/painting

The Curated Collection | Vicki Smith

I have already confessed to you many-a-time my love affair with water. I was a water baby from birth. The weightlessness and adventure of defying gravity in the clear, azure liquid of my backyard pool enabled me to dance the way I did in my dreams. Graceful, fluid movements like an elegant figure draped in sheer chiffon – that was how it appeared in my imagination.

Vicki Smith’s latest collection takes me right back to those endless hours of imaginative play from my childhood. I find that her choice of perspective emphasizes the weightless defiance of gravity, the suspension and fluidity of movement while breaking the surface of the water. The anonymity of the figures allows me to imagine it is me doing that silent, graceful dance. And the vintage-style bathing costumes simply charm me.

As I project myself into these scenes of relaxation and play, stillness and movement, I am somehow calmed and disarmed as if I’ve spent the afternoon in the pool. Perhaps painting, like water, has the power to heal? It most certainly has the power to transport.

Smith’s next solo exhibition will be held August 10 – 24, 2013 at Bau-Xi Gallery, Toronto. Well worth the visit for a dip into the waters of Vicki’s imagination.

Happy Monday!

xo
s.

By |August 5th, 2013|0 Comments

The Curated Collection | Elizabeth Lennie

Happy Canada Day! In celebration of the birthday of our home and native land, I had to share one of my favourite Canadian painters with you today. I adore Elizabeth Lennie‘s work for many reasons, but I think it is her subject matter that has most captured my Canadian heart. She understands and expresses our nation at play, capturing the essence of our outdoor pastimes in a way that is beautifully nostalgic. I am easily transported and transposed into her work, back to a younger, more innocent time. Back to a time when “time” seemed to stretch on infinitely. Back to a time when “summer” meant two months off to just play.

My guess is that this Canada Day long weekend, many of you will be spending your days by {or even better, in} the water, just as Lennie imagines you.

I know of few artists who have perfected the art of painting water with such a casual, painterly stroke. As her work has evolved, there appears to me to be an even greater air of expression and “oneness” between Lennie and the water. She has clearly spent many years researching her paintings by plumbing the water’s depths, feeling the pull and drag of it between her fingers as she draws herself through the blue, dappled-light of liquid dreams. From surface to underworld, Lennie captures the azure essence of what draws us all in and allows us to lose countless hours while finding our sense of play again.

Each time I view Lennie’s latest collections I am inspired to simply get outside. I also pine for a pool in the backyard and a weekend cottage retreat. A pool was perhaps the one and only luxury my family had growing up, and it turned me into the water baby I still am today.

Elizabeth Lennie‘s work is available through Art Interiors in Toronto.

How are you spending your Canada Day weekend? I hope it involves some play time, much laughter, and the opportunity to connect with the ones you love.

xo
s.

By |July 1st, 2013|1 Comment

The Curated Collection | Kelly Reemtsen

Provocative and compelling. That is my first reaction to the work of fine artist Kelly Reemtsen. The unexpected pairings of pretty and powerful depicted in her paintings are at once arresting and demanding of a response. From the moment I first laid eyes on her work, Reemtsen had both my rapt attention and my most sincere admiration. She also had me brimming with questions and the desire to sit down for coffee with her for a conversation that would no doubt be utterly fascinating.

I wanted to know if Reemtsen was being literal or ironic; direct or subversive. As it turns out, Kelly is not making an ironic statement about feminism. She is not theorizing about housewives. Rather, she is painting modern day empowerment as she sees it.

Grace and strength, beauty and empowerment are juxtaposed and yet entirely at home together in fit-and-flare silhouettes, pearls and “any tool necessary to get the job done.” I believe Kelly in her sincerity, and yet still I wrestle with my own personal tensions as a woman and the ways in which I see them threaded throughout these prim and unexpectedly powerful narratives.

Clearly, Kelly’s subjects are women who will do whatever it takes to be extraordinary. They are the kind of women I admire; the kind of women who intimidate me; the kind of woman I’d love to become in my more polished moments.

I think the questions Kelly’s work calls to mind are how I can more aptly marry beauty with fierceness; fearlessness with gentility; pretty with powerful. I love that she has me asking these questions. It feels to me as though she’s saying we don’t have to choose between these worlds. Pretty girls can get their hands dirty. Fierce girls can wear pearls. Graceful women can use power tools. We can get the job done and look good doing it.

Thank you, Kelly, for your compelling and beautiful paintings and the conversation they spark within me. I am sincerely inspired by your courageous, feminine strength and am honoured to have encountered your work.

xo
s.

P.S. Would you believe Kelly actually wraps gifts in maps just like me? And phone book pages, too. The best.

By |January 7th, 2013|0 Comments