A Noticeable Void

A noticeable void in blog posts recently; yet a few things brewing in absentia: IOTA PRESS

Since my last contact I have become a coop member at Iota Press, a letterpress studio in Sebastopol whose proprietor is Eric Johnson.   An artist residency ( of sorts) in that I hope to experiment with the medium  and make discoveries along the way.  I am  drawn to this old  printing technology and particularly the "dents" that the presses make.  More to come as work progresses.

Mixing color at Iota Press

setting type on press bed

A RETURN TO ICELAND

I return to Iceland on the 13th,  only a  jaunt  for two weeks.  This time I will circumnavigate the island by car, taking in new sites as well a visiting some favorites from last year's adventure.  More to come on the blog as I will post images from the trip as well as work inspired from this unique landscape.

ART EXHIBIT AT RISK PRESS GALLERY

And finally I ask you to mark your calendar for Cuttings, an exhibit of  mixed media constructions, artist books, and recent work inspired by my travels to Iceland.  I will be installing the show in October at Risk Press Gallery in Sebastopol.

Dates:  October 4 - 27 Opening: Saturday, October 5th   5 - 8 Closing:  Saturday,  October 26th  5 - 6:30

Revisiting Iceland with Elizabeth Sher

Last summer I spent a month at the Gullkistan artist residency  in Iceland.  I shared the experience with artist and filmmaker, Elizabeth Sher.   She currently is showing work from that experience in her exhibit, Evolutionary Processes, at the Sebastopol Center For the Arts from April 4th through May 10th.  On April 27th, 4:30 - 6, we will talk about our shared experiences, her work and stories that inspired it.  Come hear more! Sebastopol Center for the Arts

282 S. High Street Sebastopol, CA

Hours: Tu - Fri 10 - 4,  Sat 1 -4

707- 829-4797

e-postcard

500 Handmade Books

I am pleased to announce the inclusion of my artist book, Tangled Dreams in the upcoming Lark Crafts Publication, 500 Handmade Books Volume 2.  Some of you may know that Tangled Dreams is one of several projects on which I collaborated with artist Elizabeth Sher.  The book will be released to the bookstores in  September of 2013. Tangled Dreams, 2012 Artist Book with wrap. 8.25 x 8.13 x .33 inches

Tangled Dreams in Wrap

Tangled Dreams

Tangled Dreams Cover

It started with a rusty bedspring that I found in a barn and took into my studio. I noticed the intriguing patterns of its shadows playing against my studio wall and began taking a series of close-up photographs of them.  This humble beginning led to three series of work: mixed media works on paper, an artist book and a video.

Tangled Dreams is one of six Edition Varie.  The artist book is an accordion fold made with digital images of bedsprings layered and manipulated; the images became the basis for an examination of memory, dreams and loss. The book reflects a range of feelings found in our dreams from twists and turns, to torques, coils and agitated sensations.

Materials for the book include acrylic ink on Moab Entrada Natural 190 lb. rag paper, waxed & stained organza silk and Cave paper.

The Infinite Book

The Sometimes Books Gallery presents yet another provocative show entitled, The Infinite Book.  Zea Morvitz, one of the coordinators, wrote "If we can shed our usual association of book with the paper and cloth objects stored in our libraries, and think instead of the book as a medium for recording, storing, and transmitting thoughts, words, images from one person to others now and in the future, we see that the book has taken---and will take an infinite or at least a very large number of forms: from clay slabs, ivory tablets, skin scrolls, engraved stones, to ink on paper, to audio file, to digital image on electronic device, and to forms we have not yet imagined."

"Artist books are visionary creations: books that might have been, books that may be; books that may never be, or may never take any form except as an artist book. Sometimes Books Gallery presents books from the storehouse of infinite possibilities."

I have two works in this exhibit:    Live  2010  and MuseumUn  2006

Live, 2010

Sometimes Books is open Saturdays & Sundays noon to 4pm & by appointment

Eubank Studio: 11101 Highway One, #105, Point Reyes, CA 94956

 415.669.1380. sometimesbooks@gmail.com

And this exhibit is running concurrently  with  An Inventory of Al-Mutanabbi Street, an exhibit of artist books and broadsides made in response to the car bombing on Al Mutanabbi Street, a street of booksellers in Baghdad in March of 2007.   It is on view at Gallery Route One, in the same building complex as  the Eubank Studio, site of the Sometimes Books exhibit.

