Small Painting


Springfield Lake creates a mirror on the world when the wind is down. The calm quiet of late fall days when the birds have flown south and we wait for winter to arrive from the north.


The small size of theses paintings and others in the series allowed them to be held while the painting was done adding a tactile element to the work. Small paintings with a big heart.



From the Shore to the Wall



Yesterday we finally had a chance to hang our most recent landscape work. A very interesting exercise that revealed the energy contained in the rocks.

Drawing Halifax Harbour



Down along the harbour ships come and go from our shore. The ever changing sky is cut and defined by the monumental engineered shapes which define the waterfront and make things so interesting for myself as an artist to work with.




Painted Garden


Painting in our garden has been an ongoing interest for me. The biomorphic shapes are part of the attraction acting as a direct contrast to work along the harbour that consists of engineered shapes of buildings and support structures like cranes and wharves.

The colour contrasts you can find in a garden are always a pleasant surprise and watching the changing forms from day to day and season to season make a visual kaleidoscope that is hard to keep up to.

Art Studio


In the studio you will need to wear clothes that can get dirty without care. We started out using our parents old shirts to act as a protective layer but now old clothes are the choice.


A small space down in the basement of our house next to the water tanks and furnace serves as a studio.



Some areas can be clean and dry while some spots are just not. It is the nature of the space where I work. Where drips and globs fly this way and that and ideas reign supreme.  

Bees


Working on a Derivative Speculation and what appeared but a bee. I do like adding in objects as they appear which adds a element of surprise but also time. Things really do happen fast on site and I forgot the bee was part of the day.

Flowers in Time


While visiting friends over the weekend a small patch of wallpaper remained attached to the wall. A major renovation was underway and all the walls were being stripped to the paster. The process of stripping away and rebuilding is a familiar one to me.


 As a painter working with chance means being open to change and acting on opportunity as it presents itself. When work began on what became a tryptic only the left panel existed. The middle and right panels were added as time went on. Somehow, events and blooms around the house and yard joined together and worked together to tell a story about a particular time.


Painting Algonquin Park and Beyond


It appears that in 1975 I spent some time camping and sketching in Algonquin Park, Ontario. It was a time when we took a camping trip in the park on familiar ground before heading off on a trans Canada trip that would take us as far away as Vancouver Island. That is whole other story. 

I do remember this particular tree perched on the rocky edge of Lake Provoking. There was something about the tree and its ability to survive and grow against all adversity pushing roots out to find the soil that convinced me to make the sketch.


On the trail to the lake there is a river and a magical waterfall with bathing pools in the rocks. I made the painting of the falls a year later along with a painting based on the sketch of the pine tree and am wondering about the tree now after having hiked to a group of very large Hemlock trees over the weekend.


The scale of the Hemlock trees compared to others around led me to read about them and have found that their life could fill well over five hundred years.  As large as they seemed i guess they are teenagers as Hemlock trees go.


The spring painting is from the hill just below the site where the Hemlocks live and as you can see my painting work has grown and changed over these years. The smells and feel of the air around these sites have remained touchstones for these sites even after all the years in between.


Fade Away


How do we know when an painting is finished? This a common question painters hear and I am never sure how to answer. On any one day a work could be finished and then called into question and reworked. The painting above is a prime example of this showing the original flower blooms that were then cut out of the canvas they were painted on. I always liked the edges of the blooms and the way no two seemed the same. They were glued on a board and then repainted and repainted again. So here we are and I'm not sure if it is done or not.

Snow Birds


Now that the fall weather is taking hold we get to see all the snow birds passing through on their way to southern areas and warmer days. Ducks and Geese use the lake as a stopping off point on their journey so we get to see these visitors once in the spring and once in the fall.


Unlike working on site or from a model the rendering of a goose in flight is created from memory. 
The intaglio process used to make the image is a much slower and staged way to work that does have the advantage of producing a series of prints from the original plate but looses the speed component that I find invigorating to the work.


Painting Palette


Working with images of some recent paintings have revealed a not so scientific exploration of ideas around economy. While the objects rendered are wildly varied the limited palette forces the artist and the viewers eye to reflect on overall design. The limited palette did not limit locations chosen to create work as you can see images reflect landscape, shipyards and gardens.

Painting a Chair


Even a simple wooden chair can become the subject of painting. My favourite wooden chair is a rocker so when it came time to make a painting of a chair this rocker was the first choice.