Artist Q&A: Sheila Kernan

1. Could you please provide some background regarding the title “Forever is a Feeling”? What inspired this title and how do the elements of time, ephemerality and permanence relate to your latest series?
 
There is comfort in the idea of forever, especially in relation to fond memories, experiences, and life. 

After an experience, you begin to rely on the memory of it. The passage of time is like the game ‘Telephone’, memories evolve and shift, imagination takes root supplying and omitting small details, until, over time our initial experience changes to become something entirely unexpected. So, our experiences and memories are ephemeral, constantly evolving. I find that concept incredibly interesting and very inspiring.

 In my practice, I have always played with combining imagination, experience, and memory. Photographs of my well-documented travels help to create a level of accuracy in depicting specific places. Yet, I choose to combine source images taken from singular or multiple references to create an imagined landscape. My compositions are never actually situated, rather they capture a feeling of a place or an amalgam of spaces.

I further add to this by adding in sketches or manipulating the compositions to enable the creation of paintings that evoke my initial experience of a place. The title ‘Forever is a Feeling’ encapsulates my current hopes and desires to hold onto precious moments. My paintings become the most permanent and lasting part of the experience and memory because they will never change.

2. Which artistic sources do you draw inspiration from and how has exposure to their work influenced your practice?

I am drawn to so many different artistic sources, I have always loved the soft edges, vast simplistic shapes and vibrating nature of Rothko’s work. I appreciate artists skilled at incorporating texture into their work in really sophisticated manners, with real depths of meaning, John Hartman, Donald Martiny, and Kim Dorland are a few I admire. 

Life and everyday experiences are the most prominent in my practice. Oftentimes I’ll take notice of how the sun strikes a tree or building in a certain way when out for a walk. I will be driving and find myself pulling over because our skies are creating a conversation between drama and softness that I must observe.

Fashion, cinema, and design are three areas that particularly excite me. They always provide me with new resources to draw upon and explore. They create puzzles for me to solve in terms of how to incorporate new ideas, materials, and techniques into my practice. It’s really exciting. I am always thinking about and cultivating new ideas. Some become immediately apparent in my work and others take years to digest before they start becoming part of my aesthetic.

3. Your process involves a wide array of techniques and media (washes, airbrush, spray paint and hand-cut stencils, to name a few). Which is the latest to make its way into your painting lexicon and what qualities in these materials draws you to them?

I have been really interested in dry brushing techniques within the stencils I create, adding, scrubbing, and removing layers of paint. As I am writing this I realize that this concept plays into the title of the show and the idea of permanence and how memories are subject to change. Aesthetically I am drawn to this because it is subtle it tones down the harsh edges of the stencils, it adds more depth to the layers and also a richness to the flat shapes I am highlighting.

4. Are any new application methods, formal elements or ongoing experimentations present in these paintings? What are you eager to explore next?

 Yes, I am always working on something new, revisiting past processes or techniques that I have not used in a while. Creating new techniques. Combining old ideas and new ideas. Changing them into something new and exciting. I am incredibly curious by nature and I am always asking what if? I love pushing paint into untraditional outcomes. Seeing how I can push materials capabilities to new limits. Isolating resin is a great example of some recent explorations of mine that I am testing out. My approach is quite scientific in this manner. My studio is my test kitchen. I often have lots of mini samples on the go. Playing with transparency, techniques, textures, additives, etc. It is lots of fun. My work may appear to be spontaneous but it's really not. I spend a lot of time perfecting the application of each layer. My work is quite layered, each piece having 5-10 layers of paint. There is a lot of curing time in-between layers. Which is why I usually have a few pieces on the go at any given time. So I allow the pieces to rest when they need to. The most intuitive and unplanned part of my process is the final textural components. This is the time where I finish my piece's colour relationships, highlight and subdue shapes, create a rhythm for the viewers and finalize the feeling I hope to capture.  Playing with new subjects, new colours, and new textures. This keeps the work exciting and fresh for others and myself.

5. What specific locations, lived experiences, or memories inform the constructed spaces of your work and how is it then mediated by imagination? How do source images, photo references, collages, and sketches factor into this conceptualization?

