Clare Galloway and making a dream come true.

Last year the platform I used for my blog unexpectedly bit the dust and I lost all of my archives.  Pity as a lot of interesting information is now sadly floating in cyberspace. For example, that of Clare Galloway.

Clare Galloway Clare at GUARDIA SANFRAMONDI

Clare is a creative and energetic young Scot who fell in love with the medieval Italian town, Guardia Sanframondi, and decided to revolutionize her life by leaving Scotland and moving to southern Italy.  She bought a house that had been boarded up for 16 years and, with some of her special Scottish elbow grease, transformed the stalls into stars.

Not only did Clare remodel her house, she created an art gallery (she paints!)and a Bed&Breakfast as well. Plus she somehow managed to organize a Scot’s Night in Guardia with imported Scottish men in kilts.  She also hosts  weekly English classes.  Where does she get all of her energy?

Clare’s B&B room

A few months ago she was filmed by HOUSE HUNTERS INTERNATIONAL [Scottish Painter Finds Solace In The Medieval Village of Guardia Sanframondi, Italy] stimulating a new interest in Guardia .  In fact, many people have been inquiring about property in Guardia since then and two houses recently have been sold to Americans who plan to make a lifestyle change similar to that of Clare’s.

Guardia Sanframondi, getting much recognition now.

What Clare has done is incredible. With limited funds and a surplus of courage, she dramatically changed her life but also positively influenced the village she has adopted as her new home. Clare has all my respect and admiration!

So I am re-posting this description Clare wrote about her Italian life (it was written last year) in hopes of having her words inspire someone to take a chance and follow a dream, too.

Clare: «I have a great pile of tiny grapes on my knee- the ones called “strawberry grapes” in Italian, which you eat by squeezing the contents of each wee fruit into your mouth like a candy out of its wrapper. I am all dressed up to go out for breakfast, as is my morning ritual here; fresh croissant and the best ever coffee, in the bar up on the main street. It is going to be the hottest day, so I need to plan it carefully, to avoid being cooked alive in my British car (which doesn’t have air conditioning)… but apart from that, there is little else to be overly concerned about, on this typical summer’s day in rural south Italy.

Contrast this with my life just 15 months ago: chopping wood before it’s warm enough to sit down to a rather less romantic breakfast of porridge; working intensively from the moment I wake, to get heat into a freezing cottage deep in a Scottish glen. Then thinking “how the hell do I go on paying my rent/ council tax/ petrol, etc; how can I possibly manage to sustain this effort-full existence, at the same time as being happy and relaxed and creative?”».

Clare at San Marino

«There is a vast difference between a frugal lifestyle in the Mediterranean, and a frugal lifestyle in the UK: here in Med, the weather, character and community are infinitely more suited to the simple life -and I am infinitely more suited to all of it! But the admiration from afar by friends and colleagues “how lucky you are to have landed in such an advantageous situation!” really jars with my memory of the past two years’ challenges in getting here. I now -extraordinarily!- own my first property, I have an Italian identity card, and am well know (and mostly loved!) in the town; my work is beginning to be talked about, paintings commissioned, and my life is balancing out and deepening in every direction. But only 6 months ago, I was yet again at a point of extreme crisis in my life: I was homeless and without income, without confidence or ability in the language, and hugely undermined in multiple senses by a dreadful relationship. I sat at Christmas time in a cold dark room, in the basement of the country house of my ex, and tried to see the bright side of my situation. When I am at the most difficult points in my life, I make myself write down a list of 21 reasons why this moment is a fabulous gift; why is it enhancing my life experience and opportunities; without fail, I come up with a strong array of perfectly valid positive takes on the challenge! And this time was no different: though I was cold, afraid, unable to see how I could possibly forge a new life for myself here, alone and without resources… equally I was free, independent, had (just!) managed to hold onto my sanity, had loads of good fodder for my book and my paintings… and so on. Nothing is without use; I think of all the crap in my life like the manure or old scraps of food which go into the compost heap- yeh, they stink something awful, especially in a hot country, where it can be a very unpleasant task to go and empty into the garden, stirring up the flies in the heat of the day… but what comes out, way down the line, is pure nourishment. Food for the soul, like food for the garden, is something that we can do without, but our lives are vastly less meaningful, deep and/ or satisfying».

