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Too Many Pies

Too Many Pies

Category Archives: Philosophy

Project personification, and a strategy for the worthy

22 Monday Jan 2018

Posted by Deidhre Wauchop in Meta pie, NEO, Philosophy

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

1000 days body of work, deidhre wauchop, fabric design, kikyo, kumihimo, pomodoro technique, reticulated pattern, strategy, too many pies

The problem to solve today is ‘what to work on?’. In my pied world things aren’t black and white. I have never begun a project, then finished that project to the exclusion of all others. Creative ventures are always full of beginning joy; then sometimes turn hard and nasty; then become worthy of push to completion, or not worthy but saved for ‘just in case’.

I know each creative thing in my life intimately. I know where each thing lives and I generally know its needs. It’s always just a question of worthiness—I do the rounds each day and have a little conversation with each project and it’s myriad of offspring—’are you the muse today’?

Since this blog is part disclosure and part strategy, I thought I would try to reveal the extent of my repository of incomplete and work some strategies for dealing.

Designing for…

Some of my work is design-oriented—cards, jewellery, bags, scarves, gloves, hair accessories, craft supplies and more. I have started on some simple sewing and have collected quite a bit of fabric. I would like to do some more fabric design so that I can sew with my own designed fabrics.

In the kikyo (balloon flower) images above I’ve superimposed the kikyomon with some sections of De Chirico images. I can see potential for fabric design. For this project to progress I need to further develop the individual kikyo, probably with my own images superimposed and then develop a repeat pattern ready for printing.

The line drawing above is part of a challenge that I’ve set myself to create separate images that can be placed in any pattern combination—images that can be flipped, mirrored, rotated and even staggered—they aren’t constrained by a single orientation. Here, I was trying fluid lines and marks to represent water and it sort of works with the 6 separate patterns created so far. I think I have to try something a bit simpler to nail the concept so my strategy is to go back to the drawing board with some graph paper and some straight lines.

Endless lovely fibre…

I’m expecting another yarn delivery today. It’s a feltable wool from Bendigo Woollen Mills and of course I have several plans in my head for felted bags. I get so excited about the potential of a ball of yarn or a spool of thread for braiding.

My kumihimo braids are forever worthy. So many patterns to explore and loads of potential for jewellery and sculptural objects. I have both 32 slot and 64 slot disks so there’s still a lot to explore. Wish list includes a wooden marudai and a takadai for more complex patterning. What stops me doing more is that it’s a very sedentary activity and time-consuming so when my half-complete 32-thread green python braid cries out to be picked as I pass, I have to validate it and tell it that it’s gorgeous, but seriously consider whether I can spend time with it today.

Knitting is sedentary too but it’s much easier to pick it up for short periods of time. It doesn’t require so much concentration.

I desperately need a strategy for completion here. Like tribbles, yarn stash and unfinished projects multiply. They are all fighting for space and screaming for attention and I can hear them! Some things really only require a few minutes to finish, but the bigger problem is that finishing (e.g.a pair of gloves) demands that I make another pair in a different colour scheme, stitch pattern, shape, length. So seductive they are! Perhaps I try the pomodoro technique here? Yes, OK, be disciplined, but surely there’s a more creative answer. I’ll let you know what I come up with.

1000 days…

My artwork is already strategised thanks to a commitment to create a substantive body of work by 22 July 2020.

Strategised, in the sense that there is some direction, a clear timeframe and some works in progress. I work in this space most days and each work takes its own sweet time. We work together if you like. I’ve always enjoyed collaborating.

I’m working in acrylics for smaller works and oils for larger works. Symbols and surfaces vie for attention. I’m still learning techniques as I collaborate with the work.

Today’s strategy, then…

Reading through this post leads me to a conclusion for today’s strategy. Working on my Reticulated pattern (yes, it was worthy enough to just be named) seems like a plan. The challenge is mathematical, which I enjoy, and it made me realise that virtually everything I am doing and trying to do is demanding mathematically.

All hail the mathematical muse!

Hmmm…the wool just arrived and it’s very beautiful…

 

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The art of procrastination

23 Saturday Jan 2016

Posted by Deidhre Wauchop in Philosophy

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Tags

adam grant, colour palette, procrastinating, procrastination, repository of incomplete

I think I’ve written a few times about procrastination. Yes, really, I just jumped in and did it!

It’s been a few long months since I have posted on Too Many Pies. In my last post I wrote some notes to self about ideas on the boil and projects to complete. I’m pretty happy that I’ve managed to find a ‘hat with earflap’ pattern, part-design some cotton knits and make some adequate calzones.

