Here is a photo taken on June 25, 2021, by Judit Villiger in Steckborn, Switzerland, of my April 2021 “Living Quilt” installation of handmade paper with seeds in the pulp to change over time and produce a living blooming artwork. This photo shows red poppies and yellow gold poppies blooming as well as white wildflowers. Hope to see some blue wildflowers too in a few more days. This art installation was supported by the Haus zur Glocke art center and the city of Steckborn and is sited on the shores of Lake Constance.
Living Quilt for Steckborn, art installation by Jane Ingram Allen, on June 23, 2021, with blooming poppies. Thank you to Judit Villiger of Haus zur Glocke for sending this photo!
It is great to see the resilient power of nature and how my Living Quilt Art Installations continue to change over time and keep on producing blooming wildflowers each season. The “living quilts” are handmade paper quilts each with a unique design, and the handmade paper pulp has seeds for wildflowers in the same colors and pattern as the “quilt”. Over time the handmade paper dissolves into mulch, and the seeds sprout and grow into a living, blooming flower bed.
Living Quilt for Steckborn was just installed in Steckborn, Switzerland, on April 17, 2021, and you can see more about that in the post previous to this one. I will post new photos of the “peaks and valleys” handmade paper quilt with seeds for wildflowers in the pulp as they are sent to me by the staff at Haus zur Glocke in Switzerland. People there in Steckborn, Switzerland, are also writing wishes for a better 2021, and they will be collected and posted online too. Thanks to Haus zur Glocke and curator Judit Villiger for making this installation possible even during a pandemic year. I was able to see the installation via a FaceTime call on April 17!
Living Quilt for Steckborn being installed on April 17, 2021. Photo by Christoph Ullmann.
Living Quilt for Sojourner Truth was installed at Sojourner Truth Park, Sacramento, CA, on Nov. 25, 2020, and it is blooming well this spring. This art installation was a part of the City of Sacramento’s 2020 artist in residency project. This photo shows many wildflowers blooming there on April 18, 2021.
Living Quilt for Sojourner Truth on April 18, 2021. Photo by Timothy S. Allen
“Guns Into Flowers” a living quilt art installation was installed on March 17, 2019. This artwork was created during an artist in residency project in Sacramento working with students at Natomas Charter School and installed at South Natomas Community Center Park, Sacramento, CA. This photo shows the art installation blooming in its 3rd year.
Guns Into Flowers on April 17, 2021. Photo by Timothy S. Allen.
Living Quilt for Santa Rosa was installed at Rincon Ridge Park in Santa Rosa, CA, on Nov. 21, 2018. This “living quilt” is now blooming for its 4th year. This project was supported by a grant from the City of Santa Rosa, and it was a response to the terrible wildfires in Santa Rosa in October 2017. It is great to see the resiliency of nature and the wildflowers continuing to bring new life to this area of Santa Rosa. This photo shows Living Quilt for Santa Rosa on April 9, 2021.
Living Quilt for Santa Rosa on April 9, 2021. Photo by Timothy S. Allen.
Living Quilt for Steckborn laid out in my living room in Santa Rosa before shipping to Switzerland
I have finished making the “Living Quilt for Steckborn” artwork, and it will be installed April 15, 2021, in Steckborn, Switzerland, at a public park near the shores of Lake Constance. This project is with Haus zur Glocke, an art center in Steckborn, and some of my artworks will also be displayed at their indoor gallery in downtown Steckborn from April 17 to May 2, 2021, as part of their exhibition titled “Opening the Atlas”. The indoor show will include my “Daily Scrolls” installation of 91 handmade paper scrolls created during the first 91 days of Covid 19 quarantine here in Santa Rosa, and also one of my indoor handmade paper quilts created as an artist in residence in 2014 at Sitka Center for Art & Ecology in Oregon. It is great to have my outdoor public art installation and these indoor pieces included in the Haus zur Glocke art programs in Switzerland.
Sitka Blue/Green Quilt, 2014, handmade paper, dye, thread, 45″ x 70″Daily Scrolls, 2020, handmade paper, text, drawing, painting, 14″ x 14″ x 4″
Since I am not able to travel to Switzerland due to pandemic restrictions, my outdoor public artwork “Living Quilt for Steckborn” will be installed by Haus zur Glocke in a pubic ceremony, and it will remain on view to transform into a living blooming bed of wildflowers after several months. The “quilt” is made with handmade paper pulp dyed with non-toxic dyes, and the pulp contains seeds for wildflowers in the same colors and pattern. Over time the paper pulp will dissolve into mulch, and the seeds will sprout and bloom producing a “living quilt”. The previous post on this Blog tells about how I made this artwork in my Santa Rosa studio. Here is a link to a video showing my process and telling more about my design for this “quilt”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CdlRSswGpD0&t=67s
I will post more photos here soon of the quilt being installed in Switzerland and the indoor exhibition. Happy Spring!
Here is a link to a video on YouTube that shows how I am creating the Living Quilt for Steckborn in my Santa Rosa, CA, studio.
