Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Santa will find us


Our second holiday in our new home, and we know for sure Santa will find us this year.  He won't have to follow the neighbourhood cats' tracks to our basement door.





He won't have to trace the aroma of Snow Loaves on our next-door neighbours'  bakery assembly.

No doubt, he'll remember our distinctive ever-leaved oak tree (even though the snow has melted now.)




When he reaches our chimney, he'll have no fear of flames below...




...because as much as we appreciate the heat of our electric fireplace, this weird moulded plastic is so darned hokey that we've disconnected the Log Function, and luckily the "fireplace screen" is dark enough to hide it from view.


He'll know he's found us when he checks out the mantel (make that pseudo-mantel) and discovers four awesome socks, handcrafted and special-delivered by our Bellingham artisan friend who combines the inspiration of 60s-style tie-dye with environmentally sustainable bamboo fabric!
Let it snow! -- and Happy New Year.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Another day dawns on The Colourful Past


A few months ago, I introduced my plan to occasionally turn out a painting in a proposed series, "The Colourful Past." My goals are to put my fascination with old architecture into paintings, to work in a semi-abstract manner, and to be adventurous with colour.

I've just completed the second in the series which yielded, along the way, many serendipitous moments, in the vein of the phenomenon outlined by one of my most important "virtual teachers", Mary Beth McKenzie:--


While an initial concept is important, you must allow a painting to take its own course. It will grow in stages and each stage, or your reaction to it, influences the next. A painting has its own existence and reality, and you have to follow its needs, making changes freely. Often these changes take you in another direction, opening up new possibilities that are sometimes more interesting than your original idea. You have to allow a painting to evolve.   (- from A PAINTERLY APPROACH, Mary Beth McKenzie)

My initial concept was based on the similarity of three neighbouring houses just around the corner from our IGA. Each of the three adjacent houses has a curious 4-windowed eave in the front of the roof, and I've been fascinated by this set of triple triangles.

The same hand -- or like-minded neighbours -- must have been responsible for transforming these boxy old homes into carefully maintained minor showpieces, painted in what might seem to be improbable colours. I've wondered if these colours were inspired by Vancouver's "True Colours"  program, which promotes heritage house paint colours. The city partnered with a commercial paint manufacturer that produces commercial house paints to match the colours of paint chips and fragments that a heritage advocate painstakingly scraped, layer upon layer, from old buildings.

I set to work on my layout, finding that a Purdy's Hedgehog box made a perfect template for the triangles.


This was a rather nice heritage synchronicity since Purdy's Chocolates is one of Vancouver's oldest purveyors of fine yummy stuff!


Working along (with occasional thoughts of those Hedgehogs -- but the box was empty!), I got as far as replicating the houses' fascinating colour schemes. Originally I'd thought that this, along with a textured background that lightened from bottom to top, would be enough.


But something, or maybe a lot of somethings, was lacking. Hmmm. Those fascinating window panes. What would they reflect in reality? It was here that the painting began to take on a life of its own. Spending time with my own reflections, I remembered a quick sketch I'd made in late summer of the colours of the dawn sky.



The three houses face east. Why not let them capture this reflection, with sky colours similar to the house colours?


Trying for a somewhat "realistic" treatment of the reflection travelling along each triangle's four panes, I was struck one morning by a happy synchronicity with the cocoa-brown of the lowest triangle: the conclusion to one of the great poems of one of my favourite poets, Gerard Manley Hopkins. (I've always chosen to view -- and read -- him as a pantheist rather than the Jesuit that he was.)

Generations have trod, have trod, have trod;
And all is seared with trade; bleared, smeared with toil;
And wears man's smudge and shares man's smell: the soil
Is bare now, nor can feet feel, being shod.

