Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Merry Christmas!


Wishing you all the joy and wonders of the holiday season!

Sunday, December 22, 2013

The architectonic photos of Lauma Cenne



From the Oxford English Dictionary:

architectonic

Pronunciation: /ˌɑːkɪtɛkˈtɒnɪk/


adjective

  • 1relating to architecture or architects.
  • 2(of an artistic composition) having a clearly defined structure, especially one that is artistically pleasing:the painting’s architectonic harmony.

My friend Lauma Cenne, who is part of our text'art group, is a wonderful photographer. On a recent trip to Latvia she took many photos of the people and places of her parents' homeland, and she has generously offered to let me use some of them for my Cityscapes series. This is a first for me, as I have always relied on my own photography as a basis for my work. 


So much of the beauty of Lauma's photos comes from the textures of the old buildings: the crumbling brick, the peeling paint and the rusted metal. which I cannot replicate in fibre. But I am inspired by the interlocking forms of the buildings, the juxtaposition of old and new, the variety of shapes and the rhythm of the repeated elements.

I am excited to see what I can do with your images, Lauma!



Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Reasons to visit Toronto


The City, Robert Delauney



Until March 2, the Art Gallery of Ontario will host "The Great Upheaval: Masterpieces from the Guggenheim Collection, 1910 - 1918". This period in European painting was a time of great energy and innovation. The show features over one hundred paintings and sculptures by Matisse, Picasso, Modigliani, Kandinsky, Chagall and many more.

Kim-Dorland-French-River
French River, Kim Dorland






Jelly Shelf, Mary Pratt
For all you fans of plein air painting, Kim Dorland shows his landscapes in the tradition of the Group of Seven at the McMichael Collection until January 5. Visitors will have the opportunity to see works by this young artist displayed side-by-side those painted by Jackson, MacDonald, Carmichael et al. The exhibit is titled, “You Are Here: Kim Dorland and the Return to Painting.



From January 18 to April 27, the McMichael Collection will have a show devoted to the works of Canadian photorealist painter Mary Pratt. "She brings a sharply focused, contemporary lens to deceptively simple subject matter, demonstrating sophisticated skill rooted firmly in the history of painting."






It's always a pleasure to view the permanent collection at the McMichael, with its vast holdings of Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven. Nestled in a beautiful woodland north of Toronto, the McMichael was built to optimize its setting in an inspiring natural environment.




Sunday, December 15, 2013

Word of the day: repoussoir

Boathouses #2

Here's what an on-line dictionary had to say about the term.

re·pous·soir

  [ruh-poo-swahr] 
noun Painting.
a figure or object in the extreme foreground: used as a contrast and to increase the illusion of depth.

View from the Academy

Quebec City: Old Town

Villaggio Toscano

This word was new to me, but looking through my files, I can see that I have often used this device in my own work.

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Water Tower #4

Water Tower #4





SAQA (Studio Art Quilt Associates) is assembling a 25th Anniversary Trunk Show, which will travel worldwide to promote the concept of quilts as art. Members are asked to donate a 10" x 7" piece, which will be put up for sale when the three-year tour ends. Water Tower #4 is my response to this call for entry.

The image is based on a photo I took while walking the High Line aerial park in New York. The photo is shown below.














I have updated my Artist Statement for a current show, which reads, in part:

"Heather’s cityscapes show the radiant transformation of an everyday exterior through the expressive potential of colour. She creates sensuous, aesthetic delight by a careful consideration of form and composition."

Yes, I love the interplay of neutrals in the urban landscape, but I also love to impose my own palette on that image, using hand-dyed cottons. These days, the vibrant colours seem to be my first choice.


Sunday, December 8, 2013

Virtual exhibition

Water Tower #2



I am thrilled to have had my work included in this month's On Line Gallery exhibition on the SAQA website. Curator Linda Laird has put together fifteen images on the theme of "Looking Up, Looking Down".

She writes, "Do you ever get vertigo? I chose works, whether representational or abstract, whose upward or downward viewpoint gave me that wobbly feeling."

Some of the other artists are Alicia Merrett, whom I met at this summer's Festival of Quilts in the U.K., Cindy Grisdela, who purchased one of my SAQA auction pieces, and Leni Levinson Wiener, who coached me at the SAQA conference in Santa Fe. I am delighted to be in such excellent company!

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Art Showcase at the Hudson Medi-Centre

Since the Hudson Medi-Centre opened at its new location, 465 Main Road in Hudson, its waiting room has been enlivened by the work of local artists. The show rotates every two months, and now it's my turn! I will be artist Number 16.


If you'd like to see five of my Cityscapes, they will be exhibited until January 18, during regular clinic hours. I will be followed by Susan Porter, known for her large, distinctive acrylic paintings of flowers, and later this spring, from mid-March to mid-May, Helena Scheffer's vibrant "colour explosions" in fibre.