For this collection, I looked to a few different hiking experiences I have had over the years in the Canadian mountains. Two specific locations that come to mind are a helicopter hiking trip I did in the Bugaboos, a few favourite spots in Kananaskis, my experiences in both BC and Alberta mountain ranges and forests. Each experience is photographed. I then physically print out 1000’s of photos and go through them looking for connections. I cut up and tape together photos creating a collage and a starting off point for my work. Often, I will incorporate sketches from my memory of an experience or just my imagination and add them into the collage. After I create the collage I make large scale sketches to further refine the composition of the painting. While creating I am often flooded with memories from a particular hike. (When I encountered a grizzly bear with my 6 month old son, when we were stuck in a torrential downpour at Rawson lake sliding down the path, when happenstance took me to the most cinematic to perfect to be real windy road in San Francisco with the perfect amount of sunlight hitting the road and early morning fog still present on the trees behind)  I revisit feelings associated with them while creating the painting and my feelings and ideas about the places and experiences set the mood for my pieces. So everything all comes together within my constructed spaces, imagined places, ideas, memory, experiences collide.

6. How has your practice developed into the distinctive style and palette you work with today?

I have always been interested in interdisciplinary processes methods and techniques. Everything I am interested in from painting, sewing, design, sculpture, crafts, different styles, subjects, and their methodologies inform my work today.

Subjects, methods, and techniques I have been thinking about or had explored for a brief moment in the past may take years to manifest in my work. It’s an intuitive process and some things take years to emerge whilst others are more immediate.

In the past, my subjects were often photorealistic and only later did my work shift to photography, silk screening, glass blowing, bronze casting, and painting. I found myself more drawn to conceptualism and experiences rather than highly accurate depictions. With painting, I feel that all the combined components of my interdisciplinary experiences and found their way into one form. I really just love experimentation.

7. You had previously mentioned an interest in capturing the play of light in your compositions, what other formal considerations draw you to your subject matter?

Perspective, Colour, shapes, texture. I really love the small scale, often-overlooked elements, when painted in a large-scale format it can seem more monolithic than the mountain range. I love the quirky trees, and gnarly rocks, unexpected colours in the cracks and crevices of rocks. You really have to pay attention to find elements to paint that are unique and different. I am trying to create work that captures one's attention for more than a few moments. I think they are successful at capturing attention because of all the formal elements and layers. Each time you look at my paintings you can see something new. Hard edges, a soft edge, the suggestion of a form. All these formal elements are vital to create the context for the pieces.

8. What role do narrative frameworks play in your practice and in the viewing of the work?

In the end, a painting has to stand on its own merits, take the artists’ intentions and subtexts out and they have to work on their own aesthetically. That is why I love the ambiguity of my subjects. They are never really actual places, rather they are suggestions of places. They are neither abstract nor realistic. Not all the information is given and so the viewer is asked to fill in the gaps, to lend their own interpretation and experiences to the pieces, allowing the works to take on new and richer depths of meaning.

Read more

Richard Barnes featured in Toronto Life

New York-based artist Richard Barnes spoke with Toronto Life about his favourite pieces from his award-winning photographic series, Animal Logic. Built over 10 years, the series reveals the curious beauty of animals being prepared for display in natural history museums. Read more below.

 

Carol Aksich, for Toronto Life 

Six eerie photos of natural history dioramas under renovation 

For the past four years, Barnes has visited more than 50 museums around the world to capture natural history dioramas under renovation. His photographs transform mundane scenes of museum upkeep into voyeuristic pieces of art. “There is an irony to reanimating these wild animals,” says Barnes. “I’m interested in things that are hidden, and I want to reveal something that most people don’t see.”

Animal Logic is on at the Bau-Xi gallery until July 27. We asked Barnes about some of his favourite shots from the series.

This was the first image in Barnes’s series. He was walking through the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco when he came across this unusual safari scene, which had suffered some smoke damage and was in the process of being restored. It wasn’t just the plastic-draped fauna that intrigued him, but the man on the scaffolding painting clouds into the sky. The ways that humans and animals intersect became a theme throughout the series. 

A few museums are even nixing their dioramas entirely: some curators have ethical issues associated with the taxidermy, and dated displays are often full of asbestos and arsenic. This African Sahara scene, also photographed at the California Academy of Sciences, was decommissioned and replaced with a live penguin exhibit.

Other museums are bringing their old school dioramas into the 21st century by swapping out hand-painted scenes for video projected backgrounds. This photograph was shot at the Canadian Museum of Civilization in Gatineau, Quebec—one of the museums working on updating, rather than decommissioning, its dioramas—during some routine maintenance.

