/Art Interiors

Christmas Gift Guide {For Him}

On the heels of yesterday’s Gift Guide {For Her}, today I thought I’d share a few ideas with my ladies on what to get for the man in your life this Christmas. Here’s my thinking: Protect his technology with hand-stitched leather; Map out your adventures together based on the terrain you’d like to see; Remind him of his childhood with original art; Snuggle up like real Canadians do; Turn the occasional glass of scotch into an adventure; Give him a domestic domain that he can dominate; Offer him a guide book for one-course meals made of smoked of meat; And keep him cozy and handsome all at the same time.

1. iPhone 5 + Card Sleeve, Makr  2. Topographic Map, Schoolhouse Electric & Supply Co.  3. “Pond Hockey 30,” Elizabeth Lennie, Art Interiors  4. Hudson’s Bay Co. Wool Blanket, The Bay  5. On The Rock Glass with Ice Ball Mold, OpenSky  6. Big Green Egg Smoker, Big Green Egg  7. Slow Fire, Chronicle Books  8. Shawl Collar Cable Knit Wool Sweater, Charles Tyrwhitt

By |December 13th, 2012|2 Comments

Make Something Mondays | Patrick Lajoie | The Lost Art of Photographic Transfers

My first introduction to photo transfer was on a trip to NYC many years ago. My husband and I were wandering through Soho with no particular agenda except to find inspiration around every corner. It was on a not-so-quiet side street that we stumbled upon a photographer offering her art to passers by for a mere $20. Using a vintage polaroid camera, she had us stand out in the street {surrounded by the hum of traffic} while she snapped our portrait. While the print developed, she carefully soaked her thick watercolour paper in water to prepare for the next step in the process. Once the print was ready, she removed the watercolour paper from the water, removed the protective film from the polaroid print, and quickly pressed them into one another, massaging the back of the polaroid with great fervour. When she peeled it back, the transfer that was left behind had a wonderfully vintage charm to it, revealing a portrait that is still one of my favourites of my husband and I to this day.

I admit that I haven’t really stumbled upon anyone doing photographic transfers with such elegance and charm since that memorable day in Soho. It seemed the art of photo transfer was lost to my world of wonder. Lost, that is, until last year’s Interior Design Show where I happily found Patrick Lajoie neatly tucked into a small end row booth presenting his art. A furniture maker by trade, Patrick had started to integrate his love of wood with his lifelong passion for photography, and the result is nothing short of lovely.

Of the many reasons I love Patrick’s work, one is his experimentation with scale. The first image above is my favourite {and is permanently on my wish list for Christmas or a birthday or an anniversary…really any occasion that might justify having it hanging over my fireplace!}. This piece is available in two sizes {6×36 and 11×60} in a limited edition series of 50 prints on wood panel. I adore the way the wood grain subtly reveals itself through the photograph, marrying its texture with the clouds in a way that charmingly belies the artist’s process.

I also love the vintage warmth and figurative subject matter of the second piece above, the out-of-focus photograph allowing a dream like remembering of a favourite day spent at the beach. The unexpected scale of these pieces feel like a narrow window into memories of days gone by, almost as if the viewer is squinting to see what it is they long to remember.

I think it is the dream-like state of remembering that I feel in Patrick’s work that has captured my heart and attention. I feel as though I can superimpose countless memories onto his images and linger there with nostalgic happiness.

Patrick is currently showing at Toronto’s One of A Kind Show {on until December 2nd} and his work can also be purchased through Art Interiors.

Happy Make Something Mondays!

xo
s.

By |November 26th, 2012|0 Comments

Art Interiors | Festival of the Smalls

Each year, my favourite Toronto art gallery hosts a delightful event intended to make original art truly accessible. Art Interiors‘ trailblazing event – The Festival of the Smalls – has been making original art affordable to all of us for 19 years now. The owners of the Forest Hill Village gallery – Lisa Diamond Katz and Shira Wood – carefully curate a delightfully eclectic mix of small canvases each year. Ranging from $55 to $250, the diverse works on offer are perfectly priced for your Christmas shopping list!
Paintings by Erin Vincent and Elizabeth Lennie
As you may remember from previous posts like this one, I am a big fan of curating interesting groupings of smalls. While large canvases can be a powerful way to bring soul to your space, groupings of smalls offer a dynamic and inspired approach to creating interest and anchoring a wall. Done well, a grouping of smalls can even script something of a story in the way each of the pieces speak to one another.
Today for Make Something Monday, I thought I would share some of the Art Interiors artists I love and  offer you a peak at their contributions to this year’s Festival of the Smalls. Up first, Elizabeth Lennie, an inspired Canadian artist who captures the visceral and emotional connection with two favourite Canadian past times – swimming and hockey.

Up next is Elzbieta Krawecka, whose large landscape paintings are spectacular and can truly anchor a space. {Take a look back here at my use of one of Elzbieta’s large canveses in a client’s beautiful traditional master ensuite.} Elzbieta’s masterful painting is both classic and refined, well worthy of being collected and engaged with daily. Her smalls are the perfect way to add her spectacular work to your collection! Here are a few of my favourites this year. If someone could just buy me the first one for Christmas {please + thanks} I’d be ever so delighted!

Emily Bickell has become well known for her remarkably realistic water surface studies. Often just close-up studies of the play of light and movement on the water, they communicate a serenity and quietude that can only come from spending time on the blue, surrounded by nature. I am particularly fond of the last two as they transport me to the lakes of Northern Ontario, a place of great serenity, relaxation and beauty for me.

If I had to sum up Kelly Grace’s work in one word, for me it would be nostalgia. As a child, I spent countless hours with our family’s Viewmaster, clicking through slides of beautiful scenes. I can still hear the hard plastic “click” the lever would make as I scrolled through the images. Kelly Grace’s series of paintings {see two below} instantly transport me back to my living room’s hardwood floor where I would lay on my belly or my back, totally enrapt by the images hidden inside this deceptively simple gadget.

The pieces I’ve shared today are just a small sampling of the small works available during Art Interiors‘ Festival of The Smalls, on until December 24th. If you are in search of something inspired, personal and entirely unique for a loved one on your list, you simply must pay a visit to the lovely ladies at the gallery for help with finding that perfect piece of original art. It’s the kind of gift that is guaranteed to surprise + delight.
Happy {Make Something} Monday!
xo
s.

By |November 12th, 2012|0 Comments