Showing posts with label calgary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label calgary. Show all posts

29 May 2011

Prints from my Vanitas and Vanitas II series are now showing at Cafe Koi, which is located at 1011 1st street SW Calgary, AB

The showing runs from May 31 to June 25


Here is my artist statement for the show ...

In a way, my work is a polished descendant of the “face-down-on-the-photocopier” self portraits most of us have enjoyed. Using a scanner is really just a non-traditional form of photography. With this technique you can achieve incredible detail that quickly drops into beautiful shadows. The colour and shadows create an ethereal-type aesthetic, which is uncanny in its resemblance to 16th and17th century Dutch paintings of Memento Mori. I didn’t directly choose this technique for the project; it was more of a happy accident. It was the aesthetics of this technical process that influenced my exploration of these themes, and not vice versa. I think this creative process is rare in art making, especially with new media.

A type of Memento Mori, Vanitas paintings from the 16th and 17th century were often characterized by a combination of enticing still-life objects such as fruit and flowers, along with reminders of the transient nature of life such as skulls and hourglasses. This juxtaposition was meant to point out the ultimate shortcomings of worldly pleasures.

For this series, I asked women to participate and to include items in their portraits, as a sort of still-life defining who they are. Through their pictured memories, their favourite mementos, or the pleasing petals surrounding them, I intended for these portraits to reflect a personal story of Vanitas for each individual woman. The sensual use of hair in this series is what ties them together, and creates a kind of surreal texture to the work. The Vanitas themes remain present reminding the viewer that vanity is futile. Despite their foreboding qualities, the images remain undeniably beautiful and hint at a sexual tension. Blushing flower petals rustling open and tousled hair could be simultaneously interpreted as either qualities of the Vanitas theme or lusty indulgences.

This series has made me view not only death, but vanity differently, and bizarrely how both are so interconnected. It takes a personal unarming to show these self-portraits, especially in large format. There is no hiding or concealing in these portraits, they are hyper-realistic, so signs of aging and blemishes are on full display. These portraits show impurities, but done so in a graceful and whimsical manner.

21 May 2011

I am busily preparing for my show at Cafe Koi. My artwork will be showing from May 31 to June 25 ...
I have sent my images to the printers. They are being printed in very large format, the smallest measures approximately 4 x 2 feet ... The images I selected are all from this series - Vanitas II

If you're interested in knowing how I do the portraits and the meaning and inspiration behind my work, here is an interview I did with The Daily Undertaker on this series.

Hope you have a chance to see my work on display.

Leaving you with the latest addition I made to my botany series, it's a Tree Peony ...

20 June 2010

Inspiration: Nature. For Father's Day we went on a two hour nature walk as a family ... It was such a nice walk around the river with a cool break under a shaded tree ... I took some of the shots from our walk and made these...

I made a couple variations of this photograph of crows sitting on a wire ...



And combined this photograph with another I shot the other day ...


And here are some flowers I picked up at the Farmers' Market this morning ...


30 April 2009

Here are some slides from our group work from my urban lab course. Our intent was a community redesign of the Varsity and Dalhousie Communities in Calgary. Click on the images to make large.














1 November 2008

Street Art in Calgary ... Some photographs I've taken ...

More unusual Street Art...

Joshua Allen Harris' Inflatable Bag Monsters

Slinkachu's Little People - a tiny street art project

4 October 2007

I was introduced to Mail Art in College by my drawing instructor Don Mabie a.k.a. Chuck Stake. He collaborated with my drawing class for the Frontier Mail Art Project, which is now collection of the Glenbow Museum. Each of us were asked to make an 8 1/2"x11" postcard showing what frontier meant to us. Here is the installation from 1998.


My favourite mail art project is Postsecret. People are encouraged to mail in their deepest secrets anonymously on postcards. Periodically, Postsecret takes these submissions and turns them into a book.

27 September 2004

I was introduced to Artist Trading Cards in College by my drawing instructor Don Mabie. Artist Trading Cards are a new spin on the ever popular sport trading card. Because this kind of artmaking lacks elitism, it is geared towards anyone to participate.

The New Gallery in Calgary is involved in monthly trading sessions, where everyone is invited to look and to trade. This site also gives the history of ATC's and other great links.

Take a look at other artists' Trading Cards.

Or meet up with people in your area and start your own trading sessions.

Remember there are no rules, except the size of the card!!

The Envelope is the Museum.... Mail Art is another form of sharing art. It's a grand daddy to Artist Trading Cards, and has a more elitist history, including many famous artists such as Yoko Ono.