Recently in Art Category

The opening of Landscapes of Vancouver at the Yaletown Gallery was a very busy affair on Friday night. I managed to capture this shot before it got busier. Over 100 people came out to see the show, which runs until March 16th and features the work of 19 local photographers.
I know Leftantler was thrilled, as was I, by the number of people who came out. It was great connecting with friends, putting faces to many people we had only known through their photostreams previously.
My thoughts on the night took me back to what Alex Waterhouse-Hayward was talking about at Northern Voice the week before. There is something special about seeing photgraphy printed, framed and in a gallery. Especially when it's someone you know!
As you can see below the gallery itself became very busy. There are more photos from the opening night on my flickr page which demonstrate the excitement!
It was actually like this for most of the two hours of the opening, with folk spreading out into the hallway and the Gelato shop next door.

Thanks to everyone who shared the occasion and made it such a memorable experience. If you have chance to visit the gallery over the next two weeks I strongly encourage you to do so. After you've been it would be great to hear what you thought, and whether your purchased a piece!

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Landscapes of Vancouver - opens tonight !!!

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Very shortly I will be off to the Yaletown Gallery to see Leftantler's photo in the Landscapes of Vancouver show. I'm really excited! The show is on for a couple of weeks but you can have a virtual tour here if you can't make it downtown :-)

Congratualtions to Leftantler of course, but also to all the other photographers - it's shaping up to be an awesome collection,

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Moosehat's Vancouver Moose-ings Part 113

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Another piece of seawall art. "Welcome to the Land of Light" by Henry Tsang, a local artist who was born is Hong Kong but raised here in the city. This work is from 1997. The photo shows the third line of a poem which complete reads "Come to time where people talk different but good together."

I like this piece and it reminds me of the game I get to play frequently on the bus. Count how many different languages you can hear being spoken. I think my record is seven or eight, complicated by the fact that although I know it's often a different language, I've no idea which one!

Vancouver is an amazing place and every so often I get to write an entry on moments that bring this home to me. Henry's work captures the excitement and opportunity of living in the city. As the last line of his work says "Here, you begin live like chief. World same like in you hand."

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Moosehat's Vancouver Moose-ings Part 111

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This thin red line adorns a section of the seawall by David Lam Park. It is called Red Horizontal and dates from 2005 by an artist called Gisele Amantea. The piece was created with the cooperation of local residents and according to the Georgia Strait (A good little guide to walkable public art) addresses '... ideas of personal space in an impersonal context.' A quick hunt around online leads to other interesting work by Amantea, less of horizontal line than a window into the work of a Canadian artist ...

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Helvetica - the documentary film

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souvenir of Helvetica
Moose-ing uploaded by leftantler.

Tonight I had the pleasure of seeing Gary Hustwit's excellent documentary film about the typeface called Helvetica.

A string of interviews and film sequences were carefully put together and the resulting film should become not only a standard reference for typography but for graphic design more widely.

After the film there was a Q&A session with a panel consisting of Gary Hustwit, the director, Jim Rimmer and Douglas Coupland. This was a very entertaining half hour and it was good to see Douglas, Gary and Jim so enthused about the subject. I gained a new appreciation of Helvetica on it's 50th anniversary and suspect my font habits will be changed forever!

I of course was 'taken' by Leftantler and once again was grateful. I wasn't brave enough in a theatre full of graphic designers to ask my question (Is Helvetica as good for numbers as it is for text?) but the ones that were asked were answered informally and made for good entertainment and a good overall feeling about the evening.

Note to organisers: learn how to manage line-ups - too many people made grumpy by blatant queue jumping and poor crowd control.

The DVD is planned to come out in about 3 months and will quickly be added to our collection. For one thing Gary Hustwit tells us there are lots of extras, which will be very cool. If you get chance to see this film, you're in for a treat.

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When I consort with artists ...

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165131931.jpgSo it's been an interesting end to the week. On Thursday night a good friend invited Leftantler and myself to an art opening at the Elissa Cristall Gallery in South Granville. The exhibition, called 'Cartographies' included this piece from Toronto artist, critic and curator Pete Smith.