This alligator might look like it’s picking up a hefty order from an apothecary, but this photo was actually taken inside of a high school in Rome, which had an impressive taxidermy collection for its science classes.

Some of Barnes’s most forlorn images are of mounted animals that have been demoted from display to storage—like this grizzly bear, which has been in storage at the Smithsonian for years. Smithsonian curator Merry Foresta has described them as twice dead: “pulled from nature and then buried in the sarcophagi of the museum.”

This photo of a wild gazelle diorama being refurbished is one of Barnes’s favourite images in the series. While much of his work is meant to be a subtle nod to environmentalism, this shot is one of his more obvious conservation pleas."

Click here to read the article online.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ABOUT THE SHOW

 

Read more

Limited Time Offer: Enjoy Free Shipping!

 

 

For a limited time, Bau-Xi Gallery is offering FREE CRATING AND SHIPPING on artworks $5000 and over, purchased online. Offer ends September 1st, 2019

 

TERMS & CONDITIONS
Free crating and shipping is eligible for online purchases only, valued at $5000 and over. Select pick-up in store at time of purchase and the item will be shipped courtesy of the gallery to your location. The promotion runs until September 1, 2019. Promotion does not apply to rush or over night orders: a standard crating and shipping timeline of 10 – 15 days is applicable. Free crating and shipping is not valid in combination with other promotions or offers.

VIEW ALL ARTISTS 

 

Read more

SHERI BAKES FEATURED IN CBC ARTS

Sheri Bakes sat down with CBC Arts reporter, Lisa Hosein to discuss her experience of living with aphantasia - the inability to imagine things visually. Bakes developed aphantasia as a result of a stroke suffered at age 29 and the condition left her learning to navigate her life and artistic practice in a new way. A video below offers a peak into Sheri Bakes' Vancouver Island studio and the daily meditation that fuels her to paint her windswept landscapes. 

Click to read to the full CBC article

VIEW WORK BY SHERI BAKES

 

Read more

Virginia Mak on her latest series, Composed

Read Virginia Mak's thoughts on her most recent body of work, Composed, which will be featured in Bau-Xi Vancouver's upcoming group Exhibition, "Her" opening on Saturday, August 10.

Virginia Mak, Composed 16, available for sale at Bau-Xi Gallery

"In Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility, the character Marianne is described as “eager in everything; her sorrows and joys could have no moderation.” To me, she personifies “sensibility.”

As humans, we derive meaning and pleasure from making something. This series, titled Composed, consists of photographic portraits that imply a certain artistic sensibility. I wanted to visually depict the undeterred spirit of originality. For that, I used a film camera and a paintbrush.

I photographed writers, editors, actors, painters, visual artists and other individuals. I then painted on rice paper lines and shapes that serve as subtle hints about the subject or their work. Working in the darkroom with film negatives, I placed the painted rice paper over the photographic paper during the enlarging process.

There is both tension and harmony in choosing to use this layering process. It obscures a portion of the image while adding other elements to it. The painted lines and motifs reveal my reflections about the “creators.”  For example, in an image of a caregiver who finds time to embroider, my drawing referenced water and gardens in order to evoke her dreaming of her home faraway. Likewise, in an image of an artist who delves into ice formations in her work, I included translucent ice-like elements in my composition.

My intention was to compose collages that blend content with colours and shapes. The content may be true, fictive, mysterious or playful. The resulting photographs shift from straight portraits to more poetic pictures." 

 

Virginia Mak was born in Hong Kong. After graduating with a Philosophy Degree from the University of Calgary, she went on to study Photography at the Ontario College of Art. Mak has exhibited her work internationally. She is a recipient of project, exhibition and travel grants from the Ontario Arts Council and the Canada Council for the Arts. Her work has been written about in the Calgary Herald, the Toronto Star, the Vancouver Sun and the Globe and Mail; and featured in magazines such as Prefix and PhotoLife. Mak's photographs can be found in the Canada Council Art Bank and the Toronto Archives, among other public and private collections throughout North America and Hong Kong.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE COLLECTION 

 

Read more

PRESS COVERAGE: ERIC LOUIE'S "AWAKENING"

Eric Louie's latest exhibition, 'Awakening' has been covered by digital press outlets BOOOOOOOM, Designboom and Blouin Art Info.