 

 

 

 

the residents & a few artists we met along the way

  2013 opens with "The Residency Show" at the  Gatewood Gallery, University of North Carolina, Greensboro (UNCG) on January 14th through February 1st.  The show features work of faculty and other artists who participated in artist residencies recently.  I sent work inspired by my experiences at the Gullkistan Artist Residency in Iceland last summer.

 

mtlaugwalksections

About the work:

I walk a lot when I travel. Walking allows me to wander wherever I wish, and not be limited to "auto driven" roads. I can choose a way, a pace, and I often see more. I love how walking shifts me from an accelerated frenetic state of mind to a contemplative one.  And slowing down has a way of opening up space.  The artist, Richard Long, once wrote that "a walk expresses space and freedom and the knowledge of it can live in the imagination of anyone, and that is another space too."

And I found that space in Iceland last summer at the Gullkistan Artist Residency;  not only because  "eg' gekk mikið!", but also because I discovered that Iceland is a land with panoramic views and horizontal ribbons of sky, land, and sea.  My response was elemental and primordial and it took me back to a place of "beginning"—an invigorating feeling that I want to experience again.

I went to Gullkistan with the intent of incorporating the act of walking into my artistic process. Before I left, I purchased a Garmin GPSmap 62, a device that records tracks of walks.  In Iceland, I used it to collect the shapes and lines of my walks while exploring the new terrain.  I accumulated many tracks.  In the studio, I printed them out and displayed them on the wall.  These "visual walks" were a beginning.  However, I wasn't clear on how I would use their shapes and lines in a body of work.

I had heard of Iceland's "geologic wonders".  I was interested in how this geology related to its constantly shifting landscape. I saw this in lava beds, glaciers, craggy scree slopes, black sand beaches, glacial carved rocks and basaltic columns. These materials create a myriad of contours and textures. I have started to explore how this topography might influence my work so that it reflects the natural tensions of the land.

The work in the exhibit is a beginning of an investigation that combines both line cuts (sections from the tracks) from a walk and the contours of the landscape. The work comes from one of six walks that I tracked in Iceland; the one here is the trek up to the summit of Mt. Laugarvatn, a mountain behind the town of the residency with views of it and beyond. The track provides evidence of a step-by-step process, like walking, and is broken into 23 sections to suggest that.  The constructions, mtlaugwalkcut1, mtlaugwalkcut2, and mtlaugwalkcut3 are the result of an investigation of line and form taken from the walks.

mtlaugwalkcut1_angle view

mtlaugwalkcut1_angle view

mtlaugwalkcut2_angle view

mtlaugwalkcut2_angle view

mtlaugwalkcut2_detail

mtlaugwalkcut3_angle view

Artwork:

mtlaugwalkcut1, 2, & 3 are mixed media constructions made from book covers, cloth & board on a birch panel. Each are 9.13 x 8.66 x 3.25 inches  ©2012

The Residency Show

 

 

 

 

 

The Last Hurrah

The Last Hurrah features the work of nearly 100 artists who have exhibited at Quicksilver Mine Company since the gallery opened in 1983.  It is Quicksilver's final exhibit and I am honored to be a part of it.   For 30 years, Khysie Horn has provided many of us a place to show our work and I am so thankful to her for that!  Please come to celebrate and honor her years of service,  support and the memorable and moving exhibitions that she has hosted over the years. The Last Hurrah runs from  November 16 - December 31st  with opening reception on Saturday, November 17, 4 - 6.

