Griffin & Sabine

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Griffin and Sabine, An Extraordinary Correspondence, written and illustrated by Nick Bantock grew into a series of six books that achieved great popularity and are some of my very favourites. I love the artwork, letters inside envelopes and postcards that invite a slow savouring, a sweet pleasure of opening mail and reading hand-written letters. Something that is not so common today with the speed and ease of electronic communication. In fact, Nick Bantock and his art exhibition were the subject of a blog post here a couple of years ago.

Now there is a play, an adaptation of the Griffin & Sabine series. Called a lyrical romance, this world premiere is now playing to November 4th at the Arts Club’s Granville Island Stage in Vancouver. Here’s a description from the theatre site:

“How can I miss you this badly when we’ve never met?”  
Travel through the lush, mystical universe of Griffin & Sabine, based on the internationally renowned series of books by Nick Bantock. Griffin Moss and Sabine Strohem are two artists who live half a world apart. He is an isolated, hesitant English postcard designer, while she is a confident illustrator of postage stamps and very much a creature of the South Seas. The pair exchange love letters, unaware that their profound connection will draw them into a surreal realm of haunting figures and intrigue.

View the list of actors and a few video clips about the cast and audience reactions.

Like many fans, we wondered how these books can ever be made into a play. Some time ago I read a fascinating article about the long and challenging process of transforming this very visual and ephemeral story into a stage play. Really worth a read.

Anyway, we went to see it earlier this evening. It was well done in most respects. We liked the minimalist set with projected images of Bantock’s artworks and the interesting changing lighting. A bass player and a percussionist hidden in the shadows provided occasional background music. Knowing it’s an immensely challenging proposition to stage such an otherworldly story, it was fairly successful. However we thought it was rather rushed in the two hours, the actors speaking too fast. (I had difficulty understanding Griffin’s English accent, though it was authentic to the character, but that’s just me.) It’s the usual dilemma of condensing a book or books into a short time. My husband had not read the books (he rarely reads fiction) so he had no preconceptions and expectations and thought it well done but also felt it was rushed, the speech sometimes too “clinical”.

We’d still recommend it highly for its unique artistic achievement. We did wonder if it would make a great digital animation movie.

Image: part of the artwork on the cover of The Golden Mean by Nick Bantock, scanned from my copy.

Burtynsky in Vancouver

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Image on invitation: Edward Burtyntsky: Recycling No.20. Cankun Aluminum. Xaimen City, Fujian Province, China 2005. Chromagenic print, 58″ x 68″. Courtesy of Charles Cowles Gallery, NY.

I’m really looking forward to seeing the photographic works of acclaimed Canadian photographer Edward Burtyntsky right here in the Vancouver area. His exhibition ‘The China Series’ has been up for a while and runs until November 5th at Presentation House Gallery in North Vancouver. The artist will be in attendance at the reception Tuesday, October 10, 7 pm at the gallery.

Edward Burtyntsky will also be at the screening of the documentary ‘Manufactured Landscapes’ at the Vancouver International Film Festival.. Directed by Jennifer Baichwal, it follows the photographer as he travels the globe shooting landscapes transformed through commercial recycling, manufacturing and industry. That’s on Wednesday, October 11, 9:15 pm and on Thursday, October 12, 11:30 am at Empire Granville Theatre Cinemas #3.

Do read the exhibition statement at the Presentation House site and visit Edward Burtyntsky’s very informative website. Of course he’s been written about a great deal in the past few years, including in this blog. CBC recently wrote about the film, and so did Zeke.

P.S. I almost forgot, Gordon Coale wrote a review of the book Burtyntsky-China.

visiting Interconnection

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We were sad to miss the opening last week of Michiko Suzuki and Wayne Eastcott’s exhibition Interconnection, also the grand opening of the new Bellevue Gallery. By all accounts the opening was very successful, attended by around 200 people spilling out onto the sidewalk.

Yesterday, my husband and I had one of our after-work “gallery and dinner dates” and went to the Bellevue, knowing that Michiko and Wayne would be there. We enjoyed a personal chat about their work, which utilize techniques of etching, inkjet, silk-screen and chine-collé. The work looks stunning in this lovely new space (and these photos do not do it justice). Even though we’ve seen most of the work before other than the latest new prints, it all looked very new and different in this spacious yet warm setting. As I’ve mentioned before this exhibition was first shown last year in Tokyo, then in Vancouver. Congratulations again to both artists for the success of this amazing collaboration!

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We also met Lynn Ray, the charming owner of Bellevue Gallery (her partner is her daughter Nicole Ray-Sharma who was not there this time). It was a pleasant surprise because Lynn and I knew each other many years ago and so enjoyed catching up with our lives since then. Lynn has a studio art and art history background as well as many years of business experience, so she has excellent qualifications for running a serious art gallery. An architect had been hired to do the interior of the gallery and this shows in the lovely architectural details, materials and lighting. The Bellevue Gallery is a great cultural addition to the charming Dundarave area of West Vancouver, right by the sea. Our very best wishes to the Rays for the success of this new gallery!

