Saturday, March 11, 2006

Cloud Nine Quilt Group and the Optical Illusions Travelling Exhibition

Cloud Nine Quilt Group : Putting up the Optical Illusions Quilt Exhibition for Natal Quilters Guild.
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In our wisdom / ignorance(?) the members of the Cloud Nine quilt Group decided to spend the March meeting putting up the Optical Illusions Traveling Quilt Exhibition for the Natal Quilters Guild at the Alliance Francaise in Durban.


To say that it was entertaining was not the least of it!

Although we had all exhibited at various Quilt shows and exhibitions, hanging an exhibition was a first for all of us and it kept us pretty busy for most of the afternoon- including lunch at a great little coffee shop we found.

This was how the quilts were initially placed but by the end of the afternoon we had played musical chairs with them and eventually came up with a pleasing presentation with the help of an experienced quilt exhibition hanger- Colleen Roberts.





Hanging Hanging the quilts was a challenge for us- mainly because this is a travelling exhibition and although we had quilt sizes, we had never seen the quilts before and it was difficult to plan anything before hand.











Its amazing how much discussion it took to get the exhibition hung properly and what you see in these photographs bears no resemblance to the final order.








It does help when there are a couple of tall people around to help with the lights!



















The opening was intimate and involved quaffing a qualtity of wine and much concentration by the guests on the quilts.











Monday, March 06, 2006

IKATI'S TRAVELS PART 2




This is typical Free State countryside with the road stretching in a straight line for kilometers at a time with very little traffic.

There has been a lot of rain in the Free State ( this part anyway) and the grass on either side of the road was long and green- such a contrast to the winter when the veld is just a sea of brown.








We found this old Synagogue in Senekal.It looks as if there was a sizable Jewish community in the area in the early part of the 20th Century and I wonder what happened to them as the years passed. This building looks as if it has been unused for years.
Many buildings of historical significance are beginning to fall apart as communities battle to cope with more mundane costs such as housing and sanitation with very little money.

Senekal itself seems to be the centre of a farming district with huge silos and a couple of petrol stations and not much else.

The Bed and Breakfast we stayed in was over a hundred years old and very well maintained by its owners but the upkeep of such an old building must be astronomical given that the building was probably not that well built to start with.

This mountain outside Harrismith is more familiar territory for us- we pass it 4 or 5 times a year on the Main Johannesburg/Durban freeway. Wonderfully green at this time of the year, these mountains always exude a sense of secrecy- to me at any rate.

Friday, March 03, 2006

IKATI'S TRAVELS: PART 1

Its been a busy month of travelling around South Africa attending Provincial Guild meetings with the shop and three weekends on the trot in February heat is not my idea of fun! It does nothing for the creative spirit although I saw wonderful quilts en route.

We travelled to Pretoria first- this time taking ten hours to do a normally 5 hour trip. There was heavy rain on the way up to Pretoria and a HUGE accident on the van Reenen's Pass which necessitated a two and a half hour through the picturesque but very slow Olivers Hoek Pass.
Here is a picture of the Sterkspruit Dam which is on the road through the Olivers Hoek pass. Its huge and right in the mountains and when we passed there was mist rising off the water.

IT was only when we hit the outskirts of Johannesburg that we realised just what damage had been done by the rains- and was still being done. We got into a traffic jam and had to find a place to stop for a couple of hours until the traffic cleared and the rain slowed down. It simply wasnt worth the possibility of an accident.It was as though someone had opened the sluice gates in the sky and everything possible was comming down. It was like sitting in a West African thunderstorm- except this wasnt West Africa and it wasnt a thunderstorm!

The rest of the trip was relatively uneventful and on the way back I stopped in Kroonstad for petrol. Opposite the petrol station was the most marvellous stone church with a very unusual roof so "nog" a photograph.

Many of the older buildings in the Free State are built out of the beautiful Free State sand stone which varies from creamy yellow to a variety of browns.This church was probably built at the turn of the century when stone masons were still working in the country.

This piece of sculpture we named " the Lego Man" and we found him at the gate of a farm between Kroonstad and Senekal in the Free State.When we got closer we found that he had been welded together with bits of pipe and old farm implements. Either way he made for welcome relief from a sea of green grass and what seemed to be a never ending road.