Living Room: Conscious art and design

Living Room

Two of my metal prints made their way to Los Angeles a few weeks back, and are on display as part of a group show called the Living Room at Metro Gallery. The lovely Jody Miller did me the kind favour of visiting the gallery to take a few installation shots on my behalf. The work looks wonderful.

Living Room

“Living Room: Conscious Art and Design,” organized by guest curator Diana Barash, is an exhibition about artists and designers that are inspired to create artwork which reflects their sensitivity to the environment."

Living Room: Conscious art and design
Metro Gallery Contemporary Fine Art
November 17th 2007 to January 5th, 2008
1835 Hyperion Avenue, Los Angeles
Gallery hours: Wed – Sat 12 to 7pm

Metal prints on Etsy

metal-print-ghost-tree.jpg

metal-print-night-in-the-orchard.jpg

As an artist, I’ve found it very difficult to develop the skill of promoting and selling my work. I think this is something many artists struggle with and why so many of us never get anywhere. Sometimes it can be a lack of confidence (“why would anyone be interested in my stuff…?) but often it can be a dislike of self promotion. Somehow, somewhere, someone gave the art of putting yourself out there and promoting your work a bad name, but really its just in how you do it.

I’ve learned by making my work known, by putting it “out there”, I get to do more of it and the more places people can see my work the more it gets seen. And if all goes well when having a public exhibition and I sell my work, it helps me afford to make more of it.

And now here’s the part where I tell you the two places online where my work can be purchased:
rashe.etsy.com
rachaela.imagekind.com

I have just uploaded a fresh batch of small metal prints to etsy, featuring a selection of holga tree photos from my exhibition at Radha Yoga in October. And on Imagekind I have made some of my photoshop image manipulations available as prints. Please do check them out.

A very tall tree in the tea garden

A very tall tree in the tea garden

I’m up for the second time this morning after a very late night of going to bed at the magical hour when 2am becomes 1am again.
I was looking at my cell phone when it changed back.
I don’t think I’ve ever seen it happen before.
Neat.
And even though I went to bed THAT late my body clock still insisted I be awake for 6am.
Blergh…

Shivering toward its own creation

“I like to live in the sound of water, in the feel of mountain air. A sharp reminder hits me: this world is still alive; it stretches out there shivering toward its own creation, and I’m a part of it. Even my breathing enters into an elaborate give-and-take, this bowing to sun and moon, day or night, winter, summer, storm, still –- this tranquil chaos that seems to be going somewhere. This wilderness with a great peacefulness in it. This motionless turmoil, this everything dance.”

– Wiliam Stafford, “Time for Serenity, Anyone?” from the book *Even in Quiet Places*

Ethereal

Amari is the lovely lady featured in a new series of photos I shot last week, of which the above photo is a part. She teaches classes at the yoga studio I frequent here in Vancouver. We began the session shooting portraits and various yoga poses, but due to limitations with the shooting space I wasn’t happy with how things were going. I decided to suggest an idea I’ve had on my mind for ages – placing the model behind a backlit piece of fabric – and off we went in a better direction with the shoot. I’m very happy with the results and have a few other ideas I’d like to try in a similar way.

Japanese Tea Garden

Tea garden

I was in San Francisco for nine days at the beginning of October, and even though I was able to get my film back two days after my return I have still haven’t managed to upload many shots to Flickr. The above shot was taken in the Japanese Tea Garden, located in Golden Gate Park. It was a lovely place, but I think my favorite Japanese style garden is still the one I visited in Portland. The rest of the shots of this same location can be seen on flickr using this guest pass.

I’m trying to figure out the best way to upload the seventy-two shots of San Francisco graffiti without overwhelming myself or my audience…

Trees I have Dreamed

Trees I have dreamed

My first solo show in two years opens tomorrow evening at Radha Yoga and Eatery in Vancouver. It has been the biggest personal project I’ve ever worked on, one that allowed me to further explore a heat transfer printing process I’ve grown to love. I have been working on this show for the last six to eight months, slowly streamlining the imagery I wanted to use based around the idea of tree photos taken with a Holga camera, and figuring out the technical aspects of creating and displaying large scale metal prints. It was definitely a sort-things-out-as-I-go-along process, so in the end I’m glad I was able to reproduce the type of work I was envisioning in my head.

There are sixteen pieces in the show, three are diptychs, and the rest are single images divided and printed onto four metal panels. I chose to create these works in two and four panels due to limitations in the size of heat transfer paper and the heat press itself. Each panel has been individually hand-printed on aluminum and assembled into the finished product by me, in order to create a one-of-a-kind piece of art. Everything is mounted onto a wooden support frame on the back. These are definitely handmade pieces of art, down to the inconsistencies and imperfections that hopefully add and not subtract from each piece.

This show would not have been possible without the help of many of the lovely people I am lucky enough to call friends. Thank you to the following people: Nicole Dextras for the use of her studio and heatpress, and also for her invaluable support and feedback; Susie Gardner and Travis Smith for their very generous birthday present; Mandy Moore, Kaishin Chu, Ben Damm, Hendrik Kueck, Kathryn Ashe, and Monica Ashe for their friendship, love and support from both near and afar.

The gentle art of fallen petals.

The gentle art of fallen petals

Hello.
I’m still here. I’ve been extremely busy for the last month between work, and getting my show together, so blogging has gone by the wayside as a result. The show opens this Thursday, and I will write a bit more about it later this week…