My Experience as a First Time Artist on the Eastside Culture Crawl

Let me just start by saying, there is absolutely no way I could have taken part in the Eastside Culture Crawl this past weekend without the support of my partner Boris. Not only was he okay with the transformation our home into an art gallery for three days, he also played the gracious host and spoke with people about my work when I wasn’t available. He was in this thing as much as I was, and for that I am very very grateful.

Our apartment transformed beautifully into a cozy little gallery space. The living and dining rooms were open to the public and filled with artwork while the back hallway, bedrooms, and bathroom were not accessible. I set up a table in the hallway to block the way and created an installation of paper snowflakes as a point of interest that also acted as barrier to places I didn’t want people going into. The snowflakes are made of individual dictionary pages cut into shape and glued together. It was a last minute crazy-person project I decided to do the day before the Crawl.

Eastside Culture Crawl

Eastside Culture Crawl-2

I cleared out most of our furniture and clutter to create an open space for people to walk through easily. The living room walls were hung with altered books, with the wooden animal series along one wall, and an eclectic mix of altered books on the opposite wall. I also had a small table full of lower priced items, such as cradle frame collages, small metal prints, and postcard sets.

Eastside Culture Crawl

In the dining room I set up my installation work. The Tree of [Un]common Knowledge was against the back wall with an improvised light made from a bare lightbulb housed carefully in an arrangement of books. I set this up so the lighting cast interesting shadows on the wall above the tree.

Eastside Culture Crawl-3

The Forgotten Knowledge series of books was set up on a table arranged in a circle with the paper flowers on top. People found both of these projects fascinating, and it was great when someone recognized these works either from Container Art or the CreativeMix Conference where they’d separately each been previously shown.

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The remaining walls were hung with large metal prints and the few altered books I couldn’t fit in the living room. It was a wide variety of work for people to see and gave us much to talk about explaining the ideas or process behind each one. Every item (except the installation work) was clearly marked with a price, and I had business cards placed around the room for people to grab. I also posted by the front door a printed copy of articles featuring my work in both the Georgia Straight and The Province.

I had a really good experience for my first ever time as a participating artist on the Culture Crawl. I was told not to expect too much but I surpassed even the lowest expectations I did have. Almost three hundred people came through my apartment over the course of the weekend, which is really good for someone unknown and slightly off the beaten path of the rest of the Crawl. I sold two altered books, two collages, three metal prints, countless postcard sets, and had many new people sign up for my mailing list. I also had wonderful feedback from people and many a good conversation about art and books. I feel very lucky things went so well, and I hope to do it again next year. (I’m pretty sure Boris and I will recover by then).

I started this blog post with a thank you and must end it the same way, because I wouldn’t be able to do any of this without the people who support me.

Thank you to Horst and Anne for bringing food throughout the weekend and helping out. Thank you to James and Monique for whisking us away at the end of Saturday for a delicious home cooked meal and a relaxing evening after a crazy day. Thank you to Jess and Stewart for helping me keep count and letting people into the building on Saturday. Thank you to Kai for keeping count on Sunday, and to Ariane for bringing me a bag full of snacks on Saturday.

Thank you to so many of our other friends for taking time on a very busy weekend to drop in to see the show. It was wonderful to have everyone here, and I’m very grateful for the kindness and support.

Highlighting (Other) Artists in the Eastside Culture Crawl

One of the downsides of taking part in the Eastside Culture Crawl as an artist is that I’ll be tied to my venue all weekend long and won’t get to see everyone else’s work. (Insert sadface here).The Crawl is an event I look forward to attending every year and now I get to experience it on the other side.

I thought I’d highlight some of the other artists I would go visit if I could. Some of these recommendations are people I’ve visited in previous years and love their work, and others are artists I’ve had the pleasure of meeting since becoming a member of The Crawl. Every single one of them creates amazing work.