And for all this, nature is never spent;
There lives the dearest freshness deep down things;
And though the last lights off the black West went
Oh, morning, at the brown brink eastward, springs —
Because the Holy Ghost over the bent
World broods with warm breast and with ah! bright wings

With the series of four panes full of reflections, I took one more step, perhaps a risky one. With thoughts of those bright wings, I decided to place the dawn sky -- the sky that would evoke the reflections -- in the background. The day I made this decision, I concluded my early morning studio hour and went outside to put out the trash barrel. There above me was a confirmation (as I chose to see it) that my risk was worth it -- a stunning rosy-fingered dawn of the kind JT and I enjoyed through all the clear days of November.

Here's the final painting "Dawn: Three Neighbours on Quebec Street" (with its evolution here


I'm starting to plan and prepare paper for the next in the series, as well as for my next still life. Another day dawns in the studio...

...and I couldn't resist one more plunge into these colours -- taken November 25/2013 with the last quarter moon just visible in the upper right quadrant.)


Friday, November 15, 2013

The Big Picture




Recent ruminations on my not-quite-magnum-opus "A Question of Scale" evoked some old memories on a related issue -- the question of size in artworks.

Some of the best experiences of my working life took place at my next-to-last workplace, a renowned non-profit that fundraises for children's health. As the assistant to the VP responsible for the fundraising team, I was the designated hitter to support the exec team's twice-yearly off-site strategic planning sessions.

I don't think there will ever again be a conjunction of stars like that group -- three brilliant, funny, off-the-wall executives and an inspiring facilitator whose attitude towards the capital-C corporate world was expressed in her signature wardrobe of Birkenstocks and LL Bean flannel shirts. Well, I'm semi-brilliant myself and quickly got a reputation with this crew for not only being able to See the Big Picture but to translate their effervescence into orderly notes. One day, with just a touch of stress, I said, "This is like being the playground supervisor at a preschool for gifted children!" -- and that cemented my status as The Flipchart Queen, without whom no strategic planning day could take place.

These sessions were typically held in a meeting room at one of Vancouver's posh clubs, courtesy of one Board member or another -- and the thing about posh clubs is that they're likely to have some interesting art work on the walls. In one early session, when I was supposed to blend into the woodwork ("This isn't for the notes"), I enjoyed passing the time staring at a beautifully conceived brown- and purple-toned painting of a single garlic bulb on a canvas about 5-foot square.

Verrrrry interesting. I, too, am enchanted by the beauty of garlic bulbs, and a sprouting bulb starred in one of my first paintings in the 1980s:


Mine measured a mere 14" x 20." Suppose I'd made this on a huge canvas? Would it, too, have found patrons at a high-end club?

In the same era, I had a similar thought when we met in a top-line downtown hotel. Walking into the lobby, I was struck by a series of 6-8 framed drawings, strikingly similar to some I'd made myself of the intersections of philodendron stems and leaves. To fill its walls, the hotel had opted for giant drawings -- perhaps 3x5 feet each. When I got home, I pinned my three up in sequence -- each measuring a modest 10x14 inches:


The posh club/hotel scenario came back to me two summers ago, when I decided to paint over a very bad early landscape (colourful rocks and driftwood along the shore -- shown almost obliterated in the title photo above) for my experimental "Eyes on the Northwest". Even as I painted them out, I was drawn to some of the splashy segments of this failure:


Just suppose, instead of measuring 20" x 26", this eye-popping Fauvist shoreline -- or segments of it -- had measured 5 x 6 feet. Would it have found wall space at Vancouver's Four Seasons Hotel?


These kind of what-might-have-been questions are typical, I suppose, as one ages. Still, in this lifetime, it seems I've been destined to a certain uniqueness -- such as being the only currently living human, I'm sure, to slow down and squint at the 19th century engravings along the dimly lit hallways of the upper floors of Vancouver's Terminal City Club.

Whether or not Bigger is Better, let's return to the subject of garlic for an important culinary alert from JT, our family's garlic aficionado. For years, he's put up with the diminishing returns of soft-necked garlic, which produces many cloves per bulb, in ever-decreasing size until, near the centre, they're virtually unusable.