Gallery location:  6671 Front St/Hwy 116, Downtown Forestville  707.887.0799

Gallery hours:  11 - 6 daily, Closed Tues & Wed

Quicksilver exhibit

Transformation & Re-Purpose

 

My work and the work of Tari Kerss will be featured in Transformation & Re-Purpose, an exhibition at the Mendocino College Gallery.  Over twenty years of my work in a variety of mediums will be represented:  clamshell box and book constructions, word works, books, algae works and drawings.  The show runs from October 18 - November 9, 2012 with an opening reception on Thursday, October 18, 4 - 6 pm.   If you are up and about in Ukiah, please stop by.

 

In California

Where you currently can view my artwork:


I now have some artwork on consignment at the Kala Art Institute.  If in the area, you may contact Andrea Voinot at Andrea@Kala.org or call her at 510-841-7000 x206.

Also artwork at the

Artifacts of Passage Exhibit:

July 14 - August 28

At Orangeland   1250 Mason Street  San Francisco, 94108

Gallery Hours:  Thurs & Fri  2 - 5,  Sat  11 - 5  email: candaceloheed@comcast.net

*For parking near Orangeland, try Vallejo Street Garage 735 Vallejo or Chinatown Parking 728 Pacific or iPark 1345 Taylor Street

 

And

Sometimes Books

Spring  & Summer 2012 Show

Eubank Studio 11101 Hwy 1 Pt. Reyes 94956  Gallery open weekends: 12 - 5

Artwork on view at Orangeland and Sometimes Books:

 

Bless Bless

I'm home now after a memorable and wonder filled six weeks of work and travel in Iceland, accumulating experiences, meeting people and photographing the dramatic land, water and sky scapes.   As I settle back, my mind is still moving with ideas and imagery from the trip. Good-bye residency and good-bye Iceland.  "Bless, bless", as they say in Iceland.  Many thanks to Alda and Kriestvieg from the Gullkistan Residency and Linda and Ægir, friends and tour guides.  You made my trip filled with memories and many inspirations for future work.  I look forward to what will come from this experience and I already can't wait to come back, see you again and continue where I left off!

I will continue to add Icelandic imagery to this blog as I begin to process what I collected.  For this entry, I have posted miscellaneous images that showcase my work and experiences at the residency.

One of my projects during the residency was tracking my walks with a gps device.  I accumulated many tracks which I then printed out to get a sense of what I had.  Lots of words came to mind: scaling, scales, "fisk", a scale of scales, step by step, planes, topography, three-dimensional, planar, linear, line shapes, broken lines, contour, installation, context, meander, wander, lost, found, mapping.

 

I also made a screen out of wire from a rusty fence that I found and cut up on the farm.  Liz and I used it to project our video, Tangled Dreams, for the residents.  I then took many detail shots of it for my photo library.  Interesting to me later when I found some stones with cracks that echoed some of the wire shapes.

 

I also experimented with the ash from the Eyjafjallajökull Volcano on a variety of papers, including brown craft paper and yupo.  Examples follow:

And finally Icelandic kennings haunt me.  I've collected many during my stay and suspect that some  will find their ways in future work and titles.

 

 

 

 

 

Scree wise?

  Without seeing Iceland's glaciers, one knows by the abundance of scree slopes (skriða) throughout Iceland, that they exist. Glaciers break down the land and broken rock fragments accumulate  at the base of hamars (crags) and mountain cliffs.  Deceptively smooth from a distance!

 

 

 

On my last day of the residency, Alda (one of the residency directors) and her husband, Jon took us on a walk down to the "milky" waters outside of Laugarvatn (an endearing term they give to rivers that looked white from a distance).  Once at the river, rather than return the way we came, Jon wanted to follow the river out and asked if anyone might be interested.  Most opted not too. His children and Auke followed Jon and  I elected to as I wanted to gps a longer walk .  Little did I know that I would call this one my "challenge" walk.

As the terrain became rockier and rockier,  it became clearer that we would not be able to walk down along the river. Jon pointed up along the hillside, "this way up".  Hmm?  Straight up a hillside of scree with minimal plants for anchors. Trusting an Icelander (???),  I followed along until I was no longer able to establish firm footing in the abundant scree, slipping and sliding with no plants to hold onto. Scree wise?

Somehow, with Aucke's help (and body), I found a way up to meet the others at the top.  Thank you Auke!