Oct 19, 2012

Well,Hello Kitty!


12,230 - Well, Hello Kitty!


Michele Bilyeu
Salem, OR USA
Width: 8.25" Length: 11.25"

Materials/Techniques: Commercial cottons, free pieced stitching, hand quilting with 3D flying geese triangles and buttons.

Artist Statement: I am fascinated by the Japanese culture. Perhaps, it is because my mother loved all things Asian before Alzheimer's took away her memory. Perhaps it is because I have three Japanese members of my extended family that are very dear to me. I have always loved their cultural fascination with cute kitties in popular art and thought these little buttons must share a secret with the geisha as she looks at them with delight....and perhaps a bit of smile.
Contact Michele
 
Dedication: With love for those who love all things Asian, kittens and AAQI.
This quilt has Fast Finish Triangles.

We have family visiting from Alaska. We have brought them to see our brother, Doug, in the Hillsboro Rehab Clinic twice and are driving up to pick up my SIL, Becky, in Beaverton and bring her along with us, as well.

Doug and Becky have always loved cats and Becky so missed her own little cat up in Anchorage as she has to now live in Portland to be near her husband (my brother) Doug.

My (currently visiting us) brother and my other SIL will return to the Juneau area and our parents home on Douglas Island and return to helping with the care giving of our mother, there. It is all a labor of love no matter where we visit, or where we live as we have so many hurting family members in so many places.

Hello, Kitty, seems so sweet in such a challenging part of all of our lives. But as Doug recognizes new family faces and can greet them by name, all of our hearts are lightening and the happier, fun part of life is let out to play.

And my brother tells me that even in her 8th year of advanced Alzheimer's, our mom can still laugh as she catches on to pieces of the reading aloud from books that they do every evening. So, even through her own fog, she still can have a bit of fun and laugh..something we all need to enjoy!

Hello, Kitty is my October Quilt of the Month for AAQI and will be available to either travel to Houston or be up for sale once they scan it into the system.

Well, Hello Kitty!  So nice to see your smiling little faces and remember how to play and have fun!



Michele Bilyeu blogs With Heart and Hands as she shares a quilting journey through her life in Salem, Oregon and Douglas, Alaska and all of her AAQI Quilting. Sharing thousands of links to Free Quilt and Quilt Block Patterns and encouraging others to join in the Liberated Quilting Challenge and make or donate small art quilts to the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI) Help us change the world, one little quilt at a time!

Oct 6, 2012

Andrea Balosky: Prayers Flags from Mungpoo






Andrea Balosky-Nyima Lhamo is an improvisational and creative woman, writer, quilter, and friend whose story crosses an island, three oceans, and several continents.

 As Andrea, she was blessed to be born and grow up in Hawaii. As a quilter she was blessed to move to Oregon and live and quilt in the woods of Camp Sherman and become self-apprenticed to a number of quilters and guilt venues.  There, she created beautiful quilts and had them entered in wonderful venues and setting inside and out. As a writer, she wrote a wonderful little book "Transitions, Unlocking the Creative Quilter Within."


As Andrea becoming Nyima, she has become an inspirational story of an American woman who thought she was giving up her quilting life for a far greater calling and a much deeper and meaningful purpose by moving to India in 2004 and taking her new name Nyima, who is, as she describes herself.... a “Buddhist recluse, but recently with internet access."

But as Andrea Balosky/Nyima Lhamo,  she has found a way to create beautifully  improvisational quilts for my own very special cause and to create them with extremely limited resources and then transport them out of the Himalayan Mountains from the small village of Mungpoo, in the Darjeeling District of West Bengal, India to America.In this case small format art quilts destined for  the Alzheimer’s Art Quilt Initiative  where they have either been put up for sale or into the AAQI monthly auctions and  a into the hands of admirers and quilt purchasers.

One such 'quilt magnet' collector named  Bill Volkening  met her at the Sisters Outdoor Quilt show in 2010, and serendipitously was given one of her quilts (talk about a quilt magnet!) and a story that captivated his own heart. This led to a wonderful show of Andrea's  earlier doll quilts at the  Latimer Center, also here in Oregon.

But others have recognized her talents as well, and her quilts have also made their way into a 2011 art quilt exhibit based on the improvisational art quilts of NW quilters in Salem's own historic Bush Barn Art Gallery, that I was fortunate to be able to see and to photograph, as well.

