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oapen-20.500.12657-396972020-06-18T09:55:52Z Lace Narratives Heffer, Cecilia Lace-making Textiles design & Decorative Arts Philosophy & creative practice Education & teaching in Arts Biography of female creative textile designer Art exhibition bic Book Industry Communication::A The arts::AF Art forms::AFW Textile artworks::AFWH Textile artworks: tapestries, hangings & quilts bic Book Industry Communication::A The arts::AK Industrial / commercial art & design::AKT Fashion & textiles: design bic Book Industry Communication::A The arts::AK Industrial / commercial art & design::AKT Fashion & textiles: design::AKTX Textile design & theory bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general::GPS Research methods: general bic Book Industry Communication::A The arts::AK Industrial / commercial art & design::AKB Individual designers bic Book Industry Communication::Y Children's, Teenage & educational::YQ Educational material::YQT Educational: Technology::YQTD Educational: Design & technology Lace Narratives: A monograph, 2005 – 2015 documents Cecilia Heffer’s innovative lace-making practice over a decade, including major exhibitions and commissions. This publication examines ways that Cecilia’s research practice responds to changing ideas and technologies as a means to extend our perception of textiles. It presents an in-depth reflection on studio practice in a discursive spirit, responding to the question: What has the studio enquiry revealed that could not have been revealed through other modes of research? The publication is composed of a digital edition of the book, along with a seven-minute video documenting Cecilia creating the lace-work Drawn Threads. A print-on-demand version of the book in either hard cover or paperback is available for purchase. Additionally, a limited edition artist’s book with lace samples bound into the pages will be publicly available through selected libraries and museums, including the UTS Library. Through these different components, the audience can watch Cecilia’s lace-making innovations in the documentary video, read critical reflections on her research and creative process, and handle lace samples. This combination affords a holistic understanding of Cecilia’s practice-led research and material output. This is an experimental publication model conceived by Zoë Sadokierski for the MediaObject book series and produced with support from the UTS Library. 2020-06-17T14:18:39Z 2020-06-17T14:18:39Z 2015 book ONIX_20200617_9780992451868_38 http://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/39697 eng application/pdf n/a lace-narratives.pdf UTS ePRESS 10.5130/978-0-9924518-6-8 10.5130/978-0-9924518-6-8 feb523b3-bdff-4e43-ad50-063a48b87781 82 Broadway open access
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Lace Narratives: A monograph, 2005 – 2015 documents Cecilia Heffer’s innovative lace-making practice over a decade, including major exhibitions and commissions. This publication examines ways that Cecilia’s research practice responds to changing ideas and technologies as a means to extend our perception of textiles. It presents an in-depth reflection on studio practice in a discursive spirit, responding to the question: What has the studio enquiry revealed that could not have been revealed through other modes of research? The publication is composed of a digital edition of the book, along with a seven-minute video documenting Cecilia creating the lace-work Drawn Threads. A print-on-demand version of the book in either hard cover or paperback is available for purchase. Additionally, a limited edition artist’s book with lace samples bound into the pages will be publicly available through selected libraries and museums, including the UTS Library. Through these different components, the audience can watch Cecilia’s lace-making innovations in the documentary video, read critical reflections on her research and creative process, and handle lace samples. This combination affords a holistic understanding of Cecilia’s practice-led research and material output. This is an experimental publication model conceived by Zoë Sadokierski for the MediaObject book series and produced with support from the UTS Library.
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