Show Announcement: "Revelry" at Northampton Center for the Arts

Bonnie Sennott, A Leaf-Sized Space, 2017, pearl cotton and linen, 10 inches by 10 inches

“Revelry” at the Northampton Center for the Arts opens Friday, April 14, with a reception from 5 to 8 pm during the monthly Arts Night Out. My embroidery shown here, A Leaf-Sized Space, is among the artworks by more than 35 local artists in the show. The exhibit is a fundraiser, with half of all sales going to support the center, located at 33 Hawley in Northampton, Massachusetts.

A Leaf-Sized Space is part of a series of negative space embroideries called “Presence/Absence.” For the project, I used found objects—in this case, an oak leaf picked up during a walk—as a starting point for freeform embroidery exploring the beauty of ordinary, lost, or overlooked objects. I surrounded the leaf with a rich mix of embroidery stitches and spots of fall color as a way of celebrating its brief but beautiful appearance in this world. The stitches hold the leaf aloft and give it—or rather, its absence—a second life.

Gallery A3 Seventh Annual Juried Show

The seventh annual juried show at Gallery A3, located in downtown Amherst, Massachusetts, includes one of my recent “stones and water” watercolors. The show opens with a reception on Thursday, August 4, 5–8 pm, and continues through August 27.

Stones and Water 6, watercolor on paper, 2022, by Bonnie Sennott

This piece is one of 25 that I painted during a 100-Day creative project launched by the Isolation Journals and author Suleika Jaouad. From April 1 through July 9, 2022, I worked each day on a small abstract watercolor inspired by my walks on trails around Amethyst Brook and the Mill River in Amherst. I posted many in-progress photos on my art Instagram (see the stones&water Stories highlight).

Rather than re-create the appearance of stones and water, I used the experience of observing water flowing over and around stones as a jumping-off point for creative play. The soothing sound of water, the infinite variety of the shapes and sizes of stones, and the ever-changing play of light—I kept all of these in mind as I began painting. As each piece developed in its own particular way, the journey of painting became less about literal stones and water and more about a search for balance and harmony.

I love that watercolors can be built in layers, by painting a bit each day and contemplating where you’ve gone before going further. In this way, they’re a lot like my embroidery work. They demand patience and a light touch, because moving ahead too quickly, making rushed decisions and overworking the image, can ruin a piece. I found it best to work slowly and allow the watercolors to “do their thing”—to let them surprise and delight me.

The Seventh Annual Juried Show at Gallery A3 includes work in a variety of media by 41 area artists. The gallery is located at 28 Amity Street in Amherst (between Amherst Coffee and Amherst Cinema). Summer hours are 3–8 pm Thursday–Sunday. See the Gallery A3 website for more about the show and the juror, Daniel Kojo Schrade.

Negative Space Embroideries

During 2020, I completed several new negative space embroideries. Like my wrinkle embroideries, the negative space pieces are abstract and improvisational — I develop the compositions as I go, rather than planning them in sketches beforehand.

Daily Embroidery (19 Days), by Bonnie Sennott, 2020, perle cotton on linen, 8 x 8 inches, private collection

Daily Embroidery (19 Days), by Bonnie Sennott, 2020, perle cotton on linen, 8 x 8 inches, private collection

Negative space is an embroidery technique in which you stitch around a shape rather than the shape itself. For these pieces I used templates of circles and ovals to trace shapes with disappearing ink pen. Sometimes I stitched completely around a shape, other times just partially around.

Daily Embroidery (24 Days), by Bonnie Sennott, 2020, perle cotton on linen dyed with oak galls, 8 x 8 inches

Daily Embroidery (24 Days), by Bonnie Sennott, 2020, perle cotton on linen dyed with oak galls, 8 x 8 inches

These pieces have been a way for me to create something positive out of the loss and fragmentation of 2020, during which so much of “normal” life was disrupted. I limited the palette in each piece and kept the types of stitches employed to a minimum, hoping to find a balance between the empty spaces and the positive areas of color.

Scattered (39 Days), by Bonnie Sennott, 2020, perle cotton on linen dyed with oak galls, 10 x 10 inches

Scattered (39 Days), by Bonnie Sennott, 2020, perle cotton on linen dyed with oak galls, 10 x 10 inches

The three pieces shown above were stitched with Valdani threads. I love this particular brand of perle cotton because the colors are rich but not quite as saturated and bright as other brands. For a piece I’ve just begun (below), I’m using DMC perle cottons. I want this new piece to have a warm, sunny color composition, and the DMC yellows I already have on hand are perfect for it.

FDE No 6 in progress.JPG

If you’re interested in purchasing a piece, please visit the Artwork section of my Etsy shop. Or, click on the email icon on any page of my website to contact me.

To view work in progress, follow me on Instagram — I’m @bonniesennottart there.

Two of these negative space embroideries are part of POST PAUSE, the inaugural exhibition of the Easthampton City Arts online gallery. Curated by Maggie Nowinski, POST PAUSE presents works created during this time of pandemic by artists in western Massachusetts. Each artist's work is accompanied by a statement about how their creative practice has been impacted by COVID-19; here’s a direct link to my work.