As Andrea, she had access to all of the sewing supplies of the 60's and the quilting supplies of he early 90's. But high up in her Himalyan Mountains, Nyima had only a common pair of utility scissors, fabric given to her from another Indian quilter, and batting she had originally taken from upholstered pieces. Creating her quilts was one thing ....but finding a way to get them down the mountains and to a Post Office was quite another!

She has created the most beautiful of handpieced and quilted AAQI art quilts as well as larger pieces which I blogged about in my post featuring the improvisational art quilts collection: Bits and Pieces: Intuitive Quilts from the Northwest and Beyond

I first learned of Andrea when she emailed the Alzheimer’s Art Quilt Initiative several years ago, asking AAQI founder, Ami Simms if 'she could bend the rules a bit." Nyima (Andrea) wanted to register six quilts for donation to AAQI, but couldn’t print off the confirming email because she has no printer in the Himalayan Mountains!

When she moved to Mungpoo in the Darjeeling District of West Bengal, India, she transformed from her previous life as a professional quilter in Oregon to .."engage in a contemplative life, I easily renounced all of my mundane activity, including quilting." Life and quilting have now combined. Her quilts are exceptionally lovely and intuitively original. But it is truly her friendship that I admire most.

And because of this amazing and synchronistic set of connections, I have felt so blessed as we have traded little emails back and forth sharing details of connection between our lives that has forge a unique and greatly treasured friendship....in just little improvisational 'bits and pieces'.

Her comments on a few treasured blog posts of connection between my prayers for my family members and my prayer arbor arch, which she wrote to tell me she was using as a screen saver on her own computer in the Himalayan mountains...and believe it or not.... my chickens ..who knew that there are chickens with upside down feathers roaming freely all over Mungpoo and they are called phonetically at least 'doom say' chickens?

 I wrote Nyima that there are three distinct types of chickens in my own world. That I think that her "dhoom-say(or)" chickens are perhaps called 'Chicken Littles'..ie. "the sky is falling, the sky is falling" ;)  And that perhaps in Mungpoo, having upside down or perhaps right side up feathers, depending on your point of view, is either being a fatalist as in 'let's just get this over with', or a realist as in " it's going to rain and we are going to get wet any way!"  Or I said, perhaps just being environmentally 'green' optimist' as in 'how lovely, it's raining, we should save some for later when we are thirsty or need to take a bath! Let's grow some cupping feathers for that purpose!"

Can you tell it has been a great deal of fun for me and no doubt incredibly different from her usual contemplative life as a "Buddhist recluse?"  Oh, my aren't I just the one to turn lots of feathers upside down with my writings? ;) I like to think that I live my own contemplative life ...a lot of it on the beaches and forests on my own little small island in Alaska , but now so much more if it on 8 lane freeways where not only do a multitude of racing cars pass before me .....along with past visions of my own life.  The hills, and the songs and the music without words are all just part of all that I have read, that has influenced me, and all that has brought me to the joys of fabric and thread....and painting my own stories without a canvas. I can admire Andrea and think of all of her journeys to the special place of arrival, but it is Nyima who touches my heart with connection.


So, when Bill Volkening (who currently has an exhibit of AAQI quilts on display including four of Andrea's and one of mine) emailed me and told me he had been left with a small package from Andrea  that she had left with him last summer ...and that it was for me.... I was totally delighted!

Imagine my delight when I opened a set of real Himalayan prayer flags all the way from Mungpoo in the Himalyan Mountains! Nyima wrote me that if I sniff carely I may even catch a whiff of mildew....reminiscent of course of the famous Himalayan monsoon season. I can only sense the love, the deepest of prayers, and the most meaningful, and dear friendship of synchronistic and heartfelt connections.

Along with my heartfelt thankyou, I sent her an email attachment of my latest little art quilt to go up for auction at Alzheimer’s Art Quilt Initiative October Auction and told her that as I designed and created it, I was thinking of her.... so many miles away and her life there in those beautiful hills.  She writes me that she loves my little quilts just as she loves Tagore (the quote on the quilt)  and asked me if I knew that Tagore had actually lived in Mungpoo when the Bengali plains got too hot in the summer?..I did not!

 But nothing I, or any of us do is ever by accident, so of course somewhere it all fit like the pieces of a puzzle of all of our lives.  She says his home is now open to the public and it is so easy to fantasize that he wrote his masterpieces at his large desk on the veranda, overlooking the majestic hills.