Siobhan Humston. Painting & mixed media.
Alley Pad Studio – back lane entrance, 1774 East Hastings Street

Siobhan Humston painting

Robi Smith, Blue Lantern Studio. Painting & mixed media collage.
1218 East Pender Street, just east of Clark Drive.
Robi Smith painting

Lincoln Heller, Fiveleft Leather. Beautiful handmade leather goods.
The Mergatroid Building, 1177 parker street
Fiveleft leather
(I SERIOUSLY covet this clutch).

Valerie Arntzen. Mixed media & Photography
Paneficio Studios, 800 Keefer Street
Valerie Arntzen

Kiku Hawkes. Photography & textiles.
Quattro Pose, 733 Keefer Street

Kiku Hawkes
(I’ve always loved this photograph).

Wendy D. Photography
The ARC, Suite 711 – 1701 Powell Street
Wendy D promo

Jeina Morosoff. Glass & sculpture
William Clark Studios, 1310 William Street at Clark Drive.

Jeina Morosoff

And so many more….

Eastside Culture Crawl: Promoting All the Ladies

Just in case you needed another reason to visit during the Eastside Culture Crawl, how about the chance to win handmade things? I’m teaming up with four other women artists in the area to help promote each other’s studios.

crawl-swag-invite

Visit our five studios over the Crawl weekend to receive a stamp from each location and we will enter you into a draw to win fantastic swag. The prize includes an Astrosatchel bag from Janna Hurtzig, a framed drawing by Siobhan Humston, a photo session from WendyD, a DVD and drawing from Mira Malatestinic, and a metal print and postcard set from me.


View Eastside Culture Crawl – All the Ladies in a larger map

I’m looking forward to welcoming people to my studio. There are only four more days to go…

Sneak Preview of Work for the Eastside Culture Crawl

With the Eastside Culture Crawl a week and a half away I’m in final preparations with the work I’ll be showing. These are my five most recent altered books created in the last few months. I’ve just finished framing them and will soon begin hanging these and other work on the walls of my home. The home studio becomes my own personal art gallery with a one woman show.

New work for the Eastside Culture Crawl

Altered Book: Of Animal Folklore and Fables
Of Animal Folklore and Fables

Altered Book: Heralding The Dawn Of A New Day
Heralding the Dawn of A New Day

Altered Book: Constellation Of The Great Bear
Constellation Of The Great Bear

Altered Book: Gifts of the Goose
Gifts of the Goose

Altered Book: Kangaroo is the Life of the Party
Kangaroo is the Life of the Party

This is my first time taking part as an artist on the Crawl, and I’m more than a little nervous about it. I have no idea what to expect or even if I’ll have anyone drop by beyond my circle of friends. If you like my work, please share it with others and encourage them to visit my location during the Culture Crawl.

You can view my artist page on the Culture Crawl website, and I also have an event invitation on Facebook.

And now, back to those preparations….

Process & Intent; The Making of Art

I am one of fifteen artists with work in the Culture Crawl preview show, Process & Intent. I created a site-specific wall sculpture at the Cultch using scrap pieces of pages cut from finished altered books.

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For the Crawl, artists tidy their studios, sweep away the sawdust, scrape away the clay and present their work in a finished state, with usually just a few clues as to how the pieces unfolded. But the work you see is the result of untold hours of focused work and countless moments of problem solving: hitting a wall and persevering, and often of large financial investment. Of course, finished work is what we are striving for but for many artists, the process is where the “art” actually lies. Everyone else gets just part of the story in the form of the final piece.

For this show, as a preview presentation for this year’s 14th Annual Eastside Culture Crawl, curator Alex Henderson has decided to take the idea of the ‘preview’ in a more literal sense by showcasing the process behind some the works you will see in the studios. This is a rare opportunity to see the prototypes, the sketches books and the works in progress that reveal a little more of the story of art and artists in our community.

Process & Intent: The Making of Art
Featuring the work of 15 artists working in a range of media
The Cultch
1895 Venables Street, Vancouver. BC
Dates: November 10th to the 28th, 2010
Hours: Mon to Fri, 12-6pm. Saturday, 12-4pm, and always open 1 hour prior to scheduled performances.
Opening night is November 21st at 7pm.

