Artist Q & A: Eric Louie
Anatomy of a Painting With Michelle Nguyen
The Making of Sheri Bakes' Sunset Garden
Eric Louie Painting Featured in Concord Skybridge Condo
Artist Q & A: The Chaos of Creation with Sylvia Tait
Andre Petterson in the Studio
Sheila Kernan | Artist Video
Artist Q & A: Jamie Evrard on her latest painting collection
As I write this I almost need someone to come and rescue me from my studio where I am working on about 20 paintings at once. They are all leaned up against each other so it is like a house of cards in there. And last night I dreamed I had to ride home through miles and miles of mountains on a tiny borrowed tricycle. I felt OK about it, thought I could make it, and then a wheel fell off complicating my plan. I’m very excited about this show but sometimes it gets a little crazy getting ready for it.
1. Tell us about your reflected landscapes! What inspired you to study gardens and reflections in your new paintings?
I’ve been wanting to try my hand at landscapes again for quite some time and so I acted on a nudge in that direction from the gallery this summer. How to start I wondered briefly and I headed off to my nearest “landscape", Van Dusen Gardens with my iPhone and no idea. Young guys were busy working in hip waders pulling waterlilies out of the ponds to keep them from taking over and excited visitors were making off with the flowers. I too was immediately drawn to the water and then to reflections of the sky and nearby plants which through my camera looked so much brighter and clearer than with the naked eye. I was fascinated. This is my job, I was thinking, wandering around in a garden on a sunny afternoon waiting to see what intrigues me? Crazy and wonderful. Pure basic research. Although I returned many times to the garden in July and August and took many photos all of the large paintings in the show are riffs on just two of them.
2. Can you describe how your floral paintings have evolved since your last show?
I’m enjoying painting more abstractly with wide brushes….trying to paint more loosely. My flower paintings have a tendency to be crowded, almost baroque, and in some of my new flower pieces I’m trying to capture the feeling of open space, layers of depth and emptiness in these works.
3. Your work has continued to grow in a gestural direction. Can you tell us about how you employ spontaneous gesture in these newest pieces?
I really had no idea how to paint water so I’d make a painting then go back the next day find it too tight and paint over the whole thing in a more gestural way. I’d do that for days and began to feel like I was quite possibly going crazy. But at least the marks were getting looser and there was some suggestion of depth in the layers. After that drawing whatever was floating in and on the water was really fun. Using very small delicate brushes almost any mark I made would seem to float on the more diffuse background.
4. Where are some of the places you sought inspiration for this series?
VanDusen Gardens and the Mincio River which I rode along on a bike trip in Italy this fall.
5. This series includes several works on paper. Has painting on paper changed the way you approach a painting or created new possibilities?
Working on paper with oils allowed me to try out many different subject matters and compositions without using up lots of expensive canvases and meant that I could easily carry home what I had painted from Italy. I think doing watercolours has effected the way I paint more than the oils on paper, though, by increasing my interest in layers of transparency.
6. Can you tell us about the scale of your work and why it is satisfying for you to paint bigger and bigger?
I can get fussy with small works to the point that somehow they have as many marks in them as the bigger works and sometimes feel overcrowded to me. I like the wide open space of a big canvas and I love big brushes. I like paintings that seem to be big windows and which you can climb into and get lost in.
Designing Artful Interiors I The Peak Lobby
Art has become recognized as an essential component in designing a modern home. When designing a space, interior designers often consider the importance of placing fine art in the home, to help provide a focal point, and further elevate the space.
The modern lobby design of The Peak, a newly built multi-residential development in West Vancouver, was inspired by Cori Creed’s colourful masterpiece “The Golden Hour”. A large and vibrant coastal scene with gestural trees, skies and mountains, the painting grounds the space and connects viewers to Vancouver’s natural landscape.
This warm and uplifting interior designed by Insight Design Group for British Pacific Properties expresses the relaxed beauty of the West Coast. An abundance of natural light, warm wood, and soft furniture give the lobby a welcoming feel. Jewel-toned accents such as pillows, and a multi-coloured and softly patterned rug, are thoughtfully introduced around the room, subtly reflecting tones in the artwork.
“Often, when creating a piece, I have no idea where it will end up. In the process of visual storytelling, the site can be very important and it can be interesting to know what other elements will surround the piece before I begin. I also love the physical movement, specifically what that range of movement does for the brushwork, that larger pieces allow. The story that the painting tells up close is about process and creation, the story from a distance is about place and emotional response.” – Cori Creed
VIEW NEW WORK BY CORI CREED
Artist Q & A: Robert Marchessault
1) Can you tell me about the symbolism behind some of your different trees?
Since the image of a tree itself is highly symbolic I hope each person, regardless of cultural background, can assign meaning that is specific to themselves. Each painting of a tree or trees plays with how the environment influences growth and life. My trees show what interests me - the way that they respond to the impact of various stressors. I often paint bent and twisted shapes. I love how trees can somehow survive even the hardest conditions. I think we all can associate our own paths through life with these shapes.
Trees also present us with “beauty”. The concept of beauty has a long history and much has been written about it. I often strive to address this notion with my work.
2) How does your commitment to ecological responsibility intertwine with your art practice?
I have planted and nurtured thousands of trees since I was a child. When we first purchased acreage for a home & studio in Ontario my wife, (the artist Teresa Cullen), and I planted three empty hay fields with thousands of saplings. Today they are a beautiful pine forest. We’ve done the same at our current smaller property near Lake Simcoe. I am an organic gardener too. Sustainable living in a clean sustainable environment is essential. My paintings usually infer this. I hope they inspire people to be concerned and activist.
