Painter Joy Rome at CQA's April 13 meeting |
Originally from New York, Rome worked in advertising on the East Coast before moving
to the West Coast and movie-business assignments in California. She had some experience working
with fiber early on, as her first commissioned piece was a “clamshell” design art
quilt for a therapist’s office in Los
Angeles. But it was a weaving course at San Diego State that set her on her path as a
colorist. The weaving instructor took Rome
on as an apprentice tasked with dressing looms and mixing dyes, which provided
her a bone-deep knowledge of pigments and colors.
Rome
soon struck out on her own and created weavings—“fiber constructs”—for
residences and large hotels, etc. She would show potential designs to clients
in the form of “maquettes,” or small versions of the works where she blended
colored pencils to represent the subtlety of color achievable through the use
of multiple threads per bobbin that is the hallmark of her Aubusson-tapestry
style weavings. Some of her pieces contained bits of her own Japanese-style
handmade paper.
"Maquettes"--small pieces done in colored pencils-- Rome produced for tapestry clients' approval before creating large "fiber constructs." |
Life changes resulted in Rome selling her looms and leaving
California for Seattle, and a hiatus in her creative pursuits as she returned
to school for training in psychotherapy. But soon the love of color and fabrics
once again took hold and she started making quilts, this time dyeing and
painting her own materials to achieve desired colors. Rome says that mixing dyes for the weaving
yarns was all formula-based, but she found painting was so liberating in its
color creation: “Color is my vehicle into what I want to talk about,” she says.
Many of her art quilts are collages, combining fabrics, her
handmade papers, often some found objects and painted surfaces, and are framed.
Some are all fabric, but entirely painted. Frequently she incorporates a female
figure in these pieces, sometimes via the basic elements of the piece, sometimes
in the quilting stitches.
CQA member Marcia Mellinger holding one of Rome's framed collages |
Closeup of a Rome piece with female nude as part of quilting lines |
A Rome art quilt done in paint on fabric |
Small, unfinished quilted piece by Rome, with seated nude (in stitching) at right |
Rome returns to her tapestry weaving roots in this collaged piece |
Rome’s
more recent works are abstract paintings in fairly large sizes (36”x48” is
typical) and brilliant in color. “The fun of abstract art is that it invites
the viewer to participate in the painting,” says Rome. “It asks you to not just be a passive
viewer…turn it in different directions and the impression changes for each
viewer.” She adds that “Abstract artists frequently have trouble finding places
to exhibit because the pieces are usually large and do ask you to stop and spend
time with them.”
“Painter’s block” is something that hits even such an
experienced artist, and when it does, Rome
will take out a big piece of paper or canvas and “just make a mess!” Sometimes
she’ll take a stack of small pieces of canvas or paper and quickly create some
color patches or visualizations of thoughts, just to get her hands moving and
stop intellectualizing. She keeps an “inspirations folder” like most creative
folk, and advises others to “review your memory banks of places you’ve been when
you’re looking for a stimulus…you don’t even need a photo.”
Rome considers this large canvas "a total mess," made just to get the creative juices flowing |
Rome
cites some of her own inspirations and influences as the works of Mark Rothko
and Georgia O’Keefe, as well as Helen Frankenthaler and Kenneth Noland of the
“color-field painters” who worked with untreated canvas in order to have the
colors bleed into the fibers.
For more of Rome's work, see her website, http://www.joyromeart.com.
For more of Rome's work, see her website, http://www.joyromeart.com.
Very fine art using beautiful colors. I love your blog stuff.
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