"Red Vertical" acrylic on canvas 30" by 12"
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Friday, November 27, 2009
Painting a four by six foot triptych
Stage one..painted on site in High Park, Toronto.
Stage two - studio: oaks, red pines and goldenrod - sky lightened.
More light added in the negative spaces...a stag's head is appearing.
Forms built up, stag-headed man appears
Finished. Landscape forms tied in. Now showing at Loft Gallery, Clarksburg, ON
Monday, September 21, 2009
Gaea
"Gaea" acrylic, oil, enamel, bee's wax 36" by 48" Now showing at Loft Gallery, Clarksburg, ON.Gaea, the earth goddess, formed from original chaos, second after Eros (love), followed by Erebos(darkness) and Nyx (night). Gaea gave birth to Uranos, the heavens, and Pontos, the unfruitful sea. Eros began to stir up these forces and create pairings. Gaea was paired with Uranos and they produced Titans, Hekatoncheires, and Kyklopes. The twelve Titans represented the forces of nature. The three Hekatoncheires, each with a hundred hands, represented the crashing force of waves and earthquakes. And then there were the three one-eyed Kyklopes whose flashing eye represented storms and volcanoes. Thus love created the most powerful forces of the world.
Source: Who's Who in Mythology, Alexander S Murray, British Museum.
Ikaros
"Ikaros" acrylic, oil, enamel, bees' wax 36" by 48" $900. The father of Ikaros was Daedalos, a great artist. His talent as well as his decision to help the queen Pasiphae, wife of King Minos, daughter of the sun god, lead to his son's downfall.
Minos, after being made King of Crete, prayed to Poseidon to send a creature from the deeps to sacrifice to Zeus. Poseidon sent a shimmering white bull. Minos , instead of sacrificing it, decided to turn it out to pasture with his own cattle. To punish him for his deception, Poseidon caused the bull to turn wild and escape; at the same time he caused Queen Pasiphae to develop an unnatural passion for the white bull. She pursued it throughout the island until Daedalos caught it and held it until the Queen's desire was satisfied. She gave birth to a monster with a man's body and a bull's head. Daedalos had now to use his skills to design and build a labyrinth from which no one who entered could escape. The monster Minotauros was placed in it. Human sacrifices were regularly sent in, until one day Theseus - but that's another story.
As a gift to the queen, possibly to ease her sadness, Daedalos constructed a figure of a cow that was so lifelike, the king's cattle accepted it into the herd. When King Minos found out, he had Daedalos and Ikaros imprisoned in the labyrinth. They escaped - Daedalos knew the design, after all - and left Crete by flying away on wings that Daedalos made, out of wax and feathers.
It is at this point that the familiar part of the story ensues: Daedalos warned Ikaros not to fly too close to the sun, but Ikaros didn't heed him. He reached the highest point in his fight, his wings melted and he plunged into the sea.
(Source: Who's Who in Mythology, Alexander S. Murray, British Museum, Bracken Books, London)
Saturday, August 15, 2009
Black River Shore
Black River Shore 12 by 48 oil. This is the first in a series of studies of the Black River based on a canoe day trip my husband and I took last year. We started at the bridge over highway 169 and made our way back to our house downstream from there, shooting rapids, getting grounded and taking photos. It was high summer.
Sunday, May 31, 2009
The Sirens
"The Sirens" ink, acrylic, bees' wax, oil 36 by 48 $900.This is the story of the Sirens: they were the daughters of a river god and a Muse. They were childhood playmates of Persephone, and when she was carried off by Pluto they failed to protect her. As punishment for this, Persephone's mother Demeter turned them into half-bird creatures who could be heard singing in the forests.
Sometime later they challenged the Muses to a singing contest and lost. As punishment for that the Muses plucked their feathers and decked themselves with them. The sirens became half woman/half fish creatures still with their beautiful voices, living in the cliffs of the islands between Sicily and Italy. Their singing bewitched passing sailors who crashed to their deaths on the rocks after trying to follow the voices. Two times the charm didn't work: when the Argonauts sailed by with Orpheus aboard, they focused on his unsurpassed music and fended off the sirens; later when Odysseus passed, he had himself lashed to the mast so that he could hear the sirens' voices but not respond to them. In despair , the Sirens cast themselves into the sea and were changed into cliffs. (Who's Who in Mythology, Alexander S. Murray, British Museum)
"The Sirens" is painted on birch panel. Starting with a splash of ink on the wet wood, I then poured over the dried ink with various colours of acrylic. When that was dry I added beeswax, melted and poured on. After smoothing and polishing the beeswax, I worked into the image with oil colours.
As usual, I named the painting after it was finished.
Thursday, May 7, 2009
Red Pine Forest
Red Pine Forest acrylic 36 by 48 SOLD This new "red pine" series has emerged much more easily than I had expected. I mixed six tubs of colour and stuck to only those, plus some greys produced by combining a couple. I have finally accepted the "plastic " look of acrylic and learned to make it work for me.
Monday, May 4, 2009
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