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Thursday 29 March 2018

Batik Experimentation

Last year I blogged about a Batik course I was taking with the Toronto District School Board. Initially I was excited to try this wax resist dying method out and the first classes were interesting because we dyed fabric and then made wax designs on them with various implements. It was very experimental. Each week for several weeks, though, that is all we did and I was getting tired of this and not receiving any further instruction. I was getting frustrated and so, as often happens when I feel I am not learning anything in a class, I just stopped going. It was also a difficult place to get to being downtown and having to travel at the evening rush hour through all kinds of construction just was not my cup of tea.

The down side of that decision is that I didn't know how to get the wax out of the fabric once I was done. I googled and experimented with different methods. I tried to iron the wax out between newspaper. The wax was absorbed onto the newspaper but also left a mark that looked like a grease stain on the fabric. So I was given some old aluminum pots which I used to try to boil the wax off the fabric. This proved to be labour-intensive as the wax didn't totally come out each time and I had to boil it several times. I used boiled water from my kettle and poured it over the fabric to get the residue off. My mistake was doing it in my kitchen sink and of course the drain clogged.

I did finally get the fabric to a point where I could just iron the small residue wax off. After that I washed the fabric in hot water and hung it to dry. Below are the results of this experiment and I've decided that I am not going to try this method again. Too much work and not the result I expected.


Done with wooden blocks



Wire BarBQ brush



Dripping and drawing with wax

Dripping wax

This was going to be a landscape with sky, water, trees.

Done with a metal cookie press and the head of a nail

Done with a metal butterfly stamp. This is the one I tried
to iron the wax out and all the butterflies look like grease
stains.

Drizzling and dripping wax

Not all my experiments work out the way I expect them to but I still intend to use these fabrics for something in the future.

Wednesday 21 March 2018

Inspired by the Canoe

As I am currently housebound with the flu and have little energy for anything today, I thought I'd blog a day early. Tomorrow, I will likely be catching up on stuff I didn't do today.

I received a book titled, Canoe Country; The Making of Canada, written by Roy MacGregor. MacGregor's family roots begin in Algonquin Provincial Park in Ontario, Canada. He was a columnist for the Globe and Mail and has won a number of awards for his journalism. He is also an Officer of the Order of Canada.

I have read two of his other books, A Life in the Bush and Canoe Lake and I really love his story-telling which takes me to the places he writes about. It probably helps that I have been to or know of the locations in which his stories take place.

I picked up Canoe Country from the side table in the living room because having the flu and no energy, reading was something I could do in bed. As I read the entertaining introduction, I realized that I love to paint the canoe and my dad has also used the canoe as a subject in his sketches and paintings. Coincidentally, I am currently working on a painting of 4 canoes.

Due to the fact that I have also taken a yearly canoe trip for the last 6 years, this book really excited me. Here are some excerpts from the Introduction.

"who would criticize the canoe? It requires no fuel beyond human muscle. It does not pollute. It makes no noise. It takes us to and from familiar places we love the best, introduces us to magical places we would not otherwise experience. When properly conducted, its passage through these fragile, special landscapes leaves no mark."1

The quote below has been mine and I believe my fellow canoeists' experience.

"No man can define the attraction and the disadvantages of heat, thirst, flies, long hours bent on a paddle, under rain or sunshine, hard carries over rough portages, all things inherent to such a trip made through unfrequented territories. What then urges one to go, knowing well what is in store for him? Perhaps the charm lies in magnificent sunrise and sunset scenes, or in contending with the forces of nature by one's own physical power. Or is it the soothing calm of the forest, the restful horizon of silvery lakes, the alluring noise of rapids and waterfalls? The question is hard to answer! One goes in spite of it all, accepting in advance whatever may happen. He goes and returns satisfied, even if he only brings back memories of the beautiful panoramas he has had the privilege of admiring, memories of pleasant evenings spent around the camp fire, listening to the mysterious voices of the wild, memories of freedom he has enjoyed, far from the tentacles of civilization."2






 Above is one of my dad's canoe watercolour paintings






The above are early watercolours I did of canoes.

 

This watercolour is from one of my recent canoe trips.

Below is the painting I am working on currently in acrylic. I isn't finished yet but I like where it is going and I also like the square format.






1. MacGregor, Roy, Canoe Country;The Making of Canada, Pg. 6
2. MacGregor, Roy, Canoe Country; The Making of Canada, Quote by Raoul Clouthier, Pg 9

Thursday 15 March 2018

Outdoor Utility Boxes As Art

A while back I posted about the large utility boxes situated on street corners. Normally we don't even notice these boxes but they have been slowly turning into art installations. Here are a few more we've spotted around the neighbourhood. Thanks to Grace, who has also been keeping an eye out for them and has been sending me photos as well.  Enjoy!













Here is an article I found online about the program.

 Outside the Box


The Outside the Box program provides an opportunity for local artists to create works of art on traffic signal boxes across Toronto. Since 2013, over 350 boxes have been hand-painted by local artists, or wrapped featuring designs by local graphic artists, and transformed into extraordinary works of art. Artists and graphic designers applying to this program are encouraged to consider the context of the local area and the city as a whole. Art calls for hand-painted boxes, and graphic designs for wrapped boxes, are issued separately.

You can also check out this link for more on this program
http://toronto.citynews.ca/video/2016/04/15/video-utility-box-art-brightens-toronto/

Thursday 8 March 2018

Acrylic Painting Completed

Today, I did the last touches on the painting I have been working on. Because I hadn't painted with acrylic in a while, I struggled with it but I was glad to have been in a class where I could get some tips and try out other techniques. I am glad I pushed through and I am very happy with this painting. I don't have a title for it yet, so if anyone can help me with that, I would appreciate it.

Next week will be my last class and although there is another session, I don't think I'll register for it. Spring can be a busy time in our business and I think I'd feel a little guilty leaving paperwork to wait while I take a class. This past Tuesday, I did set up another painting in class. It is a square format and it is rather small. I don't think I have ever painted anything this small with acrylic so that will be a challenge for me as well. I started this one also by painting the canvas black. I rather liked painting on black instead of white. I'm not sure why. This new painting is also from one of my canoe trips and it has 4 red canoes in it. I believe the photo I'm using is from our French River trip. We did take 5 canoes on that trip but I left one out of the painting for composition's sake. Below is the painting with areas that I blocked in today.




And here is my finished painting.