This artwork will be installed in April 2021 in a public park in Steckborn, Switzerland. I was invited to create this outdoor environmental art installation by Haus zur Glocke (https://www.hauszurglocke.ch/home/) Living Quilt for Steckborn is a handmade paper quilt that has seeds for wildflowers in the pulp to grow and change over time into a living flower bed. The quilt pattern I am using for this installation is based on a traditional American quilt pattern called “Delectable Mountains” or “Peaks and Valleys”. This design recalls the journey of American pioneers across the beautiful and sometimes dangerous mountains as they traveled West in wagon trains to settle in the West. The design with tall mountains also refers to the mountains of Switzerland visible from the town of Steckborn, on the shores of Lake Constance in the northeastern part of Switzerland.
I will be making this quilt for the next few weeks and also deciding if it is possible to travel to Switzerland to install it and make a headboard and footboard for the “bed” in the park in Steckborn. If travel is not possible because of the pandemic and quarantines, I will mail the “living quilt” to Haus zur Glocke in Steckborn, Switzerland, and provide instructions for its installation. Keep watching my Blog to see updates on the progress of making the “quilt” and its installation in Switzerland.
This photo shows me making the handmade paper quilt for Steckborn in my studio. Also, here is a photo of some of the completed blocks hanging on a clothesline to dry.
Photos of my art projects are by my husband Timothy S. Allen, and you can see many of his photographs on his Blog at https://allentimphotos2.wordpress.com
I am happy to announce that I have been invited to create a “living quilt” art installation in Steckborn, Switzerland, in April 2021. This art project is with Haus zur Glovke, an alternative art center in Steckborn, a small town located on Lake Constance in the northeastern part of Switzerland. Haus zur Glocke Curator Judit Villager included some of my handmade paper “Site Maps” in an exhibition last November at Haus zur Glocke, and she learned about my current series of “living quilts”. outdoor public art installations with a handmade paper quilt having seeds for wildflowers in the pulp to grow and bloom over time and become a living artwork. Judit has invited me to create a Living Quilt for Steckborn that will be installed in a public park. I first met Judit when I selected her as an artist for an outdoor sculpture exhibition I curated in Taiwan in 2007. I am hoping to be able to travel to Switzerland this April to see Judit again and to install the handmade paper quilt and create a headboard and footboard for the “bed” in Steckborn. This all depends on how it goes with the virus and travel restrictions. If travel is not possible, I will be mailing the handmade paper quilt with seeds in the pulp to Steckborn with installation instructions, and then I will participate virtually from here in Santa Rosa, California.
I will be posting on this Blog links to videos from my Santa Rosa studio showing how the quilt is being made and how it will be put together to cover an outdoor flower bed about 8 feet x 10 feet (244 cm x 305 cm). The design for “Living Quilt for Steckborn” is based on a traditional pattern sometimes called “Delectable Mountains” or “Peaks and Valleys”. This is a traditional American quilt pattern that has connections to the perilous journeys of pioneers across the mountains of North America to settle in the new parts of the country. I also wanted to reference the mountain peaks visible in the distance around Lake Constance and also to recall the peaks and valleys we have all experienced in 2020 with the pandemic and Covid 19. For the Steckborn installation I will make a handmade paper quilt with seeds for wildflowers in the pulp in the same colors and pattern. I am making the handmade paper “quilt” here in my Santa Rosa studio and plan to share videos of my process and progress on the “quilt” for people in Steckborn and around the world. I have selected seeds for wildflowers that are common in America and Switzerland for this “living quilt”. After the quilt is installed in Steckborn, the handmade paper will dissolve into mulch to nourish the earth, and the seeds will sprout and grow into a living, blooming artwork in several months. The quilt will be installed in April in a Steckborn park, and the seeds should start to sprout and grow in several weeks and bloom all Spring and Summer. I hope that watching the seeds sprout and wildflowers start to grow and bloom will provide joy and hope for a better 2021.
Here is an image I found on the internet of a traditional quilts in the “Delectable Mountains” or “Peaks and Valleys” pattern.
a traditional quilt made with the “Delectable Mountains” pattern
Here is a sketch of my design for “Living Quilt for Steckborn” and it will be in blue, yellow, red and white handmade paper with seeds for wildflowers in those same colors in the pulp.
sketch for Living Quilt for Steckborn by Jane Ingram Allen
I am using stencils on my 8.5″ x 11″ papermaking molds to create this pattern and join the pieces of paper with natural cotton string put between the layers…this means I have to do 8 pieces of paper for each of these units that are about 17″ wide and 22 inches long. My “quilt” will also have a 5″ border around the outside of the whole quilt.
Keep watching this Blog to see more photos of the Steckborn “quilt” in progress and also some links to videos that I will post on YouTube to show me creating it in my Santa Rosa, California studio. This is one unit of the quilt made and dried, and I will make 25 of these!
one block of the Living Quilt for Steckborn completed