Showing posts with label beadlust. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beadlust. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Beading + Quilting - a Happy Marriage!

It sure was a lovely surprise one day last fall when a representative from the Bead&Button Show called to ask if I would be interested in sending my beaded quilts for exhibition at the 2015 show in Milwaukee, WI.

Would I be interested? Of course I would!!! But since I'm more of a beader and don't have that many beaded quilts, I suggested they also contact my brother, Thom Atkins, who has made a mind-boggling number of beaded quilts in the last 10 years or so.

Brother-sister exhibition... how fun is that! You can see all 22 quilts in the Artisan Area of the Exhibition Hall if you're attending the show, May 27 - June 8. For those who can't make it, here are my quilts, the ones in the show. When you click on the first picture, you can see a slide show with full-size pictures.

Robin Atkins, beaded quilt, Five Cats in the Yard

Robin Atkins, beaded quilt, Five Cats in the Yard, detail

Robin Atkins, beaded quilt, April

Robin Atkins, beaded quilt, April, detail

Robin Atkins, beaded quilt, Beadlust

Robin Atkins, beaded quilt, Beadlust, detail

Robin Atkins, beaded quilt, Grandpa

Robin Atkins, beaded quilt, Intersections

Robin Atkins, beaded quilt, Intersections, detail

Robin Atkins, beaded quilt, Order & Chaos

Robin Atkins, beaded quilt, Order & Chaos, detail

It's really special how,in recent years, quilters are interested in beads, and beaders are playing with quilting, both finding ways to expand their creativity! And it's super fun to show with my bro!

Tuesday, May 05, 2015

Exhibition of my Beadwork!



Robin Atkins bringing beadwork to La Conner Quilt & Textile Museum for exhibition
Bringing my beadwork to the Museum
Many, many moons ago, when I first started beading, I made an important decision about my future beading career. I decided not to be in the business of selling my beadwork. That’s a huge and somewhat uncommon decision for an artist, because most feel that in order to justify the time it takes to do beadwork and the cost of materials, it has to be sold. Many also take sales of their work as a marker of their skill as an artist… “if it sells, then I am an artist; if I sell lots of it, then I am a successful artist; if a gallery takes my work, then my work is good,” etc.

Pre-opening demonstration of bead embroidery process by Robin Atkins, with Becki Applegate and Christy Hinkle
Demonstration prior to the Opening on April 1st.
Robin Atkins with a visitor at the opening of Beadlust exhibition


Robin Atkins - Beadlust, exhibition at La Conner Quilt Musuem - Opening reception
My dear friend, Liz, drove to La Conner for the opening!
Those are tempting thoughts, aren’t they?! However, I had previously been a metalsmith, making one-of-a-kind silver and gold jewelry for 5 years. During those years, I experimented with various methods of selling my jewelry – craft fairs, home shows, commissions, galleries – and found that I hated all of them. Marketing my work, talking about it, looking in people’s eyes as they walked by my booth without stopping, answering questions about how I made something, knowing the person asking was also a metalsmith and might copy my ideas – all of that was like a millstone around my neck, depressing, daunting, and no fun at all.

Beadlust - exhibition of Robin Atkins bead embroidery at La Conner Quilt Textile Museum

So, when beadlust jumped in my heart, I almost immediately decided I would not sell my work. Instead, I would make my living by selling beads and beading supplies, teaching others how to bead, and writing books about beading. It’s been a great pathway for me, almost always fun, challenging, exciting – and, it has paid my bills and given me the means for many beady adventures. To be sure, I have sold some of my beadwork, especially jewelry, here and there. But it’s always when opportunity comes to me, not when I’ve struggled to be accepted for a show.

Beadlust - exhibition of Robin Atkins bead embroidery at La Conner Quilt Textile Museum

Twenty-seven years later, I am looking back down my beaded pathway with great satisfaction, pleased as punch about my initial decision. Twenty-seven years later, I also own a substantial stash of beaded objects that I’ve made over the years – beaded jewelry, bags, books, dolls, wall art, sculptures, and quilts. While many of them decorate my studio and home, some live in boxes, stored away in cabinets. I feel a bit guilty about those poor babies. Shouldn’t I get them out, brush the dust off, and sell them? Oh yeah, I forgot, I hate selling/promoting my beadwork.

Beadlust - exhibition of Robin Atkins bead embroidery at La Conner Quilt Textile Museum

All of the above is to introduce a fabulous and unexpected opportunity that came my way recently… The curator of the La Conner Quilt & TextileMuseum contacted me to ask if I would be willing to exhibit my beaded quilts and other beadwork in a one person show at the museum for the month of April, 2015. WOW! Would I be interested? You bet I would!!!!

Beadlust - exhibition of Robin Atkins bead embroidery at La Conner Quilt Textile Museum

Twenty-eight pieces! Once I cleared the pieces for the show out of my studio, the nearly empty walls and display counter was depressing. Guess what happened?  I opened up those boxes, and brought out things I hadn’t ever displayed, or at least hadn’t displayed for a long time. What great fun to see them every day this past month! I love it!

Beadlust - exhibition of Robin Atkins bead embroidery at La Conner Quilt Textile Museum

Beadlust - exhibition of Robin Atkins bead embroidery at La Conner Quilt Textile Museum

Beadlust - exhibition of Robin Atkins bead embroidery at La Conner Quilt Textile Museum

Beadlust - exhibition of Robin Atkins bead embroidery at La Conner Quilt Textile Museum

Two days ago the show closed (waaa), and my work is back home again. Here it is, all piled up on my studio tables. Nice to have it home; not so nice to decide which pieces go back into boxes.

Robin Atkins studio - Beadlust exhibition closed, beadwork back home
Exhibition closed - beadwork back home again
And then there is the question of what is to become of it in the long run. I am 72 years old. It might be time to start thinking about that. Some will go to my beady friends, and some to my nieces and nephews (if they want it). And, I’d die happy if I knew that some of the best pieces were in the permanent collection of a museum or two. Rosie, The Uncaged Hen, for example should be in a museum, don’t you think?

bead emroidery by Robin Atkins - Rosie The Uncaged Hen
Rosie, The Uncaged Hen
Having the show in La Conner, seeing my work so beautifully displayed there, gives me the energy to start thinking about the future of my beadwork, to make a list of my all the pieces, place an "insurance value" on them, and start talking to acquisition curators about it. Although the idea of this task seems a little like “selling my work,” the show in La Conner makes it worth the effort.

La Conner Quilt & Textile Museum, photo by Robert Demar
La Conner Quilt & Textile Museum