The artist’s distinct future-forward aesthetic and formalist sensibility informs the richly layered virtual worlds of his paintings—rife with colourful shapes, shaded with brightly-hued gradients and accented with chrome-like effects.

Louie's exhibition runs until April 20, at Bau-Xi Vancouver (3045 Granville Street)

Click to read BOOOOOOOM article

Click to read designboom article

Click to read Blouinartinfo article

View more work by Eric Louie online

Read more

SURFACING, a new series by Barbara Cole

New Barbara Cole series now available for sale at Bau-Xi Gallery

SURFACING, the latest series by Toronto-based artist Barbara Cole, represents triumph, survival and self-actualization. Set against a vast and tumultuous ocean-scape, this series depicts shimmering figures rising triumphantly towards the surface. This series is fueled by Cole's personal history, and the ethereal figures shown are a celebration of power of will and strength to overcome.

Cole expertly captures the beauty and dynamism of the human form moving through water, a reference to overcoming the obstacles which bring us ultimately toward resilience, and a place of true empowerment. SURFACING is the embodiment of what it means to rise and conquer. 

While this series has a personal undertone for Cole, the female subjects are not purely self-referential; they also refer to the many women who prevail through the daily turmoil of assault, depression, other mental health issues, as well as the stigma that often accompany them.

With this series, Cole aims not only to open a dialogue on mental health but also to let those suffering in silence know that there are effective resources available to them. Cole has partnered with organizations Bell Let’s Talk and the Campaign to Change Direction in an effort to further their initiatives in spreading awareness and destigmatizing mental health issues, and to advocate for important and useful links and resources

These pictorial metaphors echo my own struggles as well as the realization of my personal and artistic aspirations. These are women who are taking back power and leading the way.

SURFACING will be on view at 350 Dundas St W from September 12-28, 2019. Join us to celebrate the opening on Thursday, September 12th from 5-7pm, and hear Barbara Cole in conversation with renowned journalist Anna Maria Tremonti at 6pm as they discuss the importance of mental well-being. 

 

 

PREVIEW THE COLLECTION: 


Presence, from Surfacing
ADAPTATION

 

SURFACING
SURFACING

 

SUMMIT
SUMMIT

 

ESSENCE
ESSENCE

 

ALLIANCE
ALLIANCE

 

DISGUISE
DISGUISE

 

PRESENCE
PRESENCE

 

Read more

IN THE STUDIO: DREW BURNHAM

In the studio with Drew Burnham as he develops his newest body of work 'Ultramarine'. Over a year and a half in the making, ‘Ultramarine’ recently sold out within one hour.

 ‘Ultramarine’ is on view now at Bau-Xi Vancouver from March 9-23rd.

'Graham Island' in numerous stages of development. Intricate, hypercoloured underpaintings with Burnham's signature glazing technique uses oil and acrylic paint to punctuate his dense, lush forest backdrops.



 Burnham gathers source imagery from his environs in North Vancouver.

 Burnham paints diligently in his North Vancouver studio.

Studio photography courtesy of Jenn Best Photography

Read more

Jeffrey Milstein | Versailles from Above

Jeffrey Milstein, aerial photograph of Versailles

Jeffrey Milstein, Versailles 01, archival inkjet print 

Known for his impressive shots of Los Angeles and New York City, Jeffrey Milstein recently set his sights on France, shooting the country's historic chateaux from a helicopter.

The sweeping vista of the Palace of Versailles pictured above is one of the artist's favourite images from the shoot. With a background in architecture and graphic design, Milstein has always been fascinated with the elaborate and highly-ordered design of the French landmark.

Equipped with his Hasselblad and an incredibly sharp lens, Milstein approached Versailles at sunset - the "golden hour." He had the pilot fly as close as permissible (one must obtain a special permit to fly directly over Versailles), making steep turns to allow him to lean out of the helicopter’s open sides and capture the perfect view. Characteristic of the acclaimed artist's aerial work to date, this meticulously composed and highly-detailed image shows the iconic palace from an unusual perspective, including not only the gardens and the chateau in the composition, but the town that surrounds them. Viewers can spot the King's Vegetable Garden that supplies the palace kitchens, the Saint-Louis Cathedral and the orderly grids of homes and buildings. 

