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To see Marilyn Belford's
quilts is to be impressed by her deep artistic background. Her use of colors
and shapes is amazing in its evocative effect. The finished pieces exude her
boldness in design and vision. "I have always had a penchant for the dramatic,"
Marilyn admits. "Plays such as Medea, music by Beethoven, and paintings
like Guernica by Picasso and German expressionism have always been my
preferences. Strong colors like reds and yellows make me tingle."
In her quilting Marilyn
draws on both her artistic training in NYC and her rich Jewish heritage to
create her colorful work. "My love of fabric is an extension of my love of
color, texture, and shapes," she says. "Fabric in itself is a tool, just like
paint is a tool. I use whatever tool is necessary to reproduce the vision
inside of me. I enjoy searching out fabric all over the vicinity that will make
the appropriate statement for me. I spend delightful hours looking for "angry"
fabrics, or "biblical" colors, or for fabrics that will look like an unshaven
face." This love and care for her work resonates with those who see the quilts,
praise and prizes coming wherever the sewing is shown.
It was while browsing
through a fabric store that Marilyn stumbled upon art quilting. "It was as if I
were struck by lightning," she explains. "I loved sewing and I loved painting.
The art quilt combined the two. That was all I needed. Off I went exploring
this new avenue."
Inspired by Deidre Scherer's
portrait of an elderly couple, she set out to make a quilt of her own deceased
parents. "I loved working on that piece," Marilyn remembers with a smile. "I
'talked to them' as I worked on it. It was as if they gave it to me." "My
Parents" was an immediate success, eventually winning prizes on the local,
state, and national level.
"I find new challenges
inspiring," she says, and it shows in her work, from portraits to bible stories
and quilts of famous paintings. Marilyn not only loves conquering new
challenges but helping others succeed as well. At the suggestion of a friend,
Marilyn took up teaching the joy of art quilting. "There is great pleasure in
seeing a skeptical student produce a beautiful art quilt and listen to their
comments on how they never believed they could ever have done what they did,"
she says happily.
For her teaching Marilyn
draws on her own experience with her first art quilt. "While playing around on
the computer it dawned on me that technology can be great for art and can make
the life of the artist so much easier," she says with a grin. "I printed the
photo onto a transparency film and projected it onto muslin and traced it. 'How
nice' I said to myself, 'I don't even have to know how to draw!'" From this
idea Marilyn has developed a curriculum that can teach those who can't draw how
to create art quilts, or even a quilt portrait. "I am happy when I hear of a
student continuing to make more art quilts, and I get very excited when they
bring me their recent work and I see the blossoming of their skills." Always
ready with a smile and words of encouragement, Marilyn helps others and
continues to find new excitement in her own quilting adventures.
Click here for Marilyn's prequilting
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