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Textiles, community and controversy : the knitting map / edited by Jools Gilson and Nicola Moffat.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Bloomsbury Visual Arts, Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2019Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781350027534
  • 1350027537
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Textiles, community and controversy.DDC classification:
  • 746.09 23
LOC classification:
  • N6498.F54 T49 2019eb
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction Nicola Moffat -- Chapter 1 -- Navigation, nuance and half/angel's Knitting Map Jools Gilson -- Chapter 2 -- The entangled map and Irish Art Fionna Barber -- Chapter 3 -- The Knitting Map and the media Rachel Andrews -- Chapter 4 -- Busywork: The real thing Lucy R. Lippard -- Chapter 5 -- The edge of the Map Nicola Moffat -- Chapter 6 -- Knitting after making: What we do with what we make Jessica Hemmings -- Chapter 7 -- Textures of performance: Rethinking The Knitting Map Róisín O'Gorman -- Chapter 8 -- Whereabouts uncertain: Reading subversion in half/angel's The Knitting Map in Cork, Ireland and Lancaster County, Pennsylvania Deborah Barkun -- Chapter 9 -- On seeing, still Bernadette Sweeney -- Chapter 10 -- The voices of Cork: Cartography, landscape and memory in The Knitting Map Kieran McCarthy -- Chapter 11 -- Puns and needles: Reactions to The Knitting Map in 2005 Sarah Foster -- Chapter 12 -- Stitched up?: The Knitting Map in context Joanne Turney -- Chapter 13 -- Alchemy for beginners: The Knitting Map and other primes Richard Povell -- Afterword Jools Gilson -- Endnotes References Index About the authors Contributors
Summary: "Taking a major textile artwork, The Knitting Map, as a central case study, this book interrogates the social, philosophical and critical issues surrounding contemporary textile art today. It explores gestures of community and controversy manifest in contemporary textile art practices, as both process and object. Created by more than 2,000 knitters from 22 different countries, who were mostly working-class women, The Knitting Map became the subject of national controversy in Ireland. Exploring the creation of this multi-modal artwork as a key moment in Irish art history, Textiles, Community and Controversy locates the work within a context of feminist arts practice, including the work of Judy Chicago, Faith Ringold and the Guerilla Girls. Bringing together leading art critics and textile scholars, including Lucy Lippard, Jessica Hemmings and Joanne Turney, the collection explores key issues in textile practice from gender, class and nation to technology and performance."-- Provided by publisher
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Print version record.

Introduction Nicola Moffat -- Chapter 1 -- Navigation, nuance and half/angel's Knitting Map Jools Gilson -- Chapter 2 -- The entangled map and Irish Art Fionna Barber -- Chapter 3 -- The Knitting Map and the media Rachel Andrews -- Chapter 4 -- Busywork: The real thing Lucy R. Lippard -- Chapter 5 -- The edge of the Map Nicola Moffat -- Chapter 6 -- Knitting after making: What we do with what we make Jessica Hemmings -- Chapter 7 -- Textures of performance: Rethinking The Knitting Map Róisín O'Gorman -- Chapter 8 -- Whereabouts uncertain: Reading subversion in half/angel's The Knitting Map in Cork, Ireland and Lancaster County, Pennsylvania Deborah Barkun -- Chapter 9 -- On seeing, still Bernadette Sweeney -- Chapter 10 -- The voices of Cork: Cartography, landscape and memory in The Knitting Map Kieran McCarthy -- Chapter 11 -- Puns and needles: Reactions to The Knitting Map in 2005 Sarah Foster -- Chapter 12 -- Stitched up?: The Knitting Map in context Joanne Turney -- Chapter 13 -- Alchemy for beginners: The Knitting Map and other primes Richard Povell -- Afterword Jools Gilson -- Endnotes References Index About the authors Contributors

"Taking a major textile artwork, The Knitting Map, as a central case study, this book interrogates the social, philosophical and critical issues surrounding contemporary textile art today. It explores gestures of community and controversy manifest in contemporary textile art practices, as both process and object. Created by more than 2,000 knitters from 22 different countries, who were mostly working-class women, The Knitting Map became the subject of national controversy in Ireland. Exploring the creation of this multi-modal artwork as a key moment in Irish art history, Textiles, Community and Controversy locates the work within a context of feminist arts practice, including the work of Judy Chicago, Faith Ringold and the Guerilla Girls. Bringing together leading art critics and textile scholars, including Lucy Lippard, Jessica Hemmings and Joanne Turney, the collection explores key issues in textile practice from gender, class and nation to technology and performance."-- Provided by publisher

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