I treasure my Himalayan Prayer Flags from Nyima, just as I know others treasure their little art quilts they have bid on and purchased from AAQI made by Andrea Balosky.  Each is so deeply special in each of their own ways. I know in my heart, as she knew in hers, that this was the perfect little gift of connection...prayers flags stretching now between the hills of the Cascade mountains in Oregon to the hills of the Himalayas in West Bengal.

I feel so blessed and so grateful for this gift. But it is the true gift of connection that lifts up the heart and finds joy in creation and the spirit of giving and sharing.The act of creation, the joy of giving, and the manifestation of connection, fills my spirit with the present of all that is most high. And it is that song..the song of all of these hills and valleys that connect us..that is the true song of my own heart.

Collage hown at top of post:
My chickens, my treasured gift of Mungpoo prayer flags, my own prayer arbor arch with two more of my chickens at the bottom right standing at attention by it, my treasured copy of Andrea's now out of print book found at 'Goodwill' of all the wonderful places!  'Good will'

To see Andrea's AAQI quilts click here:
To see her quilts in Bits and Pieces click here:

To see my own little art quilt, inspired by this gift of connection, click here: 



 11,086 - Song of the Hills 
Michele Bilyeu
Salem, OR USA
Width: 12" Length: 9"
Designer: Original design

Materials/Techniques: Batiks, hand dyes, and commercial cottons, Shiva paint sticks, ink jet printing, and metallic threads.

Artist Statement: The poet, Rabindranath Tagore, said of his beloved Himalayan mountains “I touch God in my song as the hill touched the far-away sea with its waterfall." These words were my inspiration, and this this poet, my muse.


Dedication: In memory of those whose lives have touched ours, as the mountains touch the sea. And to those who have inspired us to reach out with our hearts, and touch others lives in return.


Michele Bilyeu blogs With Heart and Hands as she shares a quilting journey through her life in Salem, Oregon and Douglas, Alaska and all of her AAQI Quilting. Sharing thousands of links to Free Quilt and Quilt Block Patterns and encouraging others to join in the Liberated Quilting Challenge and make or donate small art quilts to the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI) Help us change the world, one little quilt at a time!

Oct 1, 2012

Song of the Hills: A Purpose and a Process



 I had a big talk with my almost 97 year old mother-in-law, yesterday..... during one of my usual 2 hour visits..and yes, I have no problem talking that long! You've read my posts, right?  ;)

She's often depressed. Her life is not as she would ever have wished it. She's filled with the frustration of not being able to use her legs, and not even being able to walk across the room and straighten her own bedding .....when her care giver leaves it all crooked, and catty wampus.  And she bemoans her ability to do the hobbies, and crafts she once so loved. She bemoans a lot, it is truly very hard for her, and on her.  I listen to her, empathize from my heart, and then I do my best to try to turn it all around.

And yes, of course I always share my brother Doug's journey through all these 4 plus months of hospitalization and now waking from the coma, and all of those mental and physical challenges, and my SIL, his wife, Becky's journey through end stage kidney disease and pain and breakage of multiple bones from osteoporosis.

But when you are old, and often when you are not even old, you only focus on yourself, your accomplishments, your life right now as bad as it is to you.  Knowing that others are worse off does not truly make you feel better off!

So, one day, I brought in all of my little art quilts in progress for the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative,
and I brought in the two baby quilts I had started for donation to the hospital, and the potholders to raise money for our charitable causes in my quilt guild and.....(Yes, I Still Sew and Quilt)
..well.....I deliberately flooded her with my doing, instead of bemoaning about her not doing.

My purpose was not to flaunt my abilities, or my talents, but to make her realize ..since she already knows this, but still doesn't truly realize it...how much time I spend listening to her complain.

I wanted it to click..that I really love her, care for her, and will come and do for here..not in spite of my own life. But because of my own life.  

And that is the secret to doing.....instead of not doing.

Complaining......and yes, I do it, too....only makes us feel all of our aches and pains. I have 32 years of chronic pain under my belt, so trust me I know. Complaining increases our depression, not decreases it. Ask me how I know that?  Complaining changes how we feel about our self, others, even our loved ones. All you want to do is go to bed, go on facebook, go on computer games sites, or go on Pinterest. You want to overload your problems with other things you focus on, get involved with, think make you feel better....by doing things that ultimately.....way down the road ultimately..may not really help you feel one bit better about yourself.  Ask me how I know? I'm a multiple blogger, right?  Care to guess just how much time I spend online doing all of this ..ha!