If you'd like to have your work shown at the Medi-Centre, please contact me through my website.

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Periwinkle challenge: Berkhamsted 2

The 12 by the Dozen group challenge for this quarter is to make a 8.5' x 11" art quilt, using the colour periwinkle. You can see my contribution below. The hand-dyed cotton used for the sky is a pale version of the periwinkle, and the larger building in the rear is composed of more saturated shades, all dyed specifically for this project. The other two buildings were made using the not-quite-right early attempts at getting to periwinkle.

Berkhamsted 2
Trying to dye to a very specific colour was a new experience for me, and I have to admit that in meeting this challenge, I learned a lot. I also took the opportunity to look for this colour as it is used by other artists, and that was fascinating.

Below is the original photo, taken in Berkhamsted, England this past summer.


If you'd like to see how the other members responded to this challenge, please visit the 12 by the Dozen site. The Big Reveal is scheduled for November 30.

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Camera 4 Line Art+





For maybe a year I have had an intriguing app on my phone, but I've rarely played with it. My friend Colleen, who knows everything about this kind of thing, introduced me to it.

Camera 4 Line Art+ allows you to take a photo with your phone, and convert it to a line drawing. There are some controls that help you adjust the amount of black vs. white, or to reverse the image to a negative.

I decided that today was a good day to try it out, as we have had our first real snowfall.










The first image is based on a photo I took with my iPhone of the tracks in the snow on my driveway.

The second image is the negative of the first.

For artists who are inspired by photos, and wish to reduce them to lines and shapes, the potential is intriguing.


To find out more, go to the iTunes app store.

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Fibre Art & Conceptualism

Much of the fibre art I see when I go to museums falls into the category of Conceptualism, and viewing it helps me to understand a bit more about my own aesthetic. In other words, sometimes we can define our work by what it is not, as much as by what it is.

Here are two thought-provoking pieces I saw today at the Musée National des Beaux-Arts du Québec.


At right is Knitwork, by Vancouver artist Germaine Koh. The work was begun in 1992, when the artist unravelled a knit garment and re-knit the salvaged wool, using very large needles which can be seen in the foreground. Constantly expanding, Knitwork now is composed of dozens of recycled garments, and lengthens with each new performance by Koh at various presentations. At this point, more than 400 pounds of wool have been incorporated into the piece.

The piece was acquired by the Art Gallery of Ontario with the support of the Canada Council for the Arts.










At left is Fashion Plaza Nights, by Montreal artist Patrick Bernatchez. The work is composed of musical scores, a sound track, digital files, yarn, reels, a rotating platform, loudspeakers and photographs. It has been produced with financial assistance of the MNBAQ.

Here is the protocol that Bernatchez used to produce his work: "Once a month for a year, from nightfall until morning, Bernatchez took snapshots of the Fashion Plaza building of Montreal, where his studio is located.... He then transformed the photographs into musical scores. Bernatchez has imported here reels of yarn, which wraps itself around the loudspeakers playing these musical compositions. A cocoon will thus slowly form, covering a life to be born again."

My art reflects a preoccupation with form, composition and colour. I want my work to be appreciated for its visual qualities, which I would like to think of as timeless. At the same time, I am aware of the tradition of women's needlework, and its history as a vehicle for women's self-expression. I enjoy being a participant in the contemporary embodiment of this tradition. There is, at least, a kind of irony in using the traditional form of quilting to make modern urban landscapes. Does this make my work conceptual in any sense?

Not according to Wikipedia's definition of Conceptual Art:

Conceptual art, sometimes simply called Conceptualism, is art in which the concept(s) or idea(s) involved in the work take precedence over traditional aesthetic and material concerns. Many works of conceptual art, sometimes called installations, may be constructed by anyone simply by following a set of written instructions.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

textileartist.org

Whether you're a textile artist or an art enthusiast, here is a website with a wealth of information and inspiration.


Clear and well-organized, this site features interviews with top-ranking textile artists, articles on topics of interest (finding venues for your work, for example) and reviews of exhibitions and publications. 

A great find! 

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Christmas postcards 2013


Every year I like to make a couple dozen special Christmas cards. Having done this for maybe ten years, it's not always easy to come up with a fresh idea.

This time around, I am doing a variation on last year's cards. I used pearlescent paint to stencil an evergreen tree onto ice-dyed cotton, outlined the tree with metallic silver thread, and added pearls or pink crystals.

These mini-quilts are backed with watercolour paper and sent through the mail bareback. I like to think they bring a special delight to those who find them in their mailbox, and perhaps to the postal workers who handle them. A couple of my friends collect or even frame them, so I know they are appreciated.

To learn more about ice-dyeing, please visit my post of September 9, 2012.