The Tree of [Un]common Knowledge at the CreativeMix Exhibition

For the past few weeks I’ve been working on a paper craft tree (pictured below) made with reclaimed cardboard and book pages. This work is one part of an interdisciplinary collaboration between myself, Kirsti Wakelin and Darren Carcary of Resolve Design. The project began back at the end of summer when I first had the crazy idea to make a paper tree and to bring together our three different disciplines.

I was using a call for exhibitors at the CreativeMix conference as an excuse to experiment and collaborate. It was a whirlwind project to work on after learning of our acceptance at the beginning of October. The tree and graphics came together for the first time last Thursday (November 4th) when we presented the work publicly at the CreativeMix conference exhibition.

Sneak Preview of the Tree of [Un]common Knowledge

A bit of background. This project was an opportunity for me to explore the creation of larger work than I’d previously done, as well as to partner with a designer working in a very different medium than myself. I was curious to explore bringing together motion graphics with a handmade paper tree and how these two different mediums could interact with one another.

The work is inspired by the idea of a tree of knowledge, and we chose to interpret this in a literal sense in both the tree form and the graphics.

From the Resolve Design artist statement: “Our project began as a simple creative art exercise, developed over 4 days, loosely based around trees in general. But research about the evening migration of crows to the Still Creek roost uncovered commonly known, but oft-forgotten Vancouver facts – historic and current. The project quickly focused on exploring Vancouver, with trees as the connecting element.”

The photos below were taken during the run of the display. The tree was positioned against a 12′ x 10′ white wall with hardcover books and paper flowers placed around the bottom of the trunk. The projector was located approximately 16′ in front and fully covered the display wall with the projection, both running the animation and lighting the tree. The movie was on a two minute loop and used beautiful illustrations created by Kirsti and interesting text about Vancouver that flowed through and around the paper tree.

Tree of [Un]common Knowledge
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Tree of [Un]common Knowledge-8
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Tree of [Un]common Knowledge-3

At the exhibition I was absolutely thrilled to see people drawn in by the piece. Little kids were enthralled with the animation and the tree, and at least a few kept their parents waiting while they watched it over and over. We had great feedback from people who stopped by to talk with us, and it’s pretty clear we gave people the sense of wonder I was hoping for.

Darren, Kirsti, and myself definitely want to show this work again at some point, though we don’t have any specific plans at this time. If you would like a chance to see the paper tree, it will be on display at my place during the Eastside Culture Crawl, November 26th to 28th, along with other new work.

Two Women: Work by Kelly Haydon & Rachael Ashe

In November (which is NEXT WEEK!!!!!) I have a two person show at the Firehall Arts Centre with print maker Kelly Haydon. The show is simply called “Two Women” because it features two female artists both exploring imagery of women but in different mediums.

Underneath an imaginary sea

I am showing a selection of ten portraits from the Imaginary Girl series, and am excited to finally have more of this work in print. If you would like to attend the opening on Friday November 5th please RSVP on facebook. I would love to see you there, especially if you happen to be a subject of one of the portraits.

Two Women
–> Opening: November 5th, 6 to 8pm
Dates: November 4th to December 15th, 2010.
Firehall Arts Centre
280 East Cordova Street
Vancouver BC V6A 1L3
Viewing Hours: Wed – Sat, 1 to 5pm

Pop-Up Now! An International Exhibition of Movable Artist Books

I have one of my altered books in this show at 23 Sandy Gallery in Portland. It opens this week, with the artist reception on October 1st (I won’t be in attendance).

The exhibition features handmade and altered books with movable parts and pop-ups. If you can’t make it in person, then check out the online catalogue. There’s lots of amazing work in the show.

Pop-Up Now!
23 Sandy Gallery
623 NE 23rd Avenue
Portland, OR 97232
Hours: Thursday, Friday, Saturday – Noon to 6:00 p.m