Thursday, October 14, 2010
Susanna Moodie
Canadian literary character, real life woman, pioneer, writer and guiding voice to those women back home on Canadian frontier life. Her husband was a drifting dreamer with little ambition and even less physical ability to survive in the wilderness. Suffered starvation and sickness alone with her children, learned to hunt for herself, learned to appreciate what her native neighbors taught her and brought her, and burnt letter after desperate angry letter to her husband when she had no one to talk to. To her sisters, to the women of England, and to her publisher she sent words of jolly stiff-upper-lip practicality, friendly tips on how to preserve wild strawberries, and documented the botanical wonders of the "new" world.
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Omar Khadr is still (t)here...

A Canadian citizen, he was arrested and sent to Guantanamo Bay Cuba, military prison, for something he did when he was 15 years old. Only 15!!! We don't put most Canadian kids (he is still Canadian) in prison at this age without a trial, but he was deported to the most contested prison in North America. I believe he was 17 when sent to Guantanamo and has been begging for a just hearing ever since. He's been there almost 10 years, and one can only imagine what that does to you, to grow up in a place like that. If he wasn't a terrorist at 15, he certainly has reason to be anti-northamerican now.
It's an extremely complex situation.
What does the government of Canada do with this citizen of theirs...?
This guy may have been able to re-habilitate when he was younger, but after years in this prison (which has been extremely contested by human rights groups around the globe) I wonder if he will ever be sane again.
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Deerscapes...


I made this blue-jean paper myself, under the watchful eye of my dear friend Habiba Smallen
(currently in Korea giving love and instruction to the young). These mini works of art will soon go up for sale at my favourite flower and gift shop, Coriander Girl. Coriander Girl is doing better than ever, and for those of you who haven't seen it yet, please do yourself a favor and go check out her dreamy little den of petals and colourful joys. Her blog is here (it's so fun to look at and read...go ahead! She's so great!) and the website is www.coriandergirl.com for any inquiries. She is such a kind and happy person, everyone should go and say hello. (She is nice enough to sell my cards and artwork at her store, too!) Thank you and love to all my little deers xx e.
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Square Foot Show!
The Illustrious: General Wolfe
Mixed media on wood
12x12''
Hey! Have a look at a drawing I just submitted to the Square Foot show at AWOL gallery today. It's part of a series (yet to be completed) called The Illustrious. It's featuring famous Canadians with fabulous names. For example, here you have General Wolfe...and what is that hanging about his head? ha ha! Watch for more to come...I've been thinking of a few people who need drawing: Michael J FOX, Marilyn BELL, Bobby ORR, Douglas CARDINAL and so many more. If you think of anyone with a particularly drawable name, let me know. xx e
ps. See that wolf skull in the upper right corner. Apparently, General Wolf had a regiment named after him at death, the 17th Lancers. Their badge, which i found kind of cool, is a skull and crossbones. I've adapted it a bit for the drawing. :) e
Friday, July 30, 2010
The Biennal Miniature Print Exhibition : BIMPE

I just found out that I have been chosen to be one of the many artists of the Biennial Miniature Print Exhibition, a.k.a. BIMPE. I'm super happy about it, as I've just started doing Lithography in the last couple of years and feel honoured to be chosen along with a number of great printers. It's a traveling show, which is really cool, and it will be traveling through September, October and November to different galleries in Vancouver and Edmonton. These galleries are the Federation Gallery and Dundarave Printmakers Gallery in Vancouver, and SNAP gallery in Edmonton.
Some recent printing experiments with drawing and stamping have been chosen. I've done a few series of prints which I will then draw on with pencil, felt, stamps and watercolour. The images are from this past 6 months, working with my friend and instructor Pam Lobb, who has gorgeous work of her own, and an amazing website to check out (click on her name or go to www.pamlobb.com)
I hope if you're on the west coast that you'll get a chance to see the show. It should be an extremely interesting and varried collection of affortable prints. :) e
Friday, June 4, 2010
Northern Flowers
Friday, May 28, 2010
Saturday, May 1, 2010
Keep Going Mutha-fckr!!!

1.Red Goat Tree: watercolour, ink and graphite on paper.
This goat seems to be becoming a central figure in a series that has yet to really coalesce in real life, but which has been growing in my mind like a forest.The one I drew first now lives with my friends in Montreal. That's the one with the giant tree, and the goat is eating a huge map of Canada. I'm hoping the series will just keep going and going.
Right now the Young Goat Image below is up on the wall at Belly Cafe at 1574 Queen, for anyone who'd like to check it out. This one is full of Canadian figures...you can see David Suzuki there in the back, Margaret Atwood, and Louis Riel.
2.Young Goat Pool: watercolour, ink and graphite on paper.
It's funny how your feelings about a certain piece can really change over time. When i first started this latest drawing I kind of hated it. Even when it was mostly done, I was still really unhappy about the way it had turned out, and I had basically decided not to show it but re-do the entire thing a different way.
After a few months break, I went back to it to tweak a few things. Suddenly I find that I'm enjoying the piece more and more. I'd still like to do it again anyway (always a good exercise) but suddenly it's one my favourite drawings to show people. I'm so glad I worked through the problems to get to a point of resolution and satisfaction.
So that's my reminder to everyone today. Don't forget that you can keep going, and re-try and erase and do-again, until you are happy with a piece of work. It just takes a bit of time and effort, which everybody has. You don't have to give it up. Sometimes it really pays off to keep going.
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Under The Guns

Hey folks! Over the last month I've been working under a small degree of self-imposed pressure in order to make a bunch of new work for a show going up in Montreal. The show, for you Montrealers interested in visiting in person (!), is being held at a lovely little resto-bar called Bistro In Vivo, located a few blocks east of Pie IX on St. Catherine street. I've also been working with a new friend and amazing local artist Pam Lobb, to improve my printing skills and try out some new techniques on the press. Sometimes working ''under the gun'' can generate some unexpectedly successful results, and I feel like this month has done just that.