We are thrilled to be exhibiting this piece at the impressive size of 55.5 X 74 inches in Milstein's upcoming solo exhibition Jeffrey Milstein: Aerials. The show runs March 9-23. The opening reception will be held at 350 Dundas Street West on Saturday, March 9, 2-4pm. 

Click here to read more about the show

CLICK HERE TO VIEW COLLECTION ONLINE 

 Jeffrey Milstein with helicopter, Francine 2019

Photographer Jeffrey Milstein poses in front of the helicopter used for his recent shoot in France.

 

CLICK HERE TO VIEW COLLECTION ONLINE 

Read more

Janna Watson Profiled in Creators Vancouver

Creators Vancouver's Elizabeth Newton profiled Janna Watson in anticipation of her upcoming February 9th show at Bau-Xi Vancouver, Suspended In Time. Janna shares some of her proudest career achievements to-date, creative lessons from her grandfather and even advice to other artists who wish to make it in the art world. 

EXCERPT

Some proud career moments:  

I used to work at the Soho Metropolitan Hotel doing room service.  Through this job, I made connections and had my first solo show in the lobby.  Soon after the hotel commissioned me to do a piece for each floor!  Hands down this experience gave me all of the confidence that I needed to make a career in painting.

Other creators who inspire you: 

My grandfather Arthur Bonnett was my mentor and taught me how to use watercolour.  He gave me painting lessons and would send me to the back field of his farm to draw the essence of a tree.  He once told me “It’s OK, but it needs to be wilder.”  His critiques were honest and he always pushed me to exude more.  I am also inspired by Cy Twombly for his raw and elegant child like mark-making techniques, as well as Joan Mitchell’s sense of colour and strokes.

Curious to hear more from Janna including her advice to other artists? Read the full Q&A on Creators here

VIEW THE JANNA WATSON COLLECTION HERE

 

Read more

Katrin Korfmann and Jens Pfeifer at the Teyler’s Museum

Korfmann and Pfeifer at the Teylers Museum, NL

Teylers, Haarlem, a large-scale photograph by Katrin Korfmann and Jens Pfeifer, is currently on view at the Teyler’s Museum in Haarlem, Netherlands.

The image depicts an imagined birdseye view of a room in the Teylers Museum. Using over 500 photographs of the museum captured from an aerial perspective, the artists digitally stitched them together to create a cohesive composition. 

Korfmann, a fine art photographer, and Pfeifer, a sculptor, created this piece as part of their recent series, Back Stages. This photographic series examines many aspects of the world of fine artwork and culturally important objects, highlighting manufacturing processes and handling. 

Back Stages will be exhibited at Bau-Xi Toronto this May for the Scotiabank Contact Photography Festival.

Click here for full details about the exhibition

Click here to read a Q&A with the artists about this piece

 

Katrin Korfmann and Jens Pfeifer, Teylers, Haarlem, archival inkjet print. 47 X 68 in. Edition of 5.

VIEW MORE WORK BY KATRIN KORFMANN

Read more

Canadian Photographer Barbara Cole featured in the Jerusalem Post

Impersonation, from Duplicity, by Barbara ColeImpersonation, from Duplicity

Canadian fine art photographer Barbara Cole is internationally recognized for her innovative process and timeless aesthetic. Cole was recently written about by Barry Davis in an article for the Jerusalem Post, which takes us through her beginnings as a young photographer working in a friend's parent's pool, to her recent experiments with shooting in the ocean. The article celebrates Cole's ability to employ the highly technical and precise medium of digital photography to create beautiful, ethereal imagery with a uniquely painterly aesthetic. She is continuously inspired by the underwater realm, and always fully embraces the unexpected in her practice, resulting in a career of unique and compelling photographic series. 

[Cole photographs] in conditions that make the end product anything but certain. That, for her, is what it’s all about… “That’s the thing that’s so magical...Every show is different, and every time I shoot I don’t know how the water is going to be, or how the people are, or what the lack of gravity is going to do. Sometimes you don’t even need to know that.” 

CLICK HERE TO SEE BARBARA COLE'S COLLECTION

CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE IN THE JERUSALEM POST 

 

Kew at Night, from Falling Through TimeKew at Night, from Falling Through Time 

 

Hoax, from UnderworldHoax, from Underworld 

 

Embellishment, from White NOiseEmbellishment, from White NOise 

Read more
435 results
Continue browsing
Your Order

You have no items in your selection.