Embryo

Embryo

An accidental double-exposure, taken with my diana clone camera. The shutter tends to stick sometimes just after I’ve switched between aperature settings.

It was a very “arty” weekend for me, checking out some of the work on display for Main Street’s studio tour, called The Drift. As always, I was inspired by a visit to Arleigh Wood’s place, and I really liked the work of Carly Louth on display at Soma.

[Please excuse me while I play around with the template a bit. I’m so tired of the old one, it makes me want to poke my eyes out when I see it…)

Of water

Reflecting pool

A good friend, the lovely and talented Nicole Dextras, has five photographs from her ice series in the group show, at YoYo Gallery in North Vancouver. The exhibition, titled Translucence, opens tonight from 6pm to 9 pm.

Gallery YoYo
312 East Esplanade in North Vancouver
(about 2 blocks east of the sea bus terminal/ lonsdale market)

I’ll write a bit more on the show after I see it tonight. In the meantime, check out her site.

Nicole Dextras

flower dressMy friend Nicole Dextras recently launched her beautifully redesigned website. When I met her in Toronto years ago, shortly before my move to Vancouver, it was in the context of photography. I have since come to know her as an amazingly versitile mixed media artist with work spaning environmental art, paper sculpture, photography, and book arts.

Her most recent project was to create clothing from leaves and flowers for a performance at the Illuminares Lantern Festival in Vancouver (pictured right.) She is also in the process of working on a series of photographs of the ice sculptures and installations she creates in the winter months. For more examples of her work in each medium, please check out her website.

Plastic* at Mooncruise Gallery

*Plastic

My mom’s feet (featured here in the invitation) is one of three holga photographs of mine featured in a toy camera show at Mooncruise Gallery.

mooncruise* | gallery presents:

PLASTIC*
An international group show of photography created with toy cameras.

Steve Barry, Levi Wedel, Jesse Louttit, Warren Harold, Rachael Ashe,
Tanya Goehring, Laura Burlton, Clare Yow, Ina Jang, Sean Frith, Noel
Bullock, Eleanor le Gresley, Brent Bennett, Vadim Marmer.

Opening July 14th 7.30pm to 10.30pm
The show run until Aug 31st


mooncruise* | gallery
235 Cambie St. (Gastown)
Vancouver. BC. V6B 1E5
Canada
604.685.9575
mooncruisegallery.com

Metal Prints

As mentioned previously, I currently have two of my metal prints in the Divine Feminie show at Radha Yoga & Eatery (pictured here.) I thought I’d explain a bit about how I made them.

The prints are made from metal flashing, a material used in roof repairs and can be found at most hardware stores. The image is first printed upon a heat sensitive image transfer paper that is meant for photocopiers, and then transfered upon the metal using a heat press. Each piece of metal is pre-heated for ten seconds and then I had to carefully place and centre the images. The press is set to about 400 degrees, and each was left in for about thirty seconds. The image transfer paper has to be removed immediately, otherwise there is a risk of bits and pieces of the image peeling off as it cools. (Many fingers were burned in the process…)

This type of paper can be transfered onto many different surfaces as long as they’re flat. I’ve experimented with glass, wood and fabric, but I like the look of metal the best.

The Divine Feminine

The Divine Feminine A great way to build up an artistic resume and get a sense of what’s involved in showing your work, is to enter group shows. I’ve done this quite a bit in the past, and have only recently gotten back into the habit of keeping an eye out for artist calls or juried shows to submit my work to.

I was thrilled when I heard about the upcoming “Divine Feminine” artshow at Radha Yoga and Eatery because I felt it was a theme very suited to my work. I’ve always had an interest in the goddess (as is evidenced by my choice of flickr name goddess_spiral) that evolved from a love of mythology as a kid, and developed further through personal study of female divinities from around the world.

Upon deciding to submit to the show, I selected two of my more recent digital images and reproduced them as metal prints using image transfer paper and a heat press. It’s the same process I used to create the work for my show last year at Wicked Cafe, and I will describe it further another time. I’ll be curious to check out how each artist chose to interpret the theme, and to see how well my own work will fit with everything else.

Radha yoga & eaterygoddess with lotus
Taken at Radha Yoga & Eatery, in June 2005.

The Divine Feminine exhibition
Radha Yoga & Eatery – 728 Main St.
March 31 – April 30
11:30 – 4:00 PM Monday to Friday
Featuring the art, photography, printmaking and fabric art of 31 artists! Curated by Eva Waldauf.

Art of the street

The dark One of the ongoing photographic projects I’ve undertaken since moving to Vancouver is the documentation of local street artist’s work. I try to keep an eye out when wandering the city and photograph new paste-ups or stencils as soon as I see them because due to the weather and strict anti-graffiti laws, very few pieces stay around for long. I’ve always had an interest in Graffiti but not to the same degree until now because the Vancouver scene distinguishes itself with interesting styles and distinctive work. Some may consider this sort of thing vandalism but I like the idea of bringing art to the street, because it adds a more interesting aspect to the visual landscape of the city and takes art out of the safe and typical environment of a gallery.

Street art is defined as any art developed in a public space, and can include traditional aerosol paint graffiti work, but encompasses many other media and techniques such as wheat pasting, stickers, and stencil graffiti.

Little man inside a ghost Introspective
A favorite of mine is the work of The Dark, for his large scale, very detailed, stencils and paste-ups. He is one of the most active contributers to Vancouver’s tight street art scene, along with Office Supplies Incorporated and Weakhand. The Dark always throws something up on the boarded over store front on the corner of Nelson and Granville, while both Weaky and OSI currently have new stuff up all over the city, so keep an eye out for it.

This week two gallery shows will begin after the cross country moving service gets all of the art here! Vancouver street artists. “Plumage” opens at Midtown (438 Pender St.) on Friday January 27th at 8pm, and on Saturday “Faces of Basco” opens at Les Gallery (1879 Powell St.) at 7pm.

Cuban Soul

In my quest for a suitable venue to show my work this year I came across the wonderful little gallery at Havana Restaurant on Commercial Drive. The current exhibition is called Cuban Soul, featuring the work of Surrey-based photographer Gabor Gasztonyi. His black & white photographs were taken in the barrios of Havana, Cuba and feature the beauty and energy of the people who live there. “They are some of the most beautiful people in the world, full of life and music, this comes through in their faces, even though the communist regime limits their freedom.”

Check it out soon because the show ends this Saturday January 28th.

Studies in Motion

If you’ve done any reading on the early history of photography then Eadweard Muybridge is a name that you’ll surely recognize. He began his career as a landscape photographer in the mid 1800s, gaining recognition for his photographs of the American West between 1868 and 1873. The work Muybridge is most well known for are his studies in human and animal locomotion, that dramatically changed long standing perceptions of motion of that time period, and led to the development of the cinema.

I was reminded of Muybridge because “Studies in Motion: The Hauntings of Eadweard Muybridge” is opening this week at the Push International Performing Arts Festival here in Vancouver. The play explores the darker aspects of Muybridge’s character, and the lesser known event of the murder of his wife’s lover, for which he was acquited. The play runs from January 17th to 29th at Frederic Wood Theatre UBC. Tickets are $18 regular, $10 student, or $12 seniors and can be order by phone at 604.822.2678. I’m planning on checking it out because I’m intrigued by the idea of a play about photography.