3) I read in your artist statement that deserts, mountains, and vast open plains serve as great inspiration for your artwork. Where do you search for sublime landscapes?
I find these places pretty much everywhere I travel; in Anatolia, Spain, the Prairies, Rockies and especially the American Southwest. I find the landscape and trees interest me. The more open the space, the better I like the way trees present themselves to me.
4) How has the artistic treatment of your work changed over the years and what triggers the shifts?
I began my professional career in the late 1970s and early 80s creating abstractions that alluded to landscapes. At the time my wife and I shared a studio in a warehouse at King and Dufferin Streets in Toronto. The city and the art scene certainly influenced my work.
Once we relocated to the countryside north of Toronto (Grey County) the surrounding landscape challenged me to interpret it in ways that were unique to my new perceptions. The work shifted somewhat so that horizon, sky, hills and trees became more recognizable while expressionistic paintwork was still important. Trees gradually became more of a focus after planting so many of them.
When we moved and built a second studio, in Oro Medonte ON in 1998, there was a giant sugar maple tree on the property. That grand dame was nicknamed “The Queen”. Living under her shifted my focus to trees as my main subject. The painterly treatment has varied over the years in response to my interests in methods of making paintings, from allusions to representation in a traditional sense. Recently, I’ve been playing with ambiguous color backgrounds as foils for tree forms.
5) Your tree paintings have a calming and meditative effect and I think this is partly because of the removal of all non-essential visual elements in their compositions. Can you tell me about the process of reduction in your work?
A few years ago I became interested in how I could strip down my paintings to emphasize mostly the tree. I played around for a year or two with abstracted backgrounds. Some of these backgrounds were resolved paintings in themselves even before the tree was painted in. This was tricky because sometimes the background became more interesting than the main subject.
Over time I’ve worked to pare down the backgrounds to play a supporting role, like the grounding tones in a musical piece (think the rhythm section in a jazz performance). I have a strong interest in visual art that is grounded in spiritual dimensions, with an emphasis on images and objects that help us to suspend thinking and experience what’s present. There are some Asian ink wash paintings that really inspire me. "Pine Trees" by Hasegawa Tōhaku (Japanese, 1539–1610) is one of my favorites.
Jamie Evrard: Painting La Dolce Vita
Jamie Evrard has spent this autumn season in her pied-à-terre near Tuscany cycling through the countryside and gathering new landscape inspiration for painting. In this candid interview, she shares a glimpse of her adventures and artistic process.
1) What have you been working on lately?
Well, my friend Florence and I just spent eight days on a bike trip in Sud Tirol and Alto Adige Provinces up in northern Italy. We biked along the Mincio and Adige Rivers as biking along a river is usually easier and less steep than taking a random route through the mountain. We stopped frequently to take photos of the turquoise blue water reflecting the trees along the shore.
I’m painting landscapes and reflections. The light is so beautiful here, along with the view out my window. I’m getting all caught up in the dreamy imaginary qualities of reflections and the impossible tangle of old-growth forests, and am especially loving painting something completely different.
2) Where in Italy are you located and how often do you go there?
My house is located in the Val di Pierle just east of Cortona in Tuscany. This is a very humble, down to earth area where people farm corn, sunflowers, and tobacco. People work with their hands and talk a lot about food. My friends are carpenters and stonemasons with the odd expat thrown in.
3) What do you find most inspiring about working in Italy?
There are several things that I love about working here. One is that life is simpler...no double shot, extra hot, double cup soy lattes, just un espresso. A small selection of old clothes with the odd piece from the 3 Euro table at the market, a car whose hubcaps have disappeared and long days to garden and paint with nary a phone call. My last three phone calls were from a seamstress whose kid got a hold of her phone and dialed me my mistake. The food is beautiful—hot sweet tiny tomatoes from our neighbor’s garden and yesterday a big haul of porcini mushrooms which they shared with us. Simplicity and emptiness can be inspiring. Having hours strung together without distraction is the best thing about this place. And the warm, golden quality of the light.
4) Can you tell us about your creative process? Are there any Italian artists that have influenced your work?
I usually take care of errands and odd jobs in the morning and paint in the afternoon. I paint in my bedroom here and move the furniture around to accommodate my easel and palette so that I can be right in front of the window overlooking the valley
Oh yeah, my “process”. I’m painting oils on Arches oil paper which I have never liked but do now for the inexpensive freedom it gives me to try all sorts of things. I stick up a piece and mark off a 20 by 20-inch square and choose a photo from the summer to explore. Sometimes I finish a sketch in a couple of hours, sometimes I work on a piece for a few sessions. Since the subject of the landscape is so new to me and the paper is too, I’m really enjoying not having a clue how to approach it. If a day’s work has been particularly stressful, I’ll go out to the garden and move some rocks or tear up a blackberry or nettle patch.
5) I imagine you have visited lots of art museums, famous art sites/ cultural spots during your time there. Do you have any favorites?
I particularly love the Etruscan Museums in the area—Chiusi and Cortona to name two. The Etruscans were such mysterious people and created with great abandon. I can just imagine a bunch of sculptors sitting around in the studio and one of them saying, "Hey guys let’s put deer hooves on the next candelabra.”
I also love to see anything by Piero della Francesca, a Renaissance painter whose work is timeless and deceptively simple. His Legend of the True Cross in Arezzo, and The Pregnant Madonna, The Deposition from the Cross are nearby. Sometimes I see someone walking down the street and think they could have just walked out of a Piero piece. That’s how vital his figures are. I have a couple of artist friends who live around here whose work I admire but the contemporary art scene here is basically nonexistent.
6) What would be your dream project?
Figuring out how to turn my landscape sketches into large paintings.