Archive for the ‘Inspiration’ Category

Artist Profile: Ben Ploughman

Sunday, June 19th, 2011

Ben Ploughman is a folk artist from Port au Choix, Newfoundland. He works in wood including recycled driftwood laths to tell stories about Newfoundland and its people.

Last summer I traveled in Newfoundland and Labrador with two friends. One of our favourite activities was looking for icebergs, and here’s one that we saw off the coast of Red Bay, Labrador.

Later we stopped by Ben Ploughman’s studio, but unfortunately it was after hours and he wasn’t there. Some of his work was displayed outdoors, including this wonderful piece, “Great Big Empty Sea.” I totally identified with these iceberg=gazers, and I was glad that the artist had depicted local people. To me, it meant that the thrill of seeing the icebergs doesn’t wear off even when you see them all your life.

I looked up Ben’s website when I returned home. He writes, “The inspiration for my work often comes from a response to critical and crucial events in Newfoundland such as the collapse of the Atlantic cod fishery, a rapid decline in rural population and lack of meaningful employment. Therefore my style and subject matter is strongly influenced by my surroundings in this little corner of the world, rural outport Newfoundland. I consider myself a contemporary self-taught artist just keeping track of what’s going on around me and in the process helping to preserve a piece of our past for future generations.”

Another piece of Ben’s that caught my fancy, since I’m a quiltmaker, is “Homemade Quilts.” This mixed-media piece of made of wood except for the quilts, which are knitted.

You can see Ben’s work in the spring issue of the Canadian art and architecture magazine Arabella in the section “Artists to Collect.” Better yet, visit Newfoundland and meet him in person.


The Dream Canoe at the new Antigonish Library

Sunday, June 19th, 2011

The new library in Antigonish, Nova Scotia (about a half hour from the causeway to Cape Breton) is getting rave reviews for its public art.  I haven’t been there yet but am really looking forward to seeing it.  The Halifax Chronicle Herald newspaper just had an article featuring Alan Syliboy’s work The Dream Canoe and listing all the other artists and their pieces.

You can also watch a video about this artwork: Alan Syliboy, The Dream Canoe.

Swoon

Sunday, April 17th, 2011

Just outside of Halifax in Hammonds Plains, the nondescript road suddenly comes to life with a huge sign announcing “Swoon” in swashy white letters on a brilliant raspberry background. You realize immediately that you’re not in Kansas anymore.

You stop and enter a 9-room Victorian farmhouse. Each room has been painted a different brilliant colour. In one large room elegant antique furniture contrasts with bold abstract paintings. Another room features Nova Scotia pottery, functional pieces and delightful faux baskets of berries. Rotating exhibits by painters, sculptors and photographers fill more rooms. Intricate stained glass creations hang in many of the windows.

Upstairs, a tiny room has more than a thousand vintage salt and pepper shakers, most of them humorous. Clothes by a local designer, retro fashion and jewelry made with found buttons fill one room, and around the corner is a room with brightly painted folk art. Even the two washrooms have art and collectables including a large stack of old books, many on the royal family.

This is the magical experience of Swoon – Fine Art, Antiques & Fashion (also on Facebook). Owner Brandt Eisner, an artist himself and the former assistant director of Argyle Fine Art in Halifax, cares about promoting the work of Nova Scotia artists, craftspeople and designers. I’m very pleased that he will be including my silk scarves, fabric cards, and painted T-shirts in this wonderfully eclectic mix.

At the Red Shoe Pub in June

Thursday, April 7th, 2011

I’ve never heard singer-songwriter Norma MacDonald perform, but I’m looking forward to her gig at the Red Shoe Pub in Mabou on June 11. The artwork on her second album, The Forest for the Trees, is just gorgeous, a delicate mixed-media piece in paint and yarn that suggests landscape and connections. You can see it on the home page of her website. It was created by artist-musician Daniel Ledwell, who has also painted a landscape for her forthcoming album Morning You Wake.

So what about her music? She was an ECMA Nominee in 2009 for Female Solo Recording of the Year. She grew up in New Waterford, Cape Breton, now lives in Halifax, and according to her website, she “manages to seamlessly meld her innate old-school country sensibilities with contemporary influences (Wilco, Patty Griffin, Bruce Springsteen) without losing a drop of authenticity.” Sounds good to me, and I’m glad she’s coming to the Red Shoe.

 

Signs of spring in Mabou

Monday, March 28th, 2011

Still no flowers, and it’s snowing again. But we know spring must be coming soon! According to local historian Jim St. Clair, one clear sign is the red ice from the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the shores of Prince Edward Island (with its red dirt) now piling into our bays. In the photo below you can see the slight red tint of the ice at West Mabou Beach.

The "red snow" at West Mabou Beach, taken from our driveway.

Two more clues:  the weight restrictions sign (so big trucks won’t get hopelessly stuck on muddy roads) and the lobster buoys, freshly painted in that family’s distinctive colours.  OK, I’m cheating, the lobster buoy photo was taken last year, but I expect to see them any minute now.

Note the word "SPRING."

Lobster buoys in tulip colours