Pages

Monday, July 27, 2009

Sketchbooks


Journals and sketchbooks have been a part of my life for many years. Lately it seems that words have overcome the images. Writing about dreams or doing Morning Pages as inspired by Julia Cameron's, The Artists Way have been an off and on ritual in my life. I began sketchbooks as a way to collect ideas for my body of work. My art comes from a fairly non literal place so I often write to develop a more conscious understanding of what I am creating. I love making discoveries in this way. Sometimes meaning emerges through poetic writing.

I have an artist friend who makes books. Both of my current books have been made by her. When on holiday recently I spent some focused time with a book that has a colourful textured cover and Fabriano pages that accept watercolour. At the outset this book is more about colour and image than written word. Creating each page becomes a form of meditation that is different than journalling. The messages are simpler as visual language tells a different kind of story.

Friday, July 3, 2009

Notebook Drawings




I was just going through my son's reading journal from school and discovered these drawings. It was fun to scan them from the journal and see them as unique moments of creation. It is really easy to overlook someone's doodles. Doodles are great! They are an expression of your unique visual language! They deserve a closer look.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Nest Making


Birds are great weavers of nests. Recently, some young people and I tried to figure out how the birds do it by constructing our own nests out of clay, sticks, wool, moss and a variety of fibres. We designed beautiful eggs with plasticene. New species of birds were hatched from vibrant imaginations. I am always amazed at what can emerge out of the magic of the creative process.

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Happy Year of the Ox!



Two loved ones in my family are celebrating birthdays in March that are exactly a week apart and both were born in the year of the ox 36 years apart. In honour of their special year we had a party last night and I made an ox cake. I used a recipe for snickerdoodle cookies for the legs, horns, ears and tail. Hot milk sponge cake makes up the forehead and haunches and fudge brownie fills in the rest.

I remember a dream that I had a while ago about doing work with a shaman somewhere in South America and I was given the job to make a cake to get the ritual started. There was a sense of honour in the task. I had the same feeling while creating this lovely creature for my family and friends. I wonder what the eating of the ox will inspire?

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Celtic Roots Festival Art Work


For a week or so every January or February I am hard at work with a now familiar creative task. Since 1993, I have created a design to celebrate the Earth, Air, Fire, Water: Celtic Roots Festival. This is number 17 in the series. A slide show of the all of the work is available on the Celtic Festival website.

In getting started I am guided by the four elements that take form as human or animal. Sometimes there is a theme that needs expressing. This year speaks of "the scattering" of Celtic people throughout the world. I started with the image of a house and gave it the wings of the geese to suggest a house taking flight. The roof suggests furrows in a field, making reference to scattering and taking root.

The animals, ox, goose, dragons feeding the hearth and the fish all speak to me of home in Huron County a place where many found themselves after scattering. Lake Huron and the agricultural land continue to be a valuable resource and a part of our natural heritage.

And so, the act of scattering becomes taking root in a new place called home.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

My Stars



It is Valentine's Day and instead of sharing hearts I am sharing my stars. I started rug hooking early this summer while travelling around Nova Scotia. While touring shops on a rainy day in Pictou I found a rug hooking kit by Deanne Fitzpatrick and subsequently became hooked on rug hooking. On our way home while passing through Amherst, Nova Scotia we stopped at Deanne's downtown studio on Electric Street. It is an inspiring place and so is Deanne.

At Christmas time I began making stars as gifts. Choosing colour is about intuitively responding from one section to the next. Most of my wool has come from Deanne's shop where you can order online as well as from The Rug Line in Hensall, Ontario. Recently, my mom has become enthused about rug hooking and has been spending time in second hand stores looking for wool clothing to recycle into rugs. She has had great success. We have also discovered there is a herstory of rug hookers on my mom's side of the family. My grandmother was a rug hooker and so was my great grandmother. There exists in the family a rug hook that my great grandmother used. It made by my great grandfather from the bone handle of a fork.

Sunday, January 4, 2009

About Encaustic

About a year ago I began experimenting again with encaustic medium-- a mix of beeswax and damar resin. I had first used it in university but decided to learn more and take a workshop with encaustic and mixed media artist, Andrea Bird. The workshop resulted in transforming my working process from mixed media and acrylic painting to one of wax, oil paint and heat. It offers the texture that I love and a luminescent quality that I have yet to see in any other medium. I can continue to incorporate collage as well as scratch and scrape into the surface, transfer images and add oil stick to enhance the rich colour quality. Every layer is fused with a blow torch or heat gun. Even this can produce inspiring results.

The paintings in the slide show below are from this year's body of work.