Showing posts with label artist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artist. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

Fundy Tidal: Terroir

My observations of the movement and placement of the debris in the swash zone along the Bay of Fundy inspired drawings of tidal action and the painting titled Fundy Tidal. Tidewrack creates lines in the sand, is tumbled through foam, and, with elements of both natural and discarded litter, performs a rhythmic dance along the shoreline. 

Life on our planet is dependant on the oceans, and the health of that environment reflects the health of the earth.  The energy of the Bay of Fundy, with the highest tides and strong currents, rips kelp from seabeds, erodes cliffs at its edge.  This drama is captured in what is temporarily left behind, only to be erased and rearranged with the next wave.

Fundy Tidal is included in Terroir: A Nova Scotia Survey

Swash Zone III
9" x 5.5 "graphite on 300 lb Fabriano watercolour paper
Swash Zone I
9" x 5.5 "graphite on 300 lb Fabriano watercolour paper


Fundy Tidal
48" x 72", acrylic on canvas
2016


detail Fundy Tidal
                             


detail Fundy Tidal
                             

Monday, May 4, 2015

The Backlands


Continuing with my interest in the subject of woodlands, I discovered the Backlands last year. With artist Richard Rudnicki and David Patriquin, professor of Biology, environmentalist, and member of the Backlands Coalition, I came to understand this area as a rare and unique ecosystem just a few kilometres from peninsular Halifax.

works on paper: India ink and acrylic on Fabriano hot press water colour paper, 300 lb.



Tree bones, the Backlands



Golden stream, the Backlands


Saturday, February 15, 2014

Dry Stream Fishing Cove Trail, 3' x 4' acrylic on canvas
 Fishing Cove Trail in the Cape Breton Highlands is a fairly gruelling descent of 355 metres from the top of MacKenzie Mountain through the forest to Fishing Cove.  Parts of the trail seem more like dry stream beds, with a tumble of moss and lichen-covered rock, and tree roots.  Using a turquoise underpainting, then drawing with cadmium red, I completed the work with  exaggerated colours, simplified patterns and shapes, building a composition which shows the delicacy and impermanence of the structures.  The natural landscape seems disorganized, but a rhythm, a tension develops as colour and line pull the disparate elements into energetic harmony. 
  

Saturday, January 4, 2014

Stream with blue log

Stream with blue log

The purple under-painting covers the unknown, the dense mystery of the woodland teaming with birth, growth and decay.  The stream flows through mossy rocks, tumbled debris on the forest floor and disappears back into the undergrowth. 


Stream with blue log, 4' x 5', acrylic on canvas 



detail: Stream with blue log


detail: Stream with blue log





Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Lake Edge, Bluff Trail

Through hikes in the wilderness of Nova Scotia, I collect memories of landscapes, which, due to the transformative effect of nature through time, no longer exist.  Once I pass through, the light, season, interaction of various animals, change. The painting becomes a trace of what once was… but that trace is more than that.  It is a collected perception formed at that time through the experience of being there. These sensory impressions are themselves dissolving and reforming with decisions based on composition, colour, addition, simplification, subtraction.  Lake Edge, Bluff Trail is a moment filtered, a moment shifted, altered and preserved.

Lake Edge, Bluff Trail, 3' x 4', acrylic on canvas