10.22.2005

Sneaking Changes

Work, work, work - as if I had trouble making time to play. I have undertaken a long overdue redesign of my main website. The "under rehab" page took me almost two hours this morning - I am so out of practice that I had to look up a couple of HTML tags.

The real hard work is ahead. Thinking hard about which pieces best represent the direction my work is taking now. Then relegating most of the pieces to an "older works" page (which always seems kind of sad to me) and, even more harsh, taking a lot of the pieces off the website altogether and then, what to do with work that is gathering cat hair and taking up space. A big SALE comes to mind but later for that. Some of the older pieces are already earmarked for the Yahoo Quilt Swap and even that feels somehow crummy to me.

When I was getting things together to take to the art festival last month, I kept unpacking older works and wondering "Who did this crap?". It was unsettling to discover how much I had changed in the year or two since I created the pieces that bothered me most.

Has anyone else felt this? What's it all about?
They say change is good. They also say a lot of other useless things. What do you say?

4 comments:

Karoda said...

I've yet to feel that way about my quilts yet, but I very distinctly remember having that feeling towards poems I'd written...but then after stepping back it was more a verification of how important it is to "trust the process" and keep on keepin' on.

Sonji Hunt said...

Change may or may not be good. It just happens, so you can either fight it or go with it. I just go with it. I get better results.

Deb, when I was setting up for my show I looked at my work differently because it was out of my work space. That seemed to change it. Everything looked smaller. Plus, I think whatever I'm working on at present is THE THING and I forget that all the rest was THE THING. Context is adoration.

Judy Shapiro said...

Deb,
I was just going through trash cans of fabric packed for our move last year. AFter pitching 26 bags of fabric collected through the last 25 years, it was a delight to go through all of those fabrics that I made the choice to keep. When I looked through my ufos, it brought me back to a very energetic time in my career - and so out they came to be viewed by my students. They couldn't believe that this came from me - but they are getting to know me on a deeper level - and I will once again begin incorporating those processes into my current work. I was so much freer then. I needed that time with my past.

Your site is lovely and I enjoy your work very much.

Judy S. in Annapolis, MD

Deb Lacativa said...

Thank you Judy.
It took me a moment to realize that you were commenting on a post from 2005..its also interesting to go back and see what is still relevant.