Showing posts with label gudrun sjoden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gudrun sjoden. Show all posts

Sunday, September 13, 2020

Gudrun Sjoden Exhibition finally opens at Nordic Heritage

Finally!
This show was due to open in April, got caught in the Coronavirus shut down, and just opened last weekend. 
https://www.gudrunsjoden.com/en-us/inspiration/spring-summer-2020/gudrun-sjoden-a-colourful-universe?



You've already seen the tunic from the online gift shop sale.

 I bought my timed ticket for Sept 6.
Of course, we are testing out how to maneuver in a museum now, so part of my interest was seeing how they would manage the space.

 Sorry, I did not take photos of the floor markers. Here's one from the Seattle Symphony offices.





The show is fine. The pieces aren't really separated by when they were designed, so there's no 'this is my design journey' here. More of a 'these are my influences' tour.
Which is a fine choice.



She does show her process with examples of inspirational items


these items were not identified either

The kantha embroidery on the upper textile and the textile without below, used in the same ensemble


Some embroidery examples from many places. Unidentified individually.

catalog cover collage

Close up on the 1980 cover, as that dress was a big revival piece that year. We were just coming off the whole Folkwear/Gunne Sax/ peasant dress style movement here in the US at that time. I can still see making a jumper/pinafore of this in striped ticking with rivets. Industrial adorable.

All of this is online at the exhibition website

Four outfits from different decades, with embroidery hoops for signs.

I'm not going into a lot of detail on this show. The show didn't, so I don't know how to.
 The clothes were not captioned or labeled, so if they were from different collections, I have no idea (and I'm kind of a fan from the beginning: I went to the Berkeley shop soon after they opened, and I live in Seattle so it's not like I drove around the corner for it).
(for more on the GS brand and fans in the USA
https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1994-09-02-ls-34083-story.html)

It wasn't a museum exhibit giving you a third person view of the creator; it came as is from Sjoden's company.
 I didn't get the catalog of the show;
I felt a little let down by that point.
I do like the presentation. The paintbrush heads are cool

Lots of watercolors. They might be originals. 
There's no knowing that.

It felt like a pop up shop, with funky displays of clothes that look a lot like what is available for sale now (Sjoden's work is 'timeless', or very similar from season to season).
The gift shop is already out of the larger sizes (putting stuff on discount ahead of time ate into their stock).

I like her stuff. I get their emails. You get the emails if you have read this far. I like Tina Givens.
It's your lagenlook
with the same too-small sleeves and oversized body and cheerfully mismatched prints in coordinated color palettes.

I enjoyed seeing the clothes, but if you live near a shop, you're seeing the same things. I wanted to know more about her and the company, and I didn't get what I wanted. I often complain about reviews that just feature what the critic thought the program should have been, and I don't want to do that here, but it's apparently where I have landed.

It was a very pretty show.

I like this museum, I appreciate how it grew out of a community center and its struggle to be an international center of a part of the world's heritage.  It has that strivers' self congratulatory tone it's always had. At this point in time in America, I honestly feel a little weird listening to the recordings of Nordic people celebrating how wonderful they are, when all the people speaking are middle class white people.
Which is not the entire Nordic experience,
but it's the experience of the people who donated money here. Hard work, and Socialism Lite.
There's a tip of the hat to the Salmi, but they aren't in the videos.
I'm not knocking this place.
 This museum has done some nice work; 
recent example was a touring exhibition of the work of Jacob Riis.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_the_Other_Half_Lives
No photos allowed, so don't tell anyone. 
In the other end of the same exhibit room, they had large scale photographs of 21st century immigrants to Denmark. Also no photos allowed, but you can see some of them here:
https://www.nordicmuseum.org/exhibition/legacy
photo from "Legacy" exhibit Danish photography

It was really well considered, and I give them major props for combining the past poverty in New York with present poverty in Denmark in one room. It's the sort of thing a good curator can put together in a public space, given the latitude and opportunity.
So the Sjoden pays the bills. That's cool.

Socially distanced northerner.....


Sunday, August 30, 2020

Alter It In August Is Just Like Every Other Month Around Here

The unaltered version of the photo 
I do a lot of alterations and mending, but this month was kinda slow (kinda working on going to work during the day and just draaaaaagging home at the end of it)


This was a skirt my sister wanted made into a shirt.
About three years ago.
Happy birthday!
You can see where the kick pleat adds to the width of the fabric (shown folded at the bottom edge). I had to stare at this photo for awhile until I realized I could cut the front piece in one on the crossgrain, most of the back on the cross, and the back with the top of it as a yoke cut on the straight, with enough to make bias strips for the facings.



actual layout of pieces on fabric not shown. Got too busy to stop for photos.

August is not a great time to try on new stuff, it's really suited to mending and remaking.
There was dyeing for future pants (I can't get the colors to look as sharp as in real life, sorry)
T shirt hems were transmogrified into face mask straps

There were a lot of masks made

And there was some altering to suit.

This Gudren Sjoden dress made from floaty cotton got turned into a tunic length top with a faced hem and a matching facemask.
final products, edited photo
Every alteration is 50% unpicking. God I love that seam ripper. Saturday night television watching/unpicking featured Curse of the Mummy's Tomb, episodes of Star Trek, Buck Rogers (the Erin Grey one), The Invaders (guest starring William Windom as the heroic defense contractor and Micheal Rennie as an alien bad guy. That show was a snore, so I went to bed and continued this morning) so I'd be fresh with the rotary cutter.
cut off the too long
trimmed one side into hem facings (left the other for the mask)
stitched a line where the finished interior seam will be
Pinned one into place.

Stitched and turned and ironed (in progress)

And made a mask. This fabric almost like crepe, so this was the hardest part after picking out the seams last night.

Fortunately the Nordic Museum, attached to the gift shop this was purchased online from:  
IS OPENING AGAIN!
and I will get to see this show in a couple weeks. 

Yes, there will be photos if allowed.