I’m sitting in my office absolutely useless as the humidex reaches 36 C – no air conditioning, just a sorry little fan that is moving the hot air around. Luckily I’m self employed, so when it’s way too hot to work, I am quite free to just surf the web and obsess over the Canadian Hurricane Website and the latest proposed track of Hurricane Earl. We’ve actually spent the last day or so making sure that we have everything we will need (based on our previous experience of Hurricane Juan) to “weather the storm”. Hope for the best, prepare for the worst.
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Heat Waves and Hurricanes
Monday, August 23, 2010
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
And now for something completely different!
It was a really great exercise that got me thinking about why exactly I’m “drawn” to art journaling (pun sort of intended!). I kept a diary for awhile when I was growing up, and I’m definitely a list-writer and record keeper, and I also have a fascination with blank journals – everything from dollar store journals to wonderful handmade ones to Moleskine journals. When I was a kid I used to love to cut pictures out of old magazines and catalogues and play with them like paper dolls, and I used to like to try to draw but never felt that what I got on the paper did justice to the image that was in my head, so I guess I let my inner critic win for awhile.
So I think art journaling sort of brings all of that together and is a great place