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SHUYU_FEATURE

Designer: SHUYU LU


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Born and raised in China, Shuyu Lu is currently a textile artist-in-residence at the Harbourfront Centre Studio in Toronto. She originally came to Canada to pursue an art education at the Ontario College of Art & Design. When she arrived, she started to explore the ways Chinese character, East Asian character, has melded with western sensibilities in Canada as well as in China.

Through screen-printing and embroidery, she expresses these insights along with her nostalgia for the country she left behind. She balances craft with design while making work that is playful, even humorous. What results is something uniquely beautiful and always unexpected.

MORE FROM SHUYU

JOURNALS

Digital printed cotton cover journal book

designed by: Shuyu Lu (China)

Material: Printable cotton

Description of item: Digital printed cotton cover journal book

For Inquiries, contact us.

SALUTE CHINIESE GIRL STUFFED TOY

Salute Chinese Girl stuffed doll

designed by: Shuyu Lu (China)
Based on my self- portrait as a Young Pioneer at my elementary school in China.

Material: Printed on cotton fabric, hand embroidery

Description of item: Sizes: 4”/8.5”/ 11”
All 4” dolls have magnet on the backside
14X4”
13X8.5”
8X11”

For Inquiries, contact us.

NEW TREASURE 1

New Treasure

designed by: Shuyu Lu (China)

Description of item: Screen printed ( traditional Chinese character pattern) on commercial cotton fabric; screen printed & hand embroidery on silk organza; wooden frame.

For Inquiries, contact us.

NEW TREASURE 2

New Treasure

designed by: Shuyu Lu (China)

Description of item: Screen printed ( traditional Chinese character pattern) on commercial cotton fabric; screen printed & hand embroidery on silk organza; wooden frame.

For Inquiries, contact us.

NEW TREASURE 3

New Treasure

designed by: Shuyu Lu (China)

Description of item: Screen printed ( traditional Chinese character pattern) on commercial cotton fabric; screen printed & hand embroidery on silk organza; wooden frame.

For Inquiries, contact us

THE INTERVIEW

wwm: How do you imagine your work displayed in a room?
SL: I think they might be displayed on a shelf or on a wall that already has other art – in the sort of “gallery section” of a home. That’s how I display work in my own home. My work is all about the combination of nostalgia, pop art, East meets West, even the mess of the cultural moment, the multi-cultural world we live in. Since my work is not an abstract painting or a bronze sculpture, it doesn’t need “breathing space” between it and other work.

wwm: What are some other items that seem to fit with your motif?
SL: Vintage toys! Also Chinese, Eastern and Western old posters, and propaganda. I get a lot of inspiration from these kinds of posters, so it would make more sense shown together.

wwm: What are some of your favorite things displayed at your house?
SL: I purchase a first edition print from 1967 of Chairman Mao propaganda from a souvenir store in Toronto’s Chinatown. Now it hangs on my living room’s wall and it is one of my favorite things in my collection. It’s not about the politics – I just fell in love with the graphic design, the color (red, cream, and black) and a sense of reminiscence. It’s kind of funny that I found it in Toronto; it would be hard to find in China now.

wwm: Walk us through the steps you take in creating a new collection.
SL: I finished school last year, so I’ve had two series of work so far. They are all made from a narrative perspective expressing my feelings about cultural impact. In my new work, I will continue to develop this concept. I like to bring the old and the traditional into contemporary pieces, meanwhile showing where the Western & Eastern elements melt together – their melting point.

wwm: What do you imagine a person who buys your work to be like?
SL: A person who has a little child inside of him or her. A happy person but a bit sentimental.

wwm: Do you have a favorite artist or writer? A designer who works in a different material? Who are they?
SL: I have a long list of my favorite artists and designers! The most inspired one is Zhang Xiaogang – the Chinese contemporary artist. He was born in 1958 and was influenced by a period of cultural revolution during his youth. His surrealist paintings are a perfect reflection of the period. It conjures the depressive atmosphere of the time. Dorie Millerson’s needlepoint is also a favorite. Most of her work is tiny and deals with memory, nostalgia, defining home and identity. The lace work brings her memories and moments of attachment to life with their delicate shapes. A person who has a little child inside of him or her. A happy person but a bit sentimental.

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August: London Design Festival 2010 Preparation Update

Help! I am trapped by my WordPress template! I have been afraid to just simply blog because I have a magazine style site where I forgo my writerly urges to post the result of my endless female creativity talent search. Women who I find through my endless trolling for the best of the best in all manners of creative entrepreneurship, innovation, problem solving, and fresh cultural expression. But I want to be able to do both. I want to be a regular blogger too. I’m seeking a web developer to help me get there. Consider this a RFP.

I am researching the various ways to go to market, communicate, and stay simple. I love the possibilities available through QR codes, any way to bring a story to life and integrate story with the things we make. Also, not that this is my domain but I think how can these women with these ingenious ideas and amazing designs produce in small quantities so the fog of supply chain doesn’t wary them from getting down to business.

Got Future of Manufacturing On The Brain

From Makerbot to Ponoko to all the myriad of personal manufacturing possibilities championed by Thingiverse, the dream is there but the access to tools have not caught up. And when they do, what will that even look like? Dreaming and communicating ideas ad infinitum is one thing but materializing ad infinitum is quite another. But back to brass tacks..

It’s August now so everything moves slower but the fact is I can’t. I have a 9 amazing designers to show off before the big day when Designers Block opens on September 22nd, I have an event to prepare for at the Sense Loft on the 23rd of September and then the rest of the London Design Festival with Tiffany, Edyta, Ai, Chisato, Natsuki, Shuyu, Tiffany and Lynn (and now possibly 1-2 more, we’ll see) up through the 26th. Then two days later I fly to New York to get ready for my wedding in October. I’m also tending to my secret other project that takes up a bundle of editing time. (No its not a book about women or design or anything like that, it truly is ‘other’.)

Anyway, that’s me in a nutshell right now. I just had a nightmarish trip to Andalucia, a slight diversion a bit like a horror movie short if you will, but I’m back in hot as hell Barcelona sitting in my Borne apartment with Peter while he edits photographs and I write.  I’ll end this now and I’ll be back with more in the next few days.

Please stay with us as we unfold the What Women Make exhibit at DesignersBlock during the London Design Festival. I’m very excited. I couldn’t have asked for more talented people to showcase.

-Chauncey

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