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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Dovecot Studios, Edinburgh : collaborative tapestries 1945-1970

Baseby, Francesca January 2014 (has links)
Dovecot Studios (also known as Dovecot) was established in 1912 by the 4th Marquess of Bute (1881-1947) for the purpose of weaving large historical tapestries for his many residences, primarily Mount Stuart on the Isle of Bute. The tapestries produced were all woven by hand, using the traditional Gobelins technique, and were primarily intended as wall hangings. After the Second World War, the studio began collaborating with external designers, inviting well-known contemporary artists to submit tapestry designs. My overall research question has been: ‘How has a wide range of artists responded to the opportunity to design tapestries for Dovecot Studios?’ The thesis addresses this question using a chronological structure and focuses on the years 1945 to 1970, a period of flux, constant change and rapid development at the studio. The broader narrative is interspersed with case studies on particular artist-designers: Graham Sutherland(1903-1980), Sax Shaw(1916-2000), Joyce Conwy Evans (b.1929) and Harold Cohen (b.1928). These allow a detailed exploration of how four individual artists designed tapestries for Dovecot, and how their tapestry designs relate to their wider creative practice. The history of the studio during this period was also shaped by individual personalities in the roles of Director, Artistic Director and Head Weaver. In the 1940s the Directors chose to weave small panels for the wealthy domestic market but as big business grew in the 1960s so too did the studio’s ambitions and it began receiving large site-specific commissions for new and refurbished buildings. Throughout this period it is evident that the artistic decisions of the studio’s directors were underpinned by financial concerns as they attempted to establish Dovecot as a commercial organisation, against the backdrop of broader economic changes and cultural and social movements in Great Britain and abroad. This in-depth examination of the development of Dovecot Studios over a twenty-five year period reveals a complex organisation, in which the inter-relationships between artist-designers, weavers, patrons and studio directors changed and adapted. In particular, artists and weavers increasingly worked as partners, trying to find a balance between artistic control for the artist as designer and interpretive freedom for the weavers as creative practitioners. This working relationship required a delicate balance and its dynamics were sensitive to the different requirements of speculative and commissioned tapestries. The thesis argues that each tapestry must be viewed as the product of both designer and weaver(s), challenging the tradition of only attributing a tapestry to its designers, not its makers. The thesis also reflects on Dovecot’s relationship with tapestry practice in post-war Europe.
2

Translating the wilderness

Englund, Lisa January 2023 (has links)
I weave figurative tapestries, working with themes regarding our relationship to the wild, both in nature and ourselves. I dye my yarns with mushrooms and plants I pick in the forest. I go through this trouble because I want the material to carry a story within itself, I see it as giving it life. This method makes the work divided in three main steps: the foraging, the dyeing, and the weaving.
3

Weave me through a dream : How can textile craft, specifically tapestry weaving, help create a more creative environment when caring for elders with dementia, and what benefits could come from that?

Rådenman, Nanny January 2024 (has links)
In the project Weave me through a dream I explore how textile craft, specifically tapestry weaving, can help create a more creative environment when caring for elders with dementia, and what the benefits with this can be. The research was done in collaboration with a nursing home in Stockholm, where I previously worked as a care assistant. This paper discusses and examines gathered research material combined with experiences from the care assistant job. In the process the project transformed from the therapeutic aspect of craft towards caring through craft in social engagement. The exhibited physical work is an interpretation of interactions at the nursing home. The tapestry can be used as discussion material concerning dementia care. My research concludes that weaving in dementia care was beneficial for the residents I met. My conclusion is also that a more creative environment within dementia care can strengthen staff and relatives affecting the residents in a positive way. The project Weave me through a dream hopes to open up the image of dementia and strengthen the relationship between residents, staff and relatives through creative care.

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