In my pursuit of a new colour palette I realised the only colour combinations I don’t use are primary colour combinations—and I’m not about to start now, so I can sort-of tick this one off. (OK, so I didn’t complete this one, but thinking about it and realising it was a stupid idea in the first place is just as good IMO)

White note paper

Most of the other ideas revealed in that post are still percolating and many others have been added. I’ve started making fingerless gloves. I’m wrestling with a couple of mathematical problems in my design work. I’ve been working puns about fish into some new imagery. I’m in procrastination heaven!

An interesting read penned by Adam Grant titled Why I Taught Myself to Procrastinate gives reasons why procrastination is a good thing:

When you procrastinate, you’re more likely to let your mind wander. That gives you a better chance of stumbling onto the unusual and spotting unexpected patterns. Nearly a century ago, the psychologist Bluma Zeigarnik found that people had a better memory for incomplete tasks than for complete ones. When we finish a project, we file it away. But when it’s in limbo, it stays active in our minds.

LIMBO and ACTIVE are oxymoronic but perfectly describe the state of my procrastination. It’s a good thing, I agree. Every day holds great excitement and promise as I delve into the substantial Repository of Incomplete.

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My Imagination is suspicious

08 Sunday Mar 2015

Posted by Deidhre Wauchop in About, Food for thought, Philosophy

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Cavendish Golden Hands Encyclopedia of Crafts, formulas, good teaching practice, imagination, patterns, spirograph

My Imagination is SUSPICIOUS of FORMULAS.

spirographweb

Image by Brian Jeffery Beggerly

I think of my Imagination as a co-conspirator. It’s been with me for a very long time. It’s great company—talkative, funny (sometimes absurd) and a terrific collaborator.

I realised at a fairly young age that my Imagination was also a bit opinionated and not very patient. I was given a spirograph set for Christmas and was really excited, until I played with it. I sat at the dining table after lunch with my new toy and had a go. After a while my Imagination became disgruntled, wanting to do more with it than it could, or that my 9-year-old brain had the capacity to make it do.

When I look back there are lots of other similar occurrences. My mother forked out money (though we had scant to spare) to buy me the full set of Marshall and Cavendish Golden Hands Encyclopedia of Crafts. I loved all the pictures and ideas, but following a procedure to make something the same as in the picture was way too tedious for good old Imagination.

When I was a teacher, Imagination only rarely let me teach the same content twice. I would have to create new and different programs and lessons every year, or at least clothe content in a new skin, an updated skin, or a skin that better matched the students before me. [Thanks, Imagination, even though it was time-consuming it was probably good teaching practice!]

Having an active imagination in my life is very good for making art. However, it can be troublesome when you are trying to develop techniques and need to follow certain rules, such as those that bring you success in using media (paints, mediums, glues, dyes, for example).

My Imagination should be commended though, for admirable effort in relation to my aspiration to build some skills in knitting. Not only is my Imagination suspicious of knitting patterns, it absolutely digs in it’s heels and forces me to work tangents until the work is uniquely ours.

Thanks, Imagination, love your work!

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The whole shebang

11 Sunday Jan 2015

Posted by Deidhre Wauchop in Philosophy

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

contingencies, finger in too many pies, stockpile, stuff, Too many pies philosophy, Too many pies syndrome, whole kit and caboodle

potpourri

Image by palindrome6996

I realise that part of the Too many pies ‘syndrome’ (my version anyway) is wanting to stockpile materials and tools, just in case I need them for some bright idea that emerges unexpectedly. When you have an idea, you really want to play with that idea IMMEDIATELY.

At first I thought this penchant for stockpiling was like planning for contingencies, but it’s not that so much as having lots of options, so that if I’m experimenting, I have lots of possibilities at my disposal.

This means I have a lot of stuff—a lot of yarn, a lot of art materials, a lot of digital images, a lot of beads and buttons, and a growing number of tools and machines, some of which I haven’t used yet, or have no idea how to use. [I was just given an overlocker and now have to find out what you do with one]

I desperately want a 3D printer.

So I don’t yet have the whole shebang but am getting closer to having the whole kit and caboodle.

In terms of Too many pies philosophy, I need:

  • a myriad (extremely large number)
  • an array (variety), and
  • just enough (for choice that satisfies, or resolves the idea in material form)

And, typically, a bigger house!

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About Deidhre

Deidhre Wauchop

Deidhre Wauchop

I'm an explorer - of the visual world and the intersections between visual arts, dance and technology. 'Life obliges me to do something, so I paint.' Rene Magritte

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Recent Posts: An artist's practice

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