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Alison Aye

Artist
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Exile Textile 3: The Prequel

November 13, 2024

I make small pieces of work in small pockets of time. Stitching that fits into an actual pocket and can be done on a bus. Eventually the tiny components become something much larger. Having no studio and multiple dayjobs, all of my artwork has been made in this way.

’Exile Textile 3: The Prequel’, was completed in 2022, but is made up of sections which were sewn years earlier. After the completion of ‘Exile Textile’ and ‘Exile Textile 2:The New Normal’, I was on a bit of a roll and keen to make a third by joining together lots of old work.

Most of it was sewn in 2016-17 and marks deaths and events of the time - Terry Wogan (my Dad despised him, partly because he reckoned he got paid loads for doing Children In Need, but mostly because my mam liked him) George Michael, Barry Hines (Kes was the only book I enjoyed at school), John Berger, Alan Rickman, Paul Daniels, David Bowie, Victoria Wood, Alex Timpson (the most amazing woman), Jill Saward (in 1986, at the age of 21, she was raped by two burglars and the judge said she suffered ‘no great trauma’), Brexit, the Manchester Arena bombing, the Westminster Bridge attack, Grenfell Tower and the Paradise Papers (leaked documents revealing the names of rich people with offshore tax havens, like King Prince Charles).

‘What kind of people are we?’ is something Billy Bragg said on Question Time (2017) in reference to 3,000 ‘refugee’ children that the UK was refusing to accommodate. He also paraphrased Tony Benn in saying that the way a government treats refugees is the way they’d treat the rest of us given half the chance.

Kunst (and also the ‘C’) was intended to be a tory Venn Diagram, but I never finished.

The red background on the bottom right corner is made up of squares of National Portrait Gallery uniforms (mine and my frolleagues’), stitched in 2014. The blue squares are cut from a tie (shoutout to Carl). The yellow chainstitched writing, bottom right quarter, is on the same uniform and made on my commute to said gallery. 

The ‘2017’ was stitched on NYE 2016, and destined to become part of my RA rejection piece, but I couldn’t find it at the time. The words ‘then’ and ‘will’ and ‘stronger economy’ were meant to be part of the Gyles Brandreth Brexit piece.

‘BFF Joe Lycett’ is in reference to me appearing on ‘Joe Lycett: Summer Exhibitionist’ (it was on the iPlayer for ages, but isn’t now) on account of the Royal Academy rejecting my work for 30 years.

I can’t remember why I stitched ‘Prejudice’ or ‘Big Boy Pants’, except that the latter was something to do with Boris Johnson.

That’s a portrait of my green daughter from 15 years ago.

The random numbers are from a ‘maternity leave’ advent calendar I started 24 years ago, but never finished.

Photo by Phil Shelly

In Art Tags hand stitch, handmade collage, textile art, textile artist, modern embroidery, documenting our times, alex timpson, george michael, terry wogan, paul daniels, prince, barry hines, victoria wood, david bowie, joe lycett, john berger
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I Have No Thoughts On This Matter

August 26, 2023

I Have No Thoughts On This Matter, 2020.

Hand-stitched textile.

35cms x 35cms, unframed.

Private Collection.

Copyright: Alison Aye, 2024.

It’s about ‘good girls’ putting up and shutting up.

‘I have no thoughts on this matter’ was my mantra during 2020. At the age of 53, I had moved back to my childhood home, sharing a bed with my mother, in what turned out to be the final year of her life. I left my husband and kids and went 300 miles north. A place where I am undervalued and underestimated. Everybody else's time is more valuable than my own. It was expected of me, and I did it, losing both my jobs, pretending it didn’t matter.

For the 18 months I was there, hand stitching kept me on the right side of sane.

As always, the materials are recycled.

A friend was binning the tea towel, describing it as embarrassing, the way the middle-classes do.

The orange and blue are my husband’s old clothes.

The blue, a shirt I remember him wearing at my cousin’s wedding. I was a Bo-Peep inspired bridesmaid. The evening cèilidh was a riot. We laughed and danced our socks off, except Mr S, who sat on the side-lines, unable to make a fool of himself.

The orange, boxer shorts I bought on Christmas Eve 1991, from the Next near Charing Cross Station, London.

The red fabric, used for my signature, is an old National Portrait Gallery uniform. I worked there for 12 years. Undervalued and underestimated. The date next to it was cut from Amnesty International Magazine, Issue 206.

I Have No Thoughts On This Matter is now available as a limited edition print. The original was bought by a French woman, which I took as the greatest of compliments.

Photo by Ian Bruton.

Copyright: Alison Aye, 2024.

In Prints, Family, Art Tags original art, feminist art, stitched art, hand stitch, contemporary art, contemporary embroidery, subversive stitch, modern embroidery, textile art, recycled art, use what you have
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Majorca '79

August 1, 2023

Majorca ‘79 was inspired by Man Ray’s portrait of Max Ernst. A photograph (photographer unknown), of me, hand-stitched to a tea towel, is about my reluctance to reconstruct my life after twenty-five years of marriage, but also about my first time abroad at the age of twelve. My nana took me to Majorca, where the photograph was taken. She was drunk every night and a horrible racist.

Majorca ‘79, 2023

Photograph hand-stitched to tea towel

62 x 47 cm, unframed

Copyright: Alison Aye, 2024

In Art, Family Tags self portrait, stitched art, stitched photo, majorca, 1979, brits abroad, sombrero, forced fun, textile art, modern embroidery
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