Lisa Karlsson

22 September11 November 2012
Previous exhibition

Lisa Karlsson, Error, 1997.

How long does it take?

For many years, Lisa Karlsson has worked based on a Swedish craft tradition of sewing patchwork quilts with inspiration drawn from visual art and nature. The patchwork quilts shown in the Museum were created over a period of twenty years.

'Most of the quilts take a long time to make. They are always large, 2 x 3 metres or so. It takes as long as it takes. Or rather, I allow my quilts to occupy my time, even though I am really a restless person. It’s like with kids; they should get the time they need, or else things go wrong. I no longer grow impatient.

It’s like turning on a tap. I think in colours and patterns, because I can’t stop myself. Sometimes I just have to turn it off. I will never have time to make all the quilts that exist in my head and in my sketchbooks. 

Lisa Karlsson, Rajasthan, 1999.
Lisa Karlsson, quilts in a pile, 1993 – 2009.

The technique is so simple, you stitch patches together, but there is an infinite number of ways in which this can be done. This infinite variety is a fantastic freedom, but also a challenge. Those choices can lead to considerable anxiety. Some quilts have a life of their own and seem to evolve and take shape automatically. Then I don’t need to hesitate. Others take longer before they allow themselves to be completed.

How long does it take? People often ask me about time. I think it is first and foremost a matter of fascination. There is nothing strange about that, since time is manifested in the tiny, combined patches. But my quilts don’t take time, they give me time.'

- Lisa Karlsson

Lisa Karlsson, quilts in a pile, 1993 – 2009.
Lisa Karlsson, The Pink Quilt, 2009.
Lisa Karlsson, Blue and Black Quilt, 1993.
Lisa Karlsson, Kimono, 1998.

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