Now through the accident of an overheard conversation in the produce department, he is being abundantly supplied with the magnificent hard-necked variety -- apple-sized bulbs producing just 6-8 large cloves, each of which packs a whammy. The hard-necks -- a whole bulb and a view of the inner tough neck -- are shown on the left below, compared to the diminutive soft-necked bulb and cloves on the right.



Certainly, our family home has always been vampire-proof, as I'm sure is the case at Vancouver's preeminent tennis club, thanks to its Big Picture "Garlic on Duty in the East Meeting Room." (...or something like that...)



Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Danse macabre






Happy Halloween! In another amazing convergence, I happened on an old drawing exercise just at cucurbit season. The drawing exercise, I'm sure, was originally inspired by the Japanese artist Hokusai (October 31, 1760 - May 10, 1839) who did some fascinating drawings of skeletons in action.

The exercise proposed in my drawing book is this: Cut out a newspaper photo of a figure (dancers, athletes and rock groups work beautifully) and, with reference to anatomy charts, draw the bones that underlie the figure's position. Here are the reference photos for the two dancing skeletons shown above:


It's not easy, even in this casual playful mode. The pelvis, which someone described as "an elegant bowl" and the rib cage present particular challenges. As Dylan Thomas said in another context, "Oh, easy for little Leonardos!"  Whether or not it was easy for him, Leonardo permanently set the bar high:--



We saw his actual drawings in a travelling show of Leonardo's works from the Windsor Castle collection. It was the year after JT came home from the hospital, and we took a break from his busy rehab schedule for a special trip to the Vancouver Art Gallery. Along with the rest of the throng, we oohed and aahed until at a certain point JT said, "Maybe we've had enough now. This is starting to remind me of the Physio Department."

But back to Cucurbits and Friends! Here are this year's carefully chosen few -- with two small bitefuls (?) from the unidentifiable volunteer vine that sprung up in our garden in July.



Now here's my prototype plan for "Dancing with Cucurbits", showing the source photos with yellow paper stand-ins for the gourds:--


And here's the final version...definitely non-archival and intended Just for Fun:--


Projecting ahead to Cucurbits 2014, things can only get more exciting. We have a wonderful bond with our new Chinese neighbours (okay, we're the new ones; they're the established ones) based on my enthusiasm for their front yard trellis and its output:-- the same fascinating squash that was grown by the elderly Chinese man in our old neighbourhood.

This friendly couple has twice presented us with two of these intriguing vegetables. I was advised to wear gloves or use a paper towel when peeling them although theirs were not as spiny as those I saw on our old street. Delicately stir-fried with garlic, they taste something like a cross between honeydew melon and zucchini.


Searching for more information via Google Images, I learned that what I thought were "Chinese vegetables" are actually chayotes, native to Mexico and Central America.

Nonetheless, we've come to call them "Anita's squash" -- and Anita has promised to give me a whole plant next year! If all goes according to plan, our tiny front yard might actually sprout a Chinese-style trellis, and I'll be able to document the entire unfolding of what was once The Great Cucurbit Mystery.


Tuesday, October 15, 2013

"A Question of Scale"






About this time last year, I was just getting established in my new basement studio after all the months and angst of moving from our old house. Placing some of my cherished artifacts on studio shelves, I became fascinated again with their shadows cast against the studio wall/ceiling -- a similar fascination to the one that led to my 2008 painting "The Artist's Hand, the Artist's Eye." 

As I continued unpacking -- congratulating myself on saving treasures ranging from my mother's antiques to my own hoards of clam shells -- I couldn't help but note how much I enjoy unique labels on bottles and boxes, preferably anthropo- or zoo-morphic. (Maybe I should have gone into package design?) Then I suddenly remembered a coffee break conversation from an early drawing class.

