Retirement
Wen is technically retired but that’s not how things work for an artist. “You’re never not an artist,” she says, “I’ll be up, I’ll go on a walk, and I’ll absorb whatever it is the energy of the day, or I’ll be reading something online, and a quote will come up, and I’ll absorb that. And the next thing you know, the stuff is churning around in there. And then, if you don’t run to your studio and get it out, it can explode.”
Wen laughingly agrees with her husband’s assessment of her as ‘a woman possessed’. “I used to feel bad about it,” she laughs, “But I just finished reading a book by Matthew Fox called Creativity. And one of the major points I gleaned from the book was that creativity is something that you should honour and that it’s not frivolous. It’s a beautiful gift.”
The power of mistakes
If Wen’s years as an artist have taught her anything, it’s the power of mistakes. “You find that you make mistakes. I’ll print something and think, ‘I don’t like this’. If you insist something has to happen a certain way, then the art is forced. So I’ll make marks, or I’ll do whatever technique, then step back. I put a sheet over the piece of work on the wall, on my working wall. And I don’t want to see it because it’ll haunt me.
A month later, I’ll look at it and somehow, it’s not so bad. A lot of times, my mistakes turn out to be really great.”
Making art by the seat of her pants
Wen has never been the sort of fibre artist whose work could be pigeonholed. She has never been able to stick to one style or medium. “I make art by the seat of my pants,” Wen says, “When I wrote my last book, I was making a sample. And then it was like, ‘Oh, I can make this sample. Oh, look, that gave me this idea.’ And ‘why don’t I try that?’ I’m an idea maker, I seem to continually make ideas.”
Percolation
Take Two asked Wen about her process; her answer was characteristically thoughtful and insightful.
“I adore being outside,” she begins, “I absolutely love nature, and that’s also a place where I go when I have a plan, and it’s not working out. I’ll go for a walk, and it will take 15 to 20 minutes for the monkey mind, the chore list and the to-do and all those things to calm down. And then I start absorbing what I’ve absorbed already, I guess, subconsciously. An idea will pop in about how to resolve my art piece. It’s a percolation process. It doesn’t only happen when I’m out of my studio, but it often happens when I’m out and about by myself.”
New book
Wen will soon be adding a new book to her list of accomplishments. With her next book, she explores new avenues in fibre arts. “This is what I do; fibre on surfaces,” she says, “However, with the new book, I’m going to be working with newer substrates, some ways of putting the substrates together, and some new techniques that I’ve discovered since I published my last book. Some workshop experiences I’ve never published will be in this book because it all builds on each other. When writing the first one, I kept saying, ‘Oh, well, this, this technique evolved from this’. And because I did that, it all builds up. So that’s what I’ll write about.”
Patterns of nature
Wen loves to play with words as much as fibre. She wrote a beautiful poem especially for her interview with Take Two, which you can read below:
Patterns of Nature
Patterns of nature,
Collected in my mind’s eye.
Trees and water,
Rocks and stones,
Mountains and moss.
Energy taken in,
And revealed in my art.
I begin in the flow,
A conduit,
A channel,
A spiritual connection,
a meditation.
Thoughts and feelings,
Bubble up from the unconscious,
Allowing the outside in,
And the inside out.
About the artist
Wen Redmond, a lover of nature, delights in creating dialogue and changing perspectives of photographic art.