If you are anywhere near Vancouver and haven’t seen this significant exhibition by two very important artists yet, I suggest not to miss it. It is up until October 29th, 2006.

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Eastcott/Suzuki at Bellevue

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INTERCONNNECTION, Wayne Eastcott and Michiko Suzuki’s collaborative printmaking project is opening in Bellevue Gallery next week. This is a recently opened new gallery that is celebrating its grand opening with this exhibition, to be introduced by renowned Canadian artist Gordon Smith.

OPENING: Thursday, September 28th, 2006 6:00 to 9:00 pm
Exhibition continues to October 29th, 2006
Bellevue Gallery, 2475 Bellevue Avenue, West Vancouver, BC

Some excerpts from the exhibition statement:

This exhibition is the result of a collaboration that we commenced in 2002. However, the first work was not complete until the fall of 2003 because we spent many months trying to really understand each other’s interests, ideas and aesthetics. We wanted it to be a true collaboration and not merely two artists working on the same piece of paper.

The project is called INTERCONNECTION because it represents an interconnection on many levels: between ourselves as individuals, our cultures (Canada/Japan), the classical and technological forms, even the paper (classic Japanese Washi or Western papers etc.). Finally the works are brought to completion by another interconnection: that between our pieces and the viewer.

Please read more about these two printmakers’ collaboration in two articles written on August 23rd, 2004 and October 31st, 2005.

Jean Detheux

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Still from ‘Sogna Sakha 2005’ © 2006 Jean Detheux

Back in July, I wrote about Belgian-Canadian artist Jean Detheux, who creates wondrous works entirely digitally after giving up painting for health reasons. If you missed it, please go read it first and then come back here.

Through the magic of the internet, Jean Detheux chanced upon my article and sent me a nice email thanking me for my words. He also wrote that his work has evolved since that last interview of several years ago and that his new material (animation and interview) can be seen here. I enjoyed looking at his new animations set to music.

From the interview, I learned that Jean has produced some films for the National Film Board of Canada (NFB). This piqued my interest even more since I’ve written here about the NFB and Norman McLaren a couple of times. Jean gives a nod to McLaren by calling his DVD “Volatile materials”**, containing his two NFB films, as an “abstract animation after McLaren.” It is amazing to compare McLaren’s hand drawn films from the 1940’s to today’s digital animations, to see the march of technology.

Have a look at the NFB site – there’s a a short biography, and some stills from Liaisons and Rupture. I think these are beautiful glimpses of what must be gorgeous films.

I asked Jean if he’s still teaching as well. He wrote: “I was just asked to conduct a master-class at the NFB theatre (in Montréal) in celebration of the “International Animation Day” on the 28th of October. This will be made of three parts: a lecture/master-class, followed by the projection, in HD, of my 2 NFB films, “Laisons” and “Rupture,” followed by yet another “happening,” during which I hope to be able to improvise images/animation while 2 great musicians, Joane Hétu and Diane Labrosse will improvise their music.”

**Jean adds: ‘the “Volatile Materials” DVD contains also works by Chris Hinton and a few others, so it is not “mine” only even if it holds my 2 NFB films’.

woodblock printmaking

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Image of woodblock from wikipedia

Some months ago I wrote about a demonstration of Japanese woodblock printing by Tae-Huk Kim.

Now I’m pleased to see that Printfreak has posted a video of the process, that looks very similar to Kim’s. When I came to the end of this video and saw the name of the artist, I was pleasantly surprised to learn that it is Graham Scholes, a well-known BC artist. I’ve spoken with him on the phone when he assisted me in my online re-registration (when I changed my email address) for the Carfac newsgroup. It was fun to put a face to the name.

You will notice that Kim’s and Scholes’ works are very different. Kim’s is contemporary and semi-abstract, while Scholes’ is traditional. It is interesting how an ancient technique is still used by artists today in very different styles.

David Bull, another woodblock printmaker living and working in Tokyo, also has an extensive and recently updated site about his work and techniques. Baren Forum is another resource, and check out the links in my earlier article.

Some day I must try out this technique. As I’ve mentioned before, it’s a non-toxic process and does not need a printing press, so it’s ideal for a small home studio like mine. My style and images would change, just in colour alone because they are light watercolour washes rather than the heavy oil-based inks that I use for etchings and collagraphs. Of course I have done some woodcuts in the western technique of relief rolling the ink and either using a press or a wooden spoon, another look again.

