Tag: Kathleen Otley

  • Local Artists Help Northwest Basketry Evolve

    Local Artists Help Northwest Basketry Evolve

    BY TOM TRIMBATH
    Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor
    January 18, 2017

    When was the last time you made soup in a basket? Basketry in 2017 can range from a beautiful work of art to an impressive demonstration of craft to something you can buy at the thrift shop for twenty-five cents. But that’s not where baskets began on Whidbey Island.

    People were able to live on the island by using what grew here. Containers that we take for granted today were the result of hours of harvesting, preparing, and weaving for indigenous tribes. Cedar, spruce, and cattails were some of the materials woven into baskets, but those words make the process sound simple and limited.

    Even within the narrow niche of food preparation, baskets were made for harvesting, gathering, carrying, sorting, winnowing, storing, and cooking. The materials used to create baskets were influenced by the weight of the basket and what its intended use was. An open weave allowed dirt or rinse water to fall through. A closed weave helped in storage and cooking.

    A basket could be made watertight by, ironically, soaking it in water. As the fibers swelled, they closed any holes. Add more water, drop in enough hot rocks to boil the water, add raw ingredients, and wait. Keep adding hot rocks to replace the ones that gave up their heat, wait some more, and a meal is made.

    If you make the basket slightly different, turn it over, and stick it on your head, you have a hat. Basketry as clothing.

    The next wave of settlers brought new materials and methods, then the Industrial Revolution added mass production. Though the old ways continue, today, they’re more a part of cultural heritage than daily living. Today, there’s a resurging interest in basketry and weaving. Sure, plastic containers and tote bags are fully functional, but they aren’t necessarily fun.

    woven sculptures
    Sea Anemones and Urchins by Danielle Bodine (Photo courtesy of Danielle Bodine)

    You can take classes in how to make your own baskets. Buy a handmade basket from a local artisan, and you can shop the farmers markets while also having something to display at home. If you want the basket to last, maybe you won’t use it, but will keep, protect, and display it. Art can exist for art’s sake, even if it has the potential to be functional.

    Take a look at how some of Whidbey’s artisans have extended the techniques into pieces that emphasize expression. Regina Kastler’s works are functional and colorful. Danielle Bodine uses basketry techniques to extend her work in fiber and paper into three dimensions. Kathleen Otley’s works are more woven sculpture than basketry, but some techniques pervade.

    Woven Fan by Kathleen Otley (Photo courtesy of Kathleen Otley)

    They aren’t the only fiber artists creating woven art. Whidbey Weavers Guild is a “community of fiber artists,” and a resource for learning and sharing more.

    If you want to see the artists and their works, visit the island’s galleries and check with the artists for tours of their studios. The Burke Museum in Seattle has an impressive collection of baskets as well. And, if you want to reach back to traditional cedar bark techniques, check out the Hibulb Cultural Center that is part of the Tulalip Indian Reservation. They’re preserving the past, keeping it current, and providing an opportunity to use those lessons today.

    Tom Trimbath is an author, nature photographer, and a project consultant. He has written and self-published six non-fiction titles, and produced five photo books of Whidbey Island. He also has managed several social media campaigns for authors, artists, and non-profits.

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  • Rob Schouten Gallery presents ‘Willow, Wax and Wire: New Works by Kathleen Otley’ from June 5 to 29

    Rob Schouten Gallery presents ‘Willow, Wax and Wire: New Works by Kathleen Otley’ from June 5 to 29

    May 27, 2015

    A gentleman perusing Kathleen Otley’s work at Rob Schouten Gallery put his nose up next to a piece and said, “I can smell the bees.”

    Mixed-media encaustic by Kathleen Otley.
    Mixed-media encaustic by Kathleen Otley.

    The great-smelling bees wax encaustics of Otley can be found year-round here at the gallery, which will also feature the artist in the upcoming show, “Willow, Wax and Wire: New Works by Kathleen Otley,” from June 5 to 29.  Friday Night Reception is 5 to 8 p.m. Friday, June 5.

    With her mixed-media encaustics, Otley uses layer upon layer of the sweet stuff, slathering it generously over a variety of media, which she lays on a block of wood.

    Otley’s smaller pieces feature vibrantly painted birds amid ancient scrolls containing sacred Buddhist writings: some stories, some letters. She acquires the monastic scrolls from the Museum of Tokyo.