Clare’s illustration

«I am still prone to bouts of chaos, as in these past two months, where one summer festival in Guardia Sanframondi has run into the next, and there have been few nights without excess of vino, dancing, food and silliness. Superbly enjoyable, but hard to sustain beyond 10 weeks, and in the scalding heat of August! My life is careening in and out of its usual organised state, but it is beginning to resemble something peaceful and pleasant; dynamic equilibrium. The most important things; my weight is back up, I am creating/ exhibiting/ selling paintings, and the house is slowly becoming increasingly like an arthouse and less like an abandoned medieval abode!».

The old town of Guardia Sanframondi via Clare’s Facebook fotos

«It is hugely entertaining to learn how to go with the flow like the folks here in south Italy do. I laugh thinking back to my initial despair at e.g. people not turning up on time -if at all, shops being closed for a minimum 4 hour lunch, restaurants not having menus, not knowing where or why I am being directed, and/ or whether or not they understood what it is I’m looking for… The bumper-car ride of the first months has somehow transformed into a subtle mesh of synchronicity, of which I am an integrated working part- a well-woven thread in the fabric of this community and lifestyle. I certainly stand out still, not least of all with my right-hand drive car and my hats with large flowers attached. But it feels less l am the village outcast, and more like I’m a minor celebrity, as my work and contributions gain respect, and as my love for this place stretches deep into every crevice».

Clare watering her plants, Photo copyright Chris Webster, Filming of House Hunters International via Clare’s Facebook Page

«My methods are not always clear to me at the time; it is often a mysterious process, how one sets up a new life. But mostly I: focus on thinking wildly positive thoughts; concentrate without distraction on my dreams and highest goals first before I get caught up in the hurdles; use laughter rather than frowning as my main mode of communication; and am open to all possibilities at all times: mostly I say yes, and think yey! With these daily habits, I’m currently pulling together a dynamic wee hub of creative energy and inspiration -Arthouse Guardia. The nine quirky rooms of my higgledy-piggledy casa will -perhaps within the year, perhaps in the next decade- take a neat and colourful form, and serve as residential and events spaces, for visitors and locals: a vessel to contain an intensity of creative outpourings, like a magical ship of celebration sailing merrily on the churning grey seas of modern western consumer culture. As with permaculture design, I am likely to spend much of my first year just observing; watching how the weather, cycles and seasons affect the house, and seeing how my living in it functions, or doesn’t. I am going with this process, and allowing it all to form in its own sweet time. And it is a sweet time: out of the bitter dregs of a difficult situation, the acidic soil of conflict, tension and disharmony, have come unexpected blooms and brews. As in my gardening, I intend to nourish this dream with all my energy and inspiration, to build on my blessings, whilst sharing them wherever I can with others».

«You can read more about my project Arthouse Guardia, and see my artwork, on www.arthouseguardia.com. You can also join the group of the same name on Facebook, as well as seeing an extensive archive of my paintings on the ‘Art by Clare Galloway’ page».
To keep up with Clare’s developments, check out her blog.
More Clare:  Clare Galloway // Guardia Sanframondi video.

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The needlework of Kagoshima City’s Nui Project

SHOBUFascinated by the creative attitude overflowing sensibility of people with disabilities in school solar Iris Society social welfare corporation is engaged in creative activities focusing on contemporary art, music, crafts and art

The needlework of Kagoshima City’s Nui Project, an embroidery workshop for the mentally disabled, uncloaks souls whose workings are little understood.

Fibre with a Difference: Nui Project

Nui Project

Informal pictures from a show earlier this month of shirts from the Nui Project at Gallery Gallery, Kyoto Japan + Another embroidered shirt + Detail of embroidered shirt + Nui Project website (in Japanese).