These images are examples of the prints that came out of the past month's hard work. They're done with a brand new (at least to me) type of Litho technique, with something magic called Prollo Paper. Amazing stuff!! These pieces are printed, painted, and drawn on. Each one is unique. Hope you like them as much as I have enjoyed making them.

I also have a few pieces up at Belly Cafe & Catering on Queen West, for those of you in Toronto. I used to work at Belly, and they have the most AMAZING coffee and treats on offer. The ladies who work there; Luciana, Paulina and the delightfully spicy owner Nicole Kruzick, are so great to visit with and will always treat you right . I owe them a big thank you for all the good times, and for putting my work up in that cheery little spot. Check it out, and get yourself some zucchini cake.


Titles: Red Coyote & Bees; Bear, Gun & Snowberries; C-Battery II; Black Bear & Clover I; Bear, Gun & Light Clover. Mixed media drawings.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Animals & Nature: recent drawings

Wild animals hold a special power over us humans. We don't just acknowledge their existance on the fringes of our own constructed worlds. We, positively or negatively, are affected emotionally, psychologically, and perhaps spiritually by their wildness.



When we see them we may be afraid of them, but there is something fascinating and awe-inspiring about witnessing their living presence. We seek to aquire information regarding their lives. We delight in their movements, their habits and their remarkable physical bodies. We wonder what they think about. We speculate about why they do what they do. And we gaze and we watch. And we wonder.

I think that sometimes the world of nature, and the beings that belong to it, can exist as a kind of real-life magic for us. It is both sacred and natural. I hope we never lose that, and that our children will always scream with excitement when birds come and eat crackers from their mitts!
Saturday, January 9, 2010
Art Show at Poor John's Cafe !

I have a show up!!! Whoo-hoo!!!
It's titled Of Martyrs Heros & Beasts, and I invite everybody to come and see it! It's so fun to have some new work to show, and so far i've been really pleased with the reception. I've already sold two pieces. Yay!
It's at this AMAZING cafe (where i happen to be working !! ) called Poor John's Cafe, at 1610 Queen St. W, in Toronto. It's a really cool place, with great food and awesome staff and customers. I'm so proud to have my stuff up. The boss, John Silva, let me have a show there two years ago, and he's a pretty great fella to let me show again. Both he and his wife Christine do art as well, and have had their own (individual) show's up recently. So, this cafe is one to check out for interesting and diverse art practice in general.
Of Martyrs Heros & Beasts is up from January 4th-31st, and we're having a small celebration/meet-and-greet/art party next Friday the 15th of January. From 6-9pm. All are welcome and encouraged to come and drink with me and my buds. It's going to be fun! Come and check out the art, too.
Saturday, December 19, 2009
Omar Khadr is the Man in the Moon III

This image will be one featured in a show I'm doing at Poor John's Cafe on Queen street in Toronto ON, Canada.
The title of the show, and I'll be posting more images and details very soon!, is Of Martyrs Heros & Beasts.
I'm excited to show my new drawings and can't wait to see them all together and up on the wall! Everyone is welcome to join me on Friday January 15th, at the opening. But, i'll post directions and times a little later.
wish me luck!
Saturday, October 31, 2009
Drawings Summer 09
Friday, October 30, 2009
Ahhh.........La Familia!

I've been thinking about the quirks and twirls of families. Particularly, I've been wondering at the amazingness (or potential horrors) of the relationships we hold with the people who count as FAMILY, and all the weird twists and feedback loops we get into with them. Fierce love, desperate hurts, blindnesses, and the greatest depth of feeling...how do we even keep it all together? What is this thing?
There are people in my life who've embraced me and welcomed me into their own family moments, sharing their tenderness and giving me a place at christmases and thanksgivings, when i was orphaned temporarily from my own. My clan, my family, are also the friends and community members of my life. My emotional ties smoothly flow across the world to Peru, to Korea, Ireland, and all across Canada from Smithers to Montreal. I think I love these people easily, with loyalty and pride, and I have some strange and unknown faith that each of them is mine somehow, belonging to me and I to them.
Recently, I've been growing a steady affection for another family grouping. These two, father and son, work together, drink coffees, and eat together in the same little shop down the street from where I work. Watching them together, it makes me yearn for my own flesh and blood. I crave my brother's solid presence, and feel guiltily neglectful of my delicate and graceful grandmother, living by herself at 95; an independent woman, curious, and delighted still by life. I talk to her regularly, but why am I so far away? Am I such a product of my time and culture, a shirker of responsibility and emotional commitment? or does it really matter if we colour outside the lines a bit, the lines that define the great sagrada familia.
Friday, September 11, 2009
Loving musicians who love art!
This drawing, so far titled simply Caribou Swim, was drawn specifically for Antlers and Anchors, a new Toronto band headed by the talented Michael Owen Liston. It's one of a few drawings that will be used in promotion of his new album, which so far sounds amazing. I really like the music, and am so happy to be on the project.
It so happens that my friend Sandy is doing the graphic design, which is super. I'm really loving that collaboration experience, of course, because she's such an amazing person to work with and so talented. But I also have to say that my experience with musicians who need album art has so far been exceptionally wonderful. I love musicians that love art! Anyone else need any? Anyhoo, check out the beautiful music at www.myspace.com/
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