    "Infinity," mixed-media encaustic by Kathleen Otley. / Photo courtesy of the artist.
    “Infinity,” mixed-media encaustic by Kathleen Otley. / Photos courtesy of the artist

    Otley dresses up some of these small and affordable bird pieces with nests, dyed willow sticks, stones, fabricated eggs and other earthly treasures. The combination gives her work not only a deep-textured quality, but speaks to the artist’s fascination with the past and what she feels is its vital importance to the present.

     For the featured show, Otley has created larger, more abstract pieces that maintain the same earthly and spiritual quality, but “branch out” with larger pieces of willow, while maintaining the artist’s longtime theme of the shield as spiritual protection a theme that is carried through to her mixed-media willow shields. Her willow shields will also be on display, along with these new abstract encaustics that revel in earth-toned colors like those of her bird pieces, and lay the Japanese texts underneath bits of sculpted wire and sheaths of blue copper basket-weaves. All of Otley’s work exudes a soft and deep texture that feels antique, nostalgic and a tribute to nature.

    Meet the artist from 5 to 8 p.m. Friday, June 5 during Greenbank Farm’s “First Friday at the Farm.” The Pies Café will be open for dinner, while the galleries and shops welcome visitors to enjoy a little wine and cheese, meet the artists, see some beautiful art, all while roaming around beautiful Greenbank Farm. We’d love to see you!

    Rob Schouten Gallery, a premier showcase for Whidbey Island and Northwest artists, is located at 765 Wonn Road, #C-103 at the historic Greenbank Farm. Gallery Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily.  For further information, call 360.222.3070 or email info@robschoutengallery.com.

  • Spotlight | Encaustic artist Kathleen Otley brings her past forward with new works at Rob Schouten Gallery

    Spotlight | Encaustic artist Kathleen Otley brings her past forward with new works at Rob Schouten Gallery

    BY PATRICIA DUFF
    April 1, 2014

    Everything once found becomes new again—at least for artists such as Kathleen Otley.

    Her most recent show, “Stones and Scrolls—Willow and Wax,” opens April 2 and runs through April 28 at Rob Schouten Gallery at Greenbank Farm.

    This Greenbank artist creates mixed-media works that reflect a modern take on ancient and earthly things. As someone who uses a predominance of willow sticks, smooth stones, nests, painted birds, eggs, wire, feathers, colorful threads, the scrolls of Asian texts and various other treasures in her encaustics and wall shields, it’s no surprise that Otley has always been a hunter and gatherer of interesting objects.

    As a child, she especially enjoyed family outings to Indian reservations and roadside attractions.

    “I loved the roadside craft stores where I wet my taste for the mixed-media creations of the local tribes. I wondered at the dolls, blankets and rugs. I collected special turquoise rocks and beads and trinkets, planning things I would create myself when I got home,” the artist said.

    Although she dreamed of one day owning such store of her own, it seems her studio is the place that has come to reflect that love of roadside whimsy, mixed with the influence of tribal earthiness.

    Just like her trips in the car as a child, she said she always has her eye out for that special object.

    “I collect these treasures or simply ruminate on them and find my inspiration eventually leading to a work of art,” Otley said.

    “From that first piece of work comes inspiration to the second, where changes will lead to the next evolution, and so a body of work distinguishes itself to the next body of work.”

    RSGallery - Kathleen Otley - encaustic 3d w_willow nest  (500x266)
    Kathleen Otley’s encaustic mixed-media sculptures often include painted birds, old scrolls with asian texts, nests, eggs and twigs. | Photos courtesy of the artist

    And so has evolved this newest body of work for Rob Schouten Gallery where she regularly shows her art.

    A reception for the artist will be held on Friday, April 4 from 5 to 8 p.m. during Greenbank Farm’s “First Friday at the Farm” event. Come in and enjoy light refreshments while viewing “Stones and Scrolls—Willow and Wax,” when all the galleries and shops at the farm welcome patrons to enjoy an evening of art and conversation, and when the Pies Café serves a special dinner. The exhibit runs through Monday, April 28.

    Rob Schouten Gallery, a premier showcase for Whidbey Island and Northwest artists, is located at historic Greenbank Farm on scenic Whidbey Island. April Gallery Hours are 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekends, open Tuesdays by appointment only.  For further information, call 360-222-3070 or email info@robschoutengallery.com.