/Make Something Mondays

The Curated Collection | Altered Perspectives

I love it when something ordinary is transformed into the unexpected. When the simplicity of everyday objects are imbued with a new kind of beauty and meaning, it somehow wakes me up inside. It’s an invitation to remember that beauty can in fact be found in the commonplace with the help of a little juxtaposition and attention to detail. And that is exactly what I’ve stumbled upon with the discovery of a series of art plates entitled “Altered Perspectives.”

Marrying two classic Dutch art forms – china and painting – this collection elevates the upcycled china-canvas back to the status of collectible with a unique and entirely original twist.

My favourite in the current series is the grouping above. The texture of the clouds and the water strategically gathers together seemingly disparate plates into a beautiful collection of textural and geometric interest with a classic scene as its focal point.

The subject matter varies from still life to landscapes to marine scenes and portraits, and each collection is entirely original. More groupings in this series can be viewed here.

Wishing you an inspired Monday, filled with moments of recognizing beauty in the everyday.

xo
s.

By |February 11th, 2013|1 Comment

The Curated Collection | Matthew Schofield

I believe that good art is a filter to the world. It gathers and collects the memories and emotions and experiences that are difficult to shape and gives them form and meaning. Good art distills life and makes it somehow more palatable or beautiful or comprehensible or sane. Good art makes us feel something.

And that is how I feel about the work of Matthew Schofield. Matthew’s work makes me feel something. For me, it is a sense of being transported back into childhood memories, even though the images he paints are from a childhood not my own. There is something about the ordinary, everyday-ness of the scenes and moments and details he captures that reminds me of my former child-sized view on the world, and somehow this is comforting.

I first came across Matthew‘s work with the collection of pieces you are seeing here. Making the most of Snap Decisions was an exhibition of paintings created from the 4 x 6 inch photographs taken by  Matthew when he was young; accidental compositions unwittingly created at various stages of his youth that he had collected and kept over time. Random moments captured in youthful photographs now translated by the adult Matthew into these beautifully detailed paintings. As he calls it, “the ordered outcome of the cumulative imagery.”

{Admit it, you just “roared” like you did when you were a kid playing with your plastic T-Rex.}

My absolutely favourite painting from this collection was and is the one above. It is in fact carefully installed in my home in a secret place of honour where I get to engage with it daily. I see something of my son’s childhood and mine all wrapped up together in it, and I experience a joy, curiosity and freedom each time I linger.

I am entirely smitten with images from his latest collection as well – a continuation of my own childhood memories as seen through the lens of Matthew‘s. Memories of picnics and driving through The African Lion Safari in our sweaty car one summer and guests gathered around our dining table in the dim light of the evening. To me, Matthew elevates ordinary moments and reminds us that they are the canvas upon which we paint our lives.

What memories have you collected, that – if pulled together and considered for their potential – might just be beautiful? Wishing you a day where even the ordinary reveals it itself to be extraordinary when given the chance to really be seen. Thank you, Matthew, for the reminder and the inspiration.

xo
s.

By |January 21st, 2013|0 Comments

The Curated Collection | Janna Watson

What’s in a line? According to Janna Watson, a great deal. And as a long-time appreciator of her artwork, I agree unswervingly. At least when it comes to Janna’s gestural, exuberant, expressive lines. If you are not yet a fan of abstract art, this may be your conversion experience.

{photo: rene johnston}
“heart beats you”
As intriguing as the work she creates, Janna’s thoughts on her latest collection have me utterly enrapt:
How do I go about making a line that isn’t stupid?  This is one of the things I have considered for the resulting aesthetics of my work.  As one who desires to keep my perception and awareness in my process honest, I have found my answer to be this: To become childlike again; the line has a mind of it’s own.  Through seemingly non-sensical mark making movements, action becomes visible.  The childlike chromatic amusement turns everything weightless.  Suspended space.  Even the lines are floating.  Like stilettos dancing in the clouds.  It is the space between everything. 

“caterpillar cave”
“ferris wheel”
“koolaid lips”
The night turns on its tap and I drink it through multi-coloured straws.  Soul is the place.  I want spirit more than anything.  It is not about making a picture in a painting, it is about having an experience.  The lighter I become with the weight of colour, line and space, the less gravity matters and all these things being created float up into the sky; the place you might call in between everything.  My biggest reluctance in all of this is to not make a stupid line.  When I reach the desired childlike space between everything, I remember that a line has a mind of it’s own, and I must not try to possess it, lest I do, and it becomes stupid.   
“when I think of Paris I want to wrap my legs around it”
“irony is fun, fake and true”

I think it is the childlike weightlessness and freedom to Janna’s work that so compels me. I want to enter into that kind of joy and dwell comfortably in the tension of chaos and colour, order and form. And I think that means I want to dwell comfortably in my own skin. I want to experience the joy of living unfettered by fear.

For those of you in Toronto, Janna’s latest show just opened this past Friday at Bau-Xi Gallery and will be open until January 26th. Be sure to stop by and drink in life {in line and colour} through the multi-coloured straws of Janna’s work.

Happy Monday!

xo
s.

By |January 14th, 2013|0 Comments