Galleries - October 2019
Stella Benjamin WEAVER 14 September – 2 November 2019 Kestle Barton Manaccan Helston Cornwall TR12 6HU 01326 231 811 info@kestlebarton.co.uk www.kestlebarton.co.uk I don’t like calling craft work art, but in Stella’s case I have no choice: her rugs are works of art of the highest calibre. Breon O’Casey It takes dedication and a great belief in her own imagery for Stella Benjamin to make her rugs in this [Navajo] method. I find that belief completely justified. I am impressed by her use of hand spun wool or goat hair, which she dyes herself in graded colours, giving life to otherwise monochrome areas. Peter Collingwood John Christian, 2013 Kestle Barton is very pleased to present unique and inspiring woven tapestries by textile artist, Stella Benjamin in an exhibition entitled, WEAVER (14 September – 2 November 2019). The works are for sale and this is a special opportunity to celebrate the major achievements of this talented, local artist with approximately a dozen rugs featured in the show. The exhibition will be launched with a public opening on Saturday 14 September from 2pm – 5pm, which is free to attend and open to all. Chris Stephens, Director of Holburne Museum will give a talk about the significance of this work at 3pm. Stella Benjamin has been living in Cornwall since 1956 and has worked closely with some of the creative icons associated with the arts in this region including sculptor Dennis Mitchell and Breon O’Casey, who taught her how to weave in the late 1970s. Stella was also a decorator with the Troika Pottery for some time. In 1979 another well known artist and friend, Bryan Illsley, built a Navajo-type loom for her home in St Ives and she has been weaving on it ever since then. The Navajo-style loom is distinct from the traditional European looms in that it is worked on vertically rather than horizontally. This method a means that a piece can be woven right up to the very edges and does not produce a fringe border, instead the edges are sealed by stitching the last of the yarn together. Stella explains her relationship to this style with enthusiasm: "I weave on a primitive Navajo loom, using hand spun yarns and dyeing my own colours. I work intuitively, sometimes from an idea made from a rough sketch, and this is one of the reasons I do not accept commissions. Over the years I have discovered ways of stretching the loom to its full capacity - it is very exciting to make a large rug by weaving two or more pieces, not knowing if the rug will work as a whole until all parts are completed and sewn together." This exhibition is supported by the National Lottery through Arts Council England. Kestle Barton is open 10.30am–5pm Tuesday–Sunday, also Bank Holiday Mondays Image: work in progress by Stella Benjamin on Navajo-style loom
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