Interview with Ambermoggie
(second of two pages)©2005 - 2006 by Ambermoggie (aka Sukie) and Aisling D'Art
Aisling's notes:
Sukie--also known as Ambermoggie--has been a friend of mine for several years, and I've admired her dolls and figures for
even longer. I was delighted when she agreed to an interview, because I know how busy she is.
One of these days, I hope to visit her studio in England.
This continues from Interview with Ambermoggie, page one.
Q. If you were
stranded on a deserted island and could take just a few supplies with you, what would you need to make
dolls?
A. If I were stranded
on an island the items I'd need would be wool, wire, a needle and cotton and paint. I could make my
own felt and the wool would also make the dolls hair. With paint I could make any colour and by
thinning it down dye the fibres. I'd hate to not have a doll in progress... it doesn't feel
right.
Q. What's your best
advice for someone who's just beginning as a dollmaker?
A. For anyone
starting out I would say: Just play and let your mind lead you to your kind of doll. There are no right and
wrong ways to make dolls; there are only people's interpretation of the ideas within. I'd just go for it.
If after that you
want to take classes that's good, but don't feel that is the only way to learn. It isn't. I've never
been able to take any classes in any of the arts I do but it doesn't stop me having a go.
Q. Do you have
a special way of displaying dolls that you keep, or your own collection of dolls?
A. I display
my dolls that I keep on a fairy tree .It has tiny christmas lights on and the dolls. These change quite
often as I tend to give most of them away.
For me the joy
is in making them and then the pleasure people get from receiving them, They seem to bring something to people
and that for me is the best reason to make them.
The ones that I
most remember from selling were made for auctions to raise money for 9/11. People gave most generously and I
received some lovely emails saying how they loved the dolls. I like the idea that my dolls
are in many private collections around the world for one reason - they are loved. Not bad for someone who,
up to a few years ago, was too scared to make anything.
Q. Do all of your
dolls have names when you make them? If so, does the name "come to you" or do you think it up
deliberately?
A. I don't
name them usually if they are going to other people; I leave that to them. I just think of them as a
representation of the element they embody . I have named some of the figures that I've kept, from characters in books.
For example, I have one
with feathers and gems who is my idea of Margaret Pye (Magpie) in the Charles de Lint
Some Place to Be Flying.
His work has influenced me the most. I see characters I want to make in all his books.
Charles and Maryann have quite a collection of my figures and also commisioned one for a
friend of theirs several years ago.
Q. Your art is always
breathtakingly beautiful. Where do you plan to go with your dolls and figures in the
future?
A. I look now at the
first doll I made. She is sitting on my desk as we speak with her brush in hand, ready to create.
The ones I make today resemble her but yet are different and that is what I'd like to continue doing:
Moving ever on in different directions from this beginning.
I'm currently exploring
pixie feet, faces and hands, and that is fun.
I'm also enjoying
getting back to writing stories. I've had quite a few dolls and other items in magazines and I'd like to do
more of that.
I'd also enjoy teaching
some more. I did a workshop last summer at a camp we were at. There were 30 people there from around 4
years of age to 80, both male and female. It was a shock when I saw how many were
waiting for the class, but we had great fun. Everyone made a doll and each one was different. It was so much fun to
see how they all did.
Q. Is dollmaking an
evolutionary process for you, and--if so--where do you see your dolls and figures going, in the future?
Were there significant discoveries ∓ turning points for you, along the path?
A. The most
significant stepping stones for me and my art were: Firstly, I could make something that reflected what I
could see. Secondly, that following your heart is the most important tool in making dolls.
Thirdly, that it doesn't matter that I can't cut a straight line or turn tiny fingers out of fabric with
these stiff and clumsy fingers of mine. Finally, that I make my dolls and my art for me. That
other people love them is a bonus... but not the reason to do it.
See more of Sukie's dolls and other art at her
PictureTrail site
YOU ARE HERE: wild art dolls >
doll artists > ambermoggie, page two
|