Sometimes starting to paint on these dark, wet days is the hardest part of the work. However, once at it, time usually disappears. So this is my studio wall today. The two warm coloured pieces are tablecloths, literally. They are canvases that I cut to size and placed on tables when I had friends over to eat and enjoy some wine, Together we spilled, drew, splashed and in general created a ground from which I could work. The intent of the finished pieces is to celebrate the value of friendship and family. And this is only the beginning. Far from finished, this small tablecloth is entitled: "QUIET CONVERSATION". It was on this piece that I spent most of my time today, "TABLECLOTH: LAUGHTER". I've enjoyed lightening the whole and using strokes that "vibrate" with the intent of conveying the fun and laughter that were so much a part of that evening. Some of the drawings and glass imprints made at the dinner will remain as parts of the finished piece as, I think, will the hand tracing. So this is a collaborative piece, a shared canvas. However, the most important sharing is that of the support and friendship that I so value and that motivate this body of work.
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A wonderful weekend at Paint The Town Paint the Town, Annapolis Royal, is an on-site painting weekend that is held mid-August each year. For over 20 years it has attracted 80 or so participants and hundreds of art lovers looking for good art at good prices. Proceeds from the silent auction are split 50/50 with the artist and ARCAC, a wonderful artists' organization and gallery in town. Saturday was hot, hot, hot but cooler in the shade of the Historic Gardens overlooking the marsh. At another spot I was joined by two furry friends. The chipmunk beside me seemed so interested that I wished that I could have given him a bidding number! Sunday was another story! Fog and rain but I worked from just outside my billet at Jan and Cam Albright's incredible home in Granville Ferry. The coffee, wash pencil and acrylics that I was working with were pretty unpredictable in the humidity - fun. Then the fun begins, the paintings are hung, the crowd gets thicker and the bidding gets faster and more competitive. Always exciting.
Big! Bold and now in place! LIMINAL SPACES is a 12 foot triptych on loan to Lunenburg Academy of Music Performance (LAMP) and can be seen in the piano studio. As well as being unusually large, LIMINAL SPACES was created with the out -of-the-ordinary media: tea, coffee, acrylic and ink on canvas. Fittings and hanging mechanism were designed for the piece by Dave Campbell who also installed the work. Almost finished! LIMINAL SPACES: a meditative painting that invites you to breath and dream.
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AuthorBarbara McLean, abstract painter, gardener, dog-lover and foody. Archives
October 2022
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