Kenneth Lochhead

Yesterday I learned from Arts News Canada that Canadian artist Kenneth Lochhead, 80, died in Ottawa on Saturday July 15th, saying to his family at his bedside, “I’ve gotta go; enjoy every second”.

I remember him well from my student years at the University of Manitoba School of Art, always friendly, smiling and easy-going. He was a well-known painter already back then thanks to his work with Saskatchewan’s Emma Lake workshops and the Regina Five group. I haven’t seen him in decades but I still recognize him in the photos.

Today, Zeke’s Gallery posted some links to more articles about Kenneth Lochhead, at CBC and Canada Council for the Arts, where you can also see a few of his paintings spanning some of the many styles he worked in over the decades.

digital abstract expressionist

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Jean Detheux – from the animation “Bénin.”

Some time ago a generous reader and commenter sent me a link to the website of a fascinating artist. Jean Detheux, was born and educated in Belgium and has been living in North America for the past three decades. He has been an assistant dean at The New York Studio School of Drawing, Painting and Sculpture and an instructor at Parsons School of Design, as well as New York University, Algonquin College, Concordia University and the Alberta College of Art, where he was also chairman of the department of drawing.

Detheux used to be a painter and is now working exclusively digitally due to allergies to paint fumes and solvents. He spent a great deal of time trying to find a way to work with computers that would be a logical continuation of his previous work. He worked on an old Mac with tools like Painter and Studio Artist and a drawing tablet. I am making digital 2D animation without a story board, without planning, without a story line, without characters, very much along the lines of (digital) “abstract expressionism, Detheux has stated.

Most informative concerning his process is this interview of him that was published 5 years ago called Digital Abstract Expressionism. At the time of this interview he was living on a farm in Canada, somewhere between Montreal and Toronto, with his family and doing his digital artworks. It particularly fascinates me is how he adapted to a totally digital way of art making and managed to continue making highly expressive work.

Visit his site showing his art works, both natural and digital, his writings and several tutorials. Don’t miss this beautiful example of Detheux’s animation work Bénin. An inspiring artist! Thanks for the link, Bill!

PS. Here is more about Jean Detheux, in a later post.

pensive

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It’s been quiet for a few days here as I recover from having a lot of visitors in the midst of a heat wave. Though it’s a little cooler today, I’m still feeling tired and uninspired. Instead I’ve been doing some needed housekeeping on my computer, and then rewarded myself with another tour of our photos from the recent trip to Alberta. I’m thinking again about how I may use the Writing-on-Stone Park photos, like the one above, in my new work.

Suiting my pensive mood, I’ve also enjoyed a tour through Simon Marsden’s moody and darkly romantic photos (introduced by wood s lot). Naturally I like his Standing Stones the most. The arches and the ruins appeal as well for they have been elements in my past work.

Then a little bit of opera music lifted my spirits some more, though the video itself is too cheesy for my taste. I know and love Dvorak’s Song to the Moon, this time sung by Russian soprano Anna Netrebko. (Kiitos, thanks to tuumailu for the link!) Nothing like this kind of art to nurse a pensive mood and then inspire! Does it work that way for you too?

Abakanowicz’ Vancouver Ancestors

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As I mentioned before, last week we ventured out to Queen Elizabeth Park in Vancouver especially to see the Magdalena Abakanowicz’ sculpture installation. I was excited to be seeing her work live for the first time.

Created for the current Vancouver International Sculpture Biennial, the Vancouver Ancestors consists of 16 three metre tall armless and headless figures, installed on the south side of the park. They look powerful caught in stride with their immense feet, bodies wrapped in folded, twisted and roped cloths of metal. They look ancient because of the rusty surface but they are actually bronze, probably with an iron oxide coating. The backs are concave or hollow I suppose to save on weight.

We were quite excited by these figures, looking and photographing them from all angles and curious about the title too. Is it a reference to the ancient peoples of the area? Somewhere I once read that the natives believe that headless figures are spirits from another world (or something like that). I like to think they are spirits of the people who used to live here long ago. Abakanowicz has worked with headless figures for a long time, so there are other references such as to victims of wars.

When I first saw Abakanowicz’ work in a book years ago, I fell in love with her fibre sculpure, wrapped figures. Since then she has moved to bronze, which of course is durable for the numerous outdoor installations she has been commissioned to do around the world. I was excited to see that she had captured these textures in the moldmaking process and revealed these on the bronze giants.

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A note to visitors: I suggest parking on the south side of the park, then walk up the hill. We lucked out in doing this and it was exciting to suddenly spot the installation in the distance. It made for a good approach coming up to it in this way, closer and closer.

Since I last posted about Abakanowicz and the Vancouver Sculpture Biennale, the biennale site has been much improved and there are excellent photos of the Vancouver Ancestors and of course, works by the other artists that I still have to go and see.

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