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Inspiration: Work of artist Michael Brennand-Wood |
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My sketch |
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Final design idea |
Michael Brennand-Wood Biography
Michael Brennand-Wood, visual artist, curator, lecturer,
arts consultant. Since 1979 he has occupied a central position in the research,
origination and advocacy of contemporary International Art Textiles. He has
exhibited in major galleries and museums world wide, including the Victoria and
Albert Museum, the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa
and National Gallery of Australia, Canberra.
His work can be seen in private, public and corporate
collections worldwide. He won The Creative Concept Award in 1987 and The Fine
Art Award in 1989 at the International Textile Competition in Kyoto, followed
by the first RSA Art for Architecture Award 1990. In 1990 he was awarded a Distinguished Visiting Fellow, British Council, City University,
Kyoto, Japan. In 1992 he was 1st Prize Winner at the 3rd
International Betonac Prize in Belgium.
In 1982 he curated the controversial exhibition ‘Fabric and
Form’ and co-curated the ‘Makers Eye’ both for the Crafts Council, followed in
1992 with ‘Restless Shadows’ a major Goldsmiths College touring exhibition of
contemporary Japanese Textiles. Until 1989 he was a senior lecturer in the
department of visual art at Goldsmiths College, University of London. He has
taught extensively in colleges and universities in the UK and overseas, and has
undertaken residencies in Japan, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and Belgium.
From 2001-08 he was
awarded an Arts and Humanities Research Board (AHRB) Fellowship in the Creative
and Performing Arts in conjunction with the University of Ulster to
research geometrical complexity in Central Asian textiles at Ulster University,
Belfast. In 2007 he won the Fine Art Award, Phaff Art
Embroidery Still Life in France.
He is currently Visiting Professor at Manchester
Metropolitan University.
Visit the Official Michael Brennan-Wood site here > >
See Alexandra Burke in a dress made of cable > >
Jewellery and Textiles influenced by the Ndoro symbols > >
The Ndebele Tribe's influence on Fashion > >
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Great, really creative.
ReplyDeleteGreat, really creative.
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