My goal is to envision the ancient craft of batik as fine art. Batik
originated in the world of craft where people create beauty to
contribute a sense of grace to their daily lives. I try to bring
forward the history of that desire for commonplace beauty and use it
to form the support for my own imagery. By developing a craft into a
fine art I can feel a kinship with people who engage in this everyday
pursuit of elegance and beauty.
Batik offers a highly unique, textured, graphic quality that can
operate to suggest three-dimensional space while maintaining a two - dimensional
or "flat" quality that suits the medium. Also in batik, the image and
the cloth become one, a fully integrated thing. There
is no surface decoration in batik. The image is established in the
fiber of the cloth. I find that to be a very powerful idea.
Batik painting offers solutions for me. It provided an escape valve
that allowed me to see the history of art differently. It comes from
the world of craft and that appeals to me in many ways: as communal,
as beauty in the utilitarian, as an anti-elitist alternative. Batik
is undiscovered territory. It appeals to me for its magical qualities
of obscurity and revelation. The finished work is only seen in its
entirety at the very end of the process, when the wax is removed and
the image revealed.
I've been a loyal Dharma customer for eight years or so. I use the
Jaquard (Green label) series of dyes but have recently purchased some Procion dyes to experiment with. I love the silk selection at Dharma
and use the heavy Silk Satin scarves for many of the pieces you see
here. Other pieces are done on handmade paper.