To me this was fantastic, even before Pete started talking about it. It is acrylics on canvas which then has a shiny glaze. Sorry if I don't describe this properly. To be honest I'm generally quite intimidated by the Art World, despite being a proud card carrying member of the Vancouver Art Gallery!

From memory Pete talked about the painting being a kind of a collage of current day culture, something which he expresses far more elegantly than myself on his own blog.

"Billboards. Televisions. Magazines. Internet. Kleenex boxes. Movie screens. Airport lobbies. Subway tunnels. Jpg's. Graphiti. Screen savers. Utube.Portablev DVD/LCD. High Definition. Traveling through the atmosphere in waves. The speed of light. Breathingin images like air, we process and exhale."

Nice, and also the line:

"... cartographies of the visual landscape."

However, I struggle with Pete's comment "These works give substance to the ephemerality of the image." but given I understand little about the critical art, two out of three is not bad! In fact this reminds me of the Crash Test Dummies song "When I go out with Artists." The chorus of which is:

If I could see, if I could see, if I could
See all the symbols, unlock what they mean
Maybe I could, maybe I could, maybe I
Could meet the artists, and get to know them personally

Which is interesting because about two months ago, for reasons I won't go into here, I painted my first painting in thirty-five years. I was very happy how it turned out and as it happens I chose acrylics. Not because I knew anything about them but because I happened to be on Granville Island one day and I came across Kroma Acrylics. At that point I hadn't even thought of painting, but I was inspired by the colours and the fact that it's a local company that produces small volumes etc ... but I digress ...

One thing Pete did was glaze his piece. This gave it an amazing finish which I couldn't help be curious about. However, my insecurity prevented me doing anything about it. Anyway Leftantler and I went outside the gallery to get some fresh air in this mental heat wave we've been in. We happened to spot a condo we'd seen featured on a home makeover show when Pete Smith, himself, also came out to take some air.

The traditional Canadian pleasantries were exchanged and then I convined myself to be brave. So I asked Pete how he did the glaze. He explained it was some kind of self-levelling glupe which turned out to be quite tricky. The problem with the canvas was that the glupe tended to pool in the middle between the support struts. Pete explained that now he paints on wood, which is easier to deal with! I assume he stretches the canvas over word, but then, what do I know?

I then asked Pete (maximum bravery turned on) why he chose acrylics. He responded that they are plastic, and given we live in a plastic world they seemed appropriate. Especially when you go back to his quotes above!

Later, at home I was reading Michaelangelo and the Pope's ceiling (highly recommended) and in this there was reference to an amazing bridge across the Bosphorus (but that's another blog post) originally thought up by Leonardo da Vinci. It just so happens that Leftantler attended a famous exhibition at the Haywood Gallery in 1989 of the grand masters work (turns out Her Majesty (that is The Queen not Leftantler) is a big fan/collector). Leftantler still has the exhibition catalogue so I went hunting for a drawing of the bridge.

i did not find it, but I did find a drawing called a"A cloudburst of material possession" from about 1510. Now I would love to have put the image in the post but I need to apply for reproduction rights from the Royal Collection. In this application I would have to explain it was for a blog post on the 'publication' called The MooseHat Blog! I just couldn't bring myself to do it! So please click through to see it.

The interesting thing for me was that Leonardo's drawing was to quote from the catalogue "... A torrent of human artefacts and tools, including rakes, barrels, bagpipes, clocks, set-squares, spectacles, ladders and pincers - rain down on the earth from a turbulent layer of clouds." So I ask myself, how different is this from Pete Smith's  "Billboards. Televisions. Magazines. Internet ..." etc?

It would appear that I can identify the dots but not have the elegance of language to join them together! I recommend you head down to South Granville and see Pete's work - it is for sale - sadly far above what I can muster, I've just settled for being inspired enough to go back to Kroma, buy some more colours and a new canvas and start working on the second painting in 35 years! 

About Me

Based in Vancouver, BC, Stewart is a financial storyteller. He helps organisations tell their story through numbers.

Picture of Stewart (© Kris Krug 2006)

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