the inside is teeming with color, pattern and wild contradiction.

Devan saw her brother's hat and wanted one of her own.  Her outside is plain soft green hand dyed cashmere, her inside can be seen above.  She also wanted her secret identity knitted into the band of hers and so you can glimpse the words Russian Spy.

 
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Ann's Photo Shoot PDF Print E-mail
Written by Martha Marques   
Tuesday, 16 September 2008 16:53

Here is a picture of one of my knitting students, Ann, in her shawl that she started in July and finished for a wedding this past weekend. This is her first shawl, her first lace knitting project, and her first knitting of any kind at all in a very long time. Didn't she do a beautiful job? The day was lovely, Ann is lovely, and the Feather and Fan shawl is lovely.

 

Here I have messed the picture up a bit with photoshop which makes the colors and Ann look worse, but you can see the detail of the knitted lace more easily. Try to combine both pictures in your mind.

Last Updated ( Friday, 19 September 2008 09:44 )
 
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The AVL or Martha and Joe's Great Adventure PDF Print E-mail
Written by Martha Marques   
Wednesday, 10 September 2008 11:02

I recently acquired a large (5 x 6 x 7 -- that's in feet) floor loom at a greatly reduced price, mostly because it was big and complicated and not like most looms and consequently nobody really wanted to invest the time to assemble it, figure the darn thing out, and then disassemble and reassemble it.  So we packed the loom in pieces into the back of the Mini Cooper, which is a bit of a feat in itself since the loom is at least as big as the Mini Cooper and brought it home with some partial manuals and paperwork dating from the 60's to figure it all out.  We thought it would take about a week of concentrated effort, and in fact the first try did.  Then more figuring, warping with a big 10 yard warp, discovery that we had figured it wrong.  Sadness.

I then cut the warp off the loom with about a foot of fabric completed and rewarped and rethreaded the whole thing with a certain grim determination.  But when I sat down to weave, satisfied that everything was just as it should be, I discovered that, in fact, I had wound the warp correctly the First time, and rewound it incorrectly the Second time.  After beating my head against the wall for a few hours Joe came home and put his not inconsiderable head to work on it.  After some computer research and careful thought he figured out to hang the weight on the arm that maintains the warp tension in reverse, so that everything worked....not exactly as it should perhaps but it did work.

I wove off the warp and cut the web off the loom and then washed the fabric, ending up with 7 yards of excellent soft, supple, tweedy woolen matereial to make an Irish cape.  And now the next time we should be all set.....I think.....but I have been here before and am not altogether sanguine.  Here is a picture of me threading the loom with great patience.

Last Updated ( Sunday, 14 September 2008 18:17 )
 
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