
COSY NOSY
, 1999
machine knitted wool, log
180 × 410 × 120 mm
Private Collection
She’s Out of Her Tree, 1999
machine knitted wool, log
70 × 520 × 70 mm
Private collection
COSY NOSY
, 1999
machine knitted wool, log
180 × 410 × 120 mm
Private Collection
She’s Out of Her Tree, 1999
machine knitted wool, log
70 × 520 × 70 mm
Private collection
17 June 1999
Comfort Creature,
1998
wool, felt, plastic
330 × 120 × 90 mm
Private Collection
Comfort Sheep, 2000
wool, felt, plastic, paper
approx 210 × 180 × 90 mm
My awareness of textiles came through Janie, a rag doll made for me by my Aunt. Janie’s orange wool hair was a great comfort to me, I would tickle my nose with it. Her hair would gradually wear out and my Godmother would give her a new lot, always wool, always orange.
My Godmother became my greatest inspiration. She was always making things, not frumpy, lumpy things that you hid in your wardrobe, but fashionable, desirable toys and clothes. She was a free spirit. She lived alone, was unmarried and just got on with her own thing. I associated textiles with her and therefore with freedom.
I loved the Clangers, they were knitted. My Godmother taught me to knit, it was difficult, she was left handed. I loved knitting.
I was further inspired by the knitwear designer, Patricia Roberts. She did not rely upon traditional textile images, wholesome flowers, but turned instead to the contemporary urban world for inspiration. She was bold. I entered knitwear design competition in a craft magazine. I won. I was academic but I was also creative. I knew which path I would follow, the one that represented individuality.
Photography: Douglas Atfield
17 June 1998
1997
machine knitted yarn (mixed fibres), rubber glove,
recycled sweater sleeves
Photography: Douglas Atfield
17 June 1997
1997
machine and hand knitted yarn, buttons
Site specific installation for “The garden pARTy”
(Feeringbury VII), Feeringbury Manor, Colchester, Essex.
Hand knitted cosies by Molly Robins.
GARDEN PARTY
TEA PARTY
TEA COSY
TREE COSY
17 June 1997
1997
machine knitted wool 960 × 520 mm
In the collection of the Crafts Council, London.
Hand of Good, Hand of God is one of my earliest pieces. It followed on from my series of Odd Gloves. It plays with mathematics and pattern writing. The large glove being a multiplication of the number of stitches and rows in a regular knitted glove, the smaller being a division. The large glove is 3 1/2 larger than a regular glove, the smaller is 1/4 smaller. I have made this piece as large as I could without having to seam pieces together. My aim is to make a much bigger piece (possibly to be called A Bigger and Better God) with more “layers” of gloves. This could either be done by seaming pieces together or by the use of large, industrial machinery, which I have begun to use in the production of my large-scale work, Anyway 2002.
40:40 – forty objects for forty years
Online exhibition celebrating forty years of the Crafts Council Collection featuring Hand of Good, Hand of God
http://onviewonline.craftscouncil.org.uk/4040/object/T165
Photography: Heini Schneebeli, courtesy of Crafts Council
17 June 1997
Odd Gloves – Giles, Polly, Conrad, Peggy, 1997
machine knitted wool, mohair
approx 240 × 160 mm
Giles, Polly and Conrad in the collection of the Victoria & Albert Museum, London. Peggy in Private Collection
Odd Gloves – Michael, Edwin, David
, 1998
machine knitted wool, machine knitted shirring elastic
100 × 100 mm, 140 × 410 mm, 300 × 260 mm
David in Private collection
Pattern to hand-knit Conrad gloves, from Victoria & Albert Museum website
http://www.vam.ac.uk/content/articles/k/knit-a-work-of-art-from-a-free-pattern/
17 June 1997
Heart 2 Heart, Kidney Stones, Spots on your Lungs, Paisley Kidney, Lily Livered and Floral Liver, 1996
screen-printed cotton, wadding,150 × 125 mm – 240 × 920 mm
People often ask “What is it?” Shouldn’t we know what our kidneys, let alone our hearts, really look like? These pieces are not intended to educate but entertain and stimulate. “Body Parts” combine Freddie Robins’ interest in word games, medicine and humour eg: turning fabrics such as iron-burnt cotton drill into a visualization of Heartburn.
(Statement taken from the catalogue for Artextiles,
Bury St. Edmunds Art Gallery 1996)
Photography: Douglas Atfield
17 June 1996
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