snow!

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What a thrill to wake up to the first snowfall this winter in the Vancouver area, below the mountains that is! I went snap happy with the digital camera, knowing how fleeting this can be. Already as I’m writing this in the afternoon, it has stopped snowing and it’s melting a bit. The forecast calls for more over the next few days, so we hope it stays a bit, though Vancouver drivers get in such a flurry (pun intended).

These photos were taken around home while it was snowing and the sky was heavy and grey, so the results are almost black and white – rather interesting, wouldn’t you say?

Below is a photo taken looking out a window with a white paper cutout snowflake appearing in dark silhouette against the bright outdoors. Youngest daughter Erika has made these unique Christmas decorations for many years, and they are always the last to be taken down in the New Year.

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artists & the internet

“Artists, Musicians and the Internet: They have embraced the internet as a tool that helps them create, promote, and sell their work. However, they are divided about the impact and importance of free file-sharing and other copyright issues.” This is from the first large-scale surveys done by PEW Internet and American Life Project. It is interesting evidence of the importance of the internet, though it mostly focuses on musicians.
Thanks to Lenny at DC Art News and today’s Arts Journal.
UPDATE: PEW surveys on blogging made the news today at SocalTECH, CoolTechZone and Mediapost.(via GoogleNews)

Sunday at Deer Lake

What a beautiful crisp, clear sunny day out here on the Westcoast, a rare treat in this rainforest. With no cloud cover the temperature is at or below the freezing point at night, and shady spots are frosty even during the day. We can’t complain about a little frost when the prairies have been having sub-zero blizzards. That elusive winter sun told us it was a good afternoon for a little outing to finish the holiday season and we chose to go to Burnaby’s Deer Lake Park.

First, we just squeaked in on its last day to see the two exhibitions I’d written about earlier at the Burnaby Art Gallery overlooking Deer Lake. A Survey of BC Printmaking and The BC Landscape by Toni Onley are both very interesting visual records of British Columbia’s art history. Of course I’m biased in loving prints, so I was pleased to see some of Onley’s silkscreens amidst his watercolours, and the many familiar works by several of BC’s best printmakers in the print survey exhibition.

We unexpectedly met another Finnish-Canadian artist, Irene McCutcheon, there and had a lively catch-up chat, then ran into Wayne Eastcott coming in as we left. Wayne has a print in the show that is also featured on the invitation and posters (and on my earlier entry).

Then, a walk around the gardens of historic Ceperley House, now the home of the Burnaby Art Gallery, past the lovely Jack Shadbolt Centre for the Arts and down to Deer Lake to see the ducks on the shimmering water, and then back home for some hearty home-made ham and pea soup! I think I’m ready to get back to work now.

a winter story

I am so thrilled and proud that I must share this! My four-year old grandaughter sent this lovely story she created (with a little help from her mommy and daddy): Lael’s Winter Story*
Don’t miss clicking on the circles to repeat or continue to the end, I did the first time. At the end you will find last year’s great story.
Enjoy your Christmas Eve!
(*Macromedia Flash Player required.)

Christmas Eve

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(My 2003 Christmas card of a gingerbread house made by daughter Erika)

It’s been sunny and cool here and we enjoyed a morning walk around our neighbourhood. I finished the last of the baking this afternoon, so this evening we decided to go for a stroll in Park & Tilford Gardens to see the annual Christmas light display – enchanting! The moon was visible in the clear sky, and it is getting frosty. As we were driving home, wisps of fog were moving in from the sea, giving the street lights a glowing halo. It may be a green and sunny Christmas. It’s almost Christmas Eve and some of our family will be here for dinner, singing and Santa’s gifts.

Again, warmest wishes to all for a Happy Christmas, Hauskaa Joulua, Frohe Weihnachten, Joyeux No&#235l and Happy Holidays ( or Bah, Humbug, as a few of you prefer 🙂 )…. and Peace on Earth!

some art reading

Holiday preparations have sidetracked me lately from the more serious business of art. Trying to keep up with reading some art blogs, I found this to be so good that I’d like to point you towards Zeke’s Gallery in Montréal. Chris has posted a very interesting, eye-opening and informative interview with Marc Mayer, the new director of the Musee d’Art Contemporain de Montréal.
And do check out James W. Bailey’s online Art Blog Project ANTI-OPTIONS 05. (Thanks James for letting me know!)

perceptions

Sensations are the items of consciousness, a color, a weight, a texture that we tend to think of as simple and single. Perceptions are complex affairs that embrace sensation together with other, associated or revived contents of the mind, including emotions. – Jacques Barzun

I like that! This is from Catherine Jamieson’s beautiful photoblog. Her words today resonate with me in how I approach much of my images in my printmaking, in visual terms. I feel and think in images, not words. Words are very elusive, very difficult for me.

a printmaker’s blog

This is why I don’t want to shut off the comments against nasty spammers. Recently Linden Langdon*, a new visitor to my blog, wrote in a comment. I am excited because she is also a printmaker who has a blog. From Hobart, Tasmania (Australia) she has written about the challenges of her final year of art schooI doing lithography and etching. It’s an attractive site with much information on her processes and project. I suggest a visit!

Update: Linden’s original blog no longer exists but she has a lovely website, so the link above has been changed to direct you there.

quotations on art

“The artist is a receptacle for emotions that come from all over the place: from the sky, from the earth, from a scrap of paper, from a passing shape, from a spider’s web.” – Pablo Picasso

“Art does not reproduce the visible; rather, it makes visible.” – Paul Klee

“The artist brings something into the world that didn’t exist before, and… he does it without destroying something else.” – George Plimpton

“Art is meant to disturb, science reassures.” – Georges Braque

(from The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations, 5th Edition, 1999)

Weekend

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We were away this weekend on a pleasant little trip. Some family stuff was happening, so we took a drive up to the Kamloops area of BC. We enjoyed the scenic Coquihalla Highway route through mountains that were already partly covered in snow at the higher elevations. Our trip took about four hours to the eastern area beyond Kamloops.

We stayed in a lovely bed & breakfast in the village of Chase on Little Shuswap Lake, run by a very friendly recently immigrated German family. The best Greek food ever was had in a big new Greek restaurant in Kamloops (sorry I did not note down the name). Oh, and we picked loads of delicious McIntosh apples off a tree at the family members’ property, so will have to cut and freeze some for pies and apple crisps!

It is always good to get away, and it is great to be home again! The only unpleasant thing was to find 68 comment spam when I went to check my emails and comments! Have you noticed that I recently upgraded to Movable Type 3.11? This has comment approval by me, so those spam comments do not make it directly into the blog, and a new MT anti-spam plug-in just got installed to allow me to easily add the spammers to a blacklist and delete in one step! Begone, scum!