Mental illness:

Cloth embroidered by a schizophrenia patient found at How to Deal with a Mentally Ill Person: Setting Boundaries

ALL THE SAINTS AND PROPHETS WERE MENTALLY ILL embroidery.

Existential doily (by Stitch Therapy) found at The Hand Embroidery Network the only official blog of the Hand Embroidery Network Community, a place to promote, share and enjoy the world of hand embroidery.

More from stitch therapy + an embroidered hole.

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Mend & Repair

In the past 100 years, the world population has quadrupled. This means we have more and more people using our limited natural resources.  So it’s only logical that we try to repair what we have instead of throwing things away.

But there is also The Aesthetics of The Mended. Reparations can turn something insignificant into something sublime.


Worcester porcelain plate, c.1770 + Past Imperfect, The Art of Inventive Repair is a blog focusing on “Antiques with inventive repairs (also known as “make-do” repairs) are unique examples of necessity and thrift, made during a time before Krazy Glue was invented”.

More:  You can hardly see the mend.

The mended mat shown here was found with a marriage contract for the remarriage of a poor couple.

Kintsugi: Mending the Broken Plate

Flickwerk The Aesthetics of Mended Japanese Ceramics pdf.
Remarkable Repairs.

A medieval book mended with silk thread via SHELF FULFILLMENT

A repaired book.

Make-Do-And-Mend.org is a crafty, green, informative and design website, trying to tackle the problems arising out of the commercial direction of the fashion industry.

PATCH HAPPY! From the blog REPAIRED THINGS

Reclaimed Pillowcases + Simple Fixes and Mending Techniques + How to Fix a Hole in Jeans + MENDING.

Darn It!, how to mend a sock

Chairs: Hybrid Heirloom: Wood & Plastic Fused to Fix a Family Chair + Skateboard chair + Reused Bicycle Inner Tubes Woven into Cool Recycled Bedframe Bench.

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Paint By Numbers and Muy Marcottage.

  The artist Carine Légeret is modelling “Paint By Numbers,” a Muy Marcottage dress.

This dress was made from secondhand clothing found at the San Lorenzo outdoor market in Rome. The top part was a boring white summer dress that I gave some color to by transforming it into a pseudo-paint by number kit.

detail "paint y numbers" dress detail “Paint By Numbers”

Remember those Paint By Numbers kits so popular starting with the 1950’s?And that so many people bought them seems to imply that many want to be an artist whether or not they have talent. PAINT BY NUMBER kits guarantee A Successful Painting.  Instant gratification can sometimes make life easier!

In the book Math and the Mona Lisa: The Art and Science of Leonardo Da Vinci, the author tells us that it was Leonardo who invented “paint-by-numbers” so that his assistents could help him with his commissions.

painted by number pets Look!: Paint By Numbers Pet Portraits

Gary Baseman’s alternative paint-by-number art

related links: Counting on Art (and Painting by Numbers)—-

Paint By Numbers, artists who work in the paint by number style—Paint by Numbers Goes Highbrow at Chelsea Gallery—-Giant Paint by Numbers—-artist Trey SpeegleJenn Jarnot Paintings—-

Do It Yourself (Landscape) by Andy WarholDo It Yourself (Landscape) by Andy Warhol

The History Of Paint-By-Numbers—-DIY Paint By Numbers Projects—As a child I received a Paint by Number set for Christmas or a birthday. —-

Vans Women’s Paint By Numbers Tote Bag–more paint by numbers totes—-BlueQ Paint By Numbers Tote—  geisha paint by number—–paint by numbers in fashion—-‘Megan McKean for Made590’ Paint by Number clothing—-

paint by numbers Mork and Mindy paint by number kit

Paint by NumbersKRISATOMIC,Paint by Numbers…..I loved the paint by numbers-y patterns at Basso & Brooke and Jill Stuart

MORE:  Painting-by-Number #1—The Philosophy of “Paint-by-Number!—Paint by Number: The How-to Craze that Swept the Nation book—-

The real-life Da Vinci Code: Historians discover tiny numbers and letters in the eyes of the Mona Lisa—Leonardo Da Vinci was a painting-by-numbers hoaxer—–Paint by number Oil Painting The Last Supper By Leonardo Da Vinci 70cmX160cm—

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Doilies and Huipiles

 Doiley Bags for Produce Tutorial…..