What we do, and how we do it.....must truly have purpose.

It must truly help us to feel better what where we are, and what we do, with our lives. 

If we are creating, if we are learning, if we are trying to do something better...we feel good, we feel better...we are involved in the process of growth and of discovery. About some thing. Some thing that is special and important to us and to our lives.

When all we do is feel bad, feel sorry for ourselves, or feel depressed...it grows and grows because we feed it... and feed it well.   Suddenly we see the dark side of ourselves, our lives, and it all seems so very bleak and so very hopeless.  And yes, been there, done that, too!

Instead of complaining, and yes, on bad days I bemoan over and over how I can't sleep, hardly ever sleep, nothing works to help me sleep. But then I clean the house, feed the cat, do the laundry, and quilt. Not always in that order ;)



Quilting lifts me up beyond and past and over my self. Quilting is just like gardening, or doing yoga, or singing, or dancing, or being involved in theatre. It creates and involves us with 'right thinking' and "true purpose" with and for those things that we do in our lives. Right purpose fill my life with song. It creates a happy heart inside, instead of a sad, and hurting heart.

So, this new month...October...a time of changing seasons, changing weather, changing colors...I bring in a new quilt filled with my own personal song...the "Song of the Hills." The song of the majesty of the changing seasons, to a vision of snow on the mountains ahead, but still the flowing waters of our spirits, and the joy filled, and light filled song of our hearts.

My newest AAQI quilt that happily made it to auction this month. And I always, always feel so very blessed when that happens because hundreds if not thousands of quilts do not, each and every month. Ami Simms has the challenging task of selecting 26 out of so very, wonderful many.

So, gratitude for each and every opportunity to spread my love of quilting, of AAQI, and send forth my loving, and caring, and healing energies, into the world. And boy do I spread it..on multiple blogs, multiple venues, and by writing and talking about it all...a lot ;)  But this is part of my own soul's purpose..to do good on this earth..the best that I can, in any way that I can.

So, I quilt with heart and soul and spread the energy around by donating my creations... everywhere that I can!  And when you bid on one, or buy one of my quilts...you are part of that song. Part of that right doing, and right purpose.  For it is for such good, good if not down right great causes.

I always know that each quilt will go just where it is meant to go. And if is a money earning quilt, that it will earn the right amount for Alzheimer's research through my quilt sales  and my chance to have a quilt up at Auction to hopefully earn extra money that way!  

And hopefully through my words of the heart as I type on my little (ok very, very long) blog posts. 

                    The October Online Quilt Auction Starts October 1st!

Yes, this whole long, long post to say..."Take a look at the quilts. Take a second look at my quilt up at auction. And if you have any money to give towards charitable causes this month...please, consider my quilt  ;-)   And we have been unemployed now for three years, so trust me I do know how that is too!  So, every single time one of you is able to bid on or buy one of my quilts I truly, truly, truly appreciate it. I know what it is to give and I know how hard it is to wish you could but can not. Big hug anyway!

Thank you for taking the time to visit this blog, for reading my very long posts, and for lifting your own hearts and spirits to connect with mine and so many others. Blessings flow through all of our songs of the hills!


11,086 - Song of the Hills 


Michele Bilyeu
Salem, OR USA
Width: 12" Length: 9"
Designer: Original design

Materials/Techniques: Batiks, hand dyes, and commercial cottons, Shiva paint sticks, ink jet printing, and metallic threads.

Artist Statement: The poet, Rabindranath Tagore, said of his beloved Himalayan mountains “I touch God in my song as the hill touched the far-away sea with its waterfall." These words were my inspiration, and this this poet, my muse.


Dedication: In memory of those whose lives have touched ours, as the mountains touch the sea. And to those who have inspired us to reach out with our hearts, and touch others lives in return.

Another post on the making of this quilt:Lift Up Your Spirit with the "Song of the Hills"

Michele Bilyeu blogs With Heart and Hands as she shares a quilting journey through her life in Salem, Oregon and Douglas, Alaska and all of her AAQI Quilting. Sharing thousands of links to Free Quilt and Quilt Block Patterns and encouraging others to join in the Liberated Quilting Challenge and make or donate small art quilts to the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative (AAQI) Help us change the world, one little quilt at a time!