The topic had shifted to our instructor's painting experience and he casually said, "Do you know what has always intrigued me about paintings?" "Colour!!" we answered in chorus. "Well, sure," he said, "but I'm talking about scale." Scale? We looked blank. "You know -- you'll have a canvas, maybe 2x3 feet, and on it are all these little people in a crowd scene -- or maybe a bowl of fruit with lemons larger than could ever be possible." Scale.

Suddenly, it became irresistible to play with this idea within a painting. I rearranged some objects to illustrate the point:


Then I decided, in keeping with the theme, that I'd need to do a carefully planned layout, to scale -- a decision that would cost me about 45 hours of work before I even set paint to paper, as described in a previous post

I started with a 10" x 13" drawing, which took me a mere 20 hours:



-- and eventually scaled this up to 20" x 26", the size of my painting paper -- to which I then transferred the outlines.



To accomplish the transfer of the same-size layout to my painting paper, I cut away sections of the large drawing, bit by bit -- more painstaking work, which much later yielded some amusing moments when I could place the pencilled figures against their painted counterparts.



And now...ta tum...five months in the making, here's the final painting: "A Question of Scale" (copyright 2013).


So what do we have here, contained within a space of about 520 square inches? Three human figures of different sizes, each larger than a mountain (see the blue mug) and smaller than a brandy bottle (Metaxa -- a delicious treat in days gone by; white wine does nicely nowadays); a wren-type bird larger than a seagull and a leopard's head (see the Metaxa box); two mugs of different sizes and two similar bottles of different sizes which, if stacked, would be twice the size of the mannikin human figure.

The evolution of this painting can be seen here  -- and it's not a process that I'm ever likely to get involved in again.

Holding this up against my general goal to make each painting "my best yet".... well, it's not. In fact, there are so many mistakes (about which the artist's lips are sealed), it could be a nice example of "What's wrong with this picture?" Still: I learned a lot and worked the idea out of my system -- but one has to wonder if the outcome was proportionate to the effort.


Tuesday, September 24, 2013

A colour for the season: Cadmium Yellow Deep




Many years ago, when I first ventured beyond a 5-colour student grade paint set, one of the first artist-quality paints I bought was Cadmium Yellow Deep. With a twisted tube and a dented cap, it was on sale for only a dollar. Post-purchase, I discovered that its deformities had allowed air inside the tube and only a small bit of the paint had not dried out -- but the colour was so inviting, I kept the tube around long after it was usable.

Cadmium Yellow Deep is a scrumptious warm dark yellow, perhaps best equated by some of the pleasures of an autumn garden. I've thought of my old paint tube lately as I've looked out our kitchen window at the volunteer cucurbit vines shown above. They sprouted in early July -- from a squirrel's cache?  For whatever reason (too much shade?), there's been no development of squash or melon, but the advancing vine and the gorgeous simple flowers are a joy.

A similar deep yellow can be found in variegated marigolds, JT's favourite. (The orange of the traditional marigolds of elementary classroom projects is closer to Cadmium Orange).


I'm always pleased when, on my own, I discover the insights or teachings of master artists. From our first spring in Vancouver, I've loved the sight of the city's abundant roses, rhododendrons, and cherry blossoms viewed on a grey day. Not too long ago, I read about a man who visited Monet in his original Giverny garden. The visitor was disappointed that the day was so dreary but thrilled that Monet enthusiastically toured him around -- until sun broke through the clouds. "We might as well go in now," said the artist, "the flowers can't compete with full sun."

It's an elementary principle of painting: Crowd the canvas with unrelieved intense colours and it's an overwhelming blur OR set the brights off against greyed or muted colours and it's a marvel.

As I write this post, the seasonal rains have begun, but still blooming in the garden is one of our great favourites and a prime example of Cadmium Yellow Deep -- Black-eyed Susans, popping right out of the dull landscape of autumn. Monet would have loved these grey days.


Friday, August 30, 2013

Public Art - the dark underbelly




I've always been suspicious of "public consultations" (on proposed urban rezoning, for example), and I'm even more cynical about "public art." In Vancouver these days, there's one offense after another, in either or both of these categories. I'll leave the dark rezoning stories to the many local blogs dedicated to the betrayal being felt by neighbourhoods under assault, and I'll stick to the art. The so-called art.