There are various outdoor markets here in Rome that sell second hand clothing and, if one is lucky, also sell second-hand linens including doilies or, as they’re called in Italian, “centrini” (“small centers” probably because objects are placed on their center).

When I arrived in Italy many many years ago, it was quite common in small villages to see women of a certain generation, sitting outside their door crocheting these centrini .  More than a pastime, making them could even be considered a form of meditation….handwork focuses the mind and thus allows our Psycho Self a chance to relax, a  chance to float instead of resisting  gravity all the time.

In the past, in Italy it was custom for the nuns to teach young women how to sew and embroidery for their corredo da sposa (hope chest).  And  the work produced was exceptional.  It’s not difficult to understand how Italy became a protagonist in terms of fashion having had so many highly skilled seamstresses.

But eventually centrini were considered de mode and, as a result, who inherited them generally gave them away to charity groups.  That’s why they periodically surface at secondhand markets.

If the prices are good, I try to buy them.  Not just for their beauty but also because I’m fascinated by their role in terms of giving women a psychological space for their thoughts.  Because sitting down and focusing your attention on your handwork gives you a chance to isolate yourself from the rest of the world and re-synchronize the self with itself.

I like to make huipiles.  They are easy to wear, easy to make and look a lot better on me than a t-shirt does.  In fact, in my opinion, t-shirts are not flattering in general.

And because of their simple structure, huipiles provide a format for all kinds of experimentation.  For example, that of repurposing centrini.

 

Above is the Muy Marcottage Huipil “United”(still to be washed and ironed).  It’s made primarily from second hand silk and cotton skirts as well as from doilies bought at the San Lorenzo outdoor market.

    

The word “united” is stitched on the front. I like the idea of uniting doilies made from different women, women who don’t even know one another. So philosophical, no?

United” is also a continuation of the concept “parts make the whole.”

United”  is available via Blomming.

Related:

DOILIES: A doily (or doilie) is an ornamental mat, originally the name of a fabric made by Doiley, a 17th-centuryLondon draper. Doily earlier meant “genteel, affordable woolens”, evidently from the same source.——– Doilie, doily, doyley, doiley, d’oyley or d’oilie?dabbling with doilies…

   These are antimacassars…….men use to cover their hair with macassar oil.  So to protect the  armchairs,   antimacassars were used.    —-Antimacassar Painting Antimacassar and me—

 Oscar de la Renta dress

Vintage Lace Handmade Dress Altered Couture Cotton Doilies Upcycleddoily wedding dressResurrection Rags’ photostreamPatchwork Couture by Gibbous Fashions—–another doiley style dress—

  This dress is created from dozens of doilies from Susanne’s collection of antique linens. Some of the hand-made laces are more than 100 years old. Susanne collects them from all over the country to repurpose them into one-of-a-kind pieces of wearable art—-Magnolia Pearl doiley dress

 Vintage Doily Lampshade DIY

Fab repurposed Seeoily décor—– Jane repurposed an old doily into this beautiful lacey bowl—– Upcycling, recycling, crafting and repurposing: Doiliesgranny chic, specs & little doggies…—-Embroidered doily——-more embroidery HERE—–

Italiano:  Come riciclare i centrinilibro PAZZE PER il crochet—Uncinetto Irlandese: una tecnica antica da riscoprire—-

P:S: working with your hands does help the psyche. See Interview Excerpt: My History of Learning to Crochet Through Depression via Tangle With Tami—10 Health Problems Helped by Crochet—-Crochet Saved My Life | On My Bookshelf—-

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