A few months ago, I started using the Kensington branch of the Vancouver Public Library, just two blocks away from us. I'd once returned books there several years ago and found that they'd just begun to install metal animal sculptures as the public art component of a new condo and commercial building complex that itself outraged the neighbourhood with its excessive height.

With those first small sculptures, the entrance to this lovely brand-new library became... ooh...ugh...creepy...repulsive...with RATS. I tried to think Pied Piper of Hamlin but, no, a vicious-faced beaver was leading the rodent pack.



Fast forward to 2013 when I happened on the full catastrophe, the completed installation, starting with this stomach-churning embrace of a giant pig and a python. ("Mum, is that the kind of snake that wrapped around the two little boys and....." "DON'T LOOK, KID, don't look!").


There's a smaller porcine sculpture which looks like a mass of congealed piglet, but mercifully my photo was compromised by the strong August shadows. ("They wouldn't want to see them anyway," said JT). And okay, there's one grouping that I almost like -- the otters who hang out near a mini-waterfall.



There's still something nasty about their facial expressions, though -- a weak spot of this artist, I think. I mean....does this bear look like it has anything but evil intentions? And does this child look like he's imagining a can of bear spray in his left hand? Definitely not Winnie-the-Pooh and Christopher Robin.



These animals lurk about the courtyard through which the library is accessed -- initially a big surprise to library staff and patrons who had no say in the selection of the public art nor its placement. (You can read more about what the series is supposed to represent here -- an article in the local newspaper that coincidentally appeared, just as I was thinking about taking these pictures). But imagine the surprise of the condo residents who woke up one morning to find perched on the heights, three storeys up, this vulture with a 12-foot wing span.


Okay, another admission: On my (short) preference list, the vulture ties with the otters -- but it's not MY balcony it's sinking its claws into.



At the bottom of my preference list is another Vancouver public art mistake:-- the $100,000 white plastic poodle-on-a-pole installed in one of the few remaining neighbourhoods that harbours small artisans, antique shops, small-scale jewellery and fashion designers, and ethnic restaurants and coffee shops. You can imagine the hackles raised there by this piece of kitsch.

The commissions for both the poodle and the Kensington animal sculptures were for mega-bucks and were awarded to out-of-province artists. That's how things happen in the dark underbelly of the City of Vancouver in these sorry times.

P.S.  As I sit in the library hurriedly posting this blog, I know the rats are waiting for me just outside the door.


Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Back to the future



"Obsessionated." It's a mixed-up word -- a malapropism -- passed along with relish by my lifelong friend, a food-and-fascinations blogger. I like it! It certainly describes my feelings about the features and individualities of old buildings, both the Downtown Details of my working days and the quirky charms of old family houses like those on our side of town that are falling fast to the wreckers' ball.

I'm fascinated by the variety in these old houses of windows, doors, porches, bays, roofs -- everything.


As I've sketched and occasionally photographed the details that catch my eye, I've finally decided to do something with them, in terms of painting. Meanwhile, I've also committed myself to exploring more adventurous byways in colour.

With this post, I'm introducing a planned series based on old architectural features and new (to me) colour possibilities. Here's the first of the series, "Colourful Past - Small Front Windows" copyright 2013).



In this series, I expect to be working in a looser style than in my traditional still lifes -- in this case, I textured some layers of paint by applying plastic wrap during the drying phase, an exciting process when the plastic is lifted from the dried paint, revealing unpredictable patterns of the underlying paint layer.


While I've already recognized some problems to be worked out, I've enjoyed this kind of splash. You can see the evolution of "Small Front Windows"here.

The works in the series might become more or less geometrical, more or less abstract, more or less colourful. Whether or not you like the concept, you'll be seeing more of the "Colourful Past" series from time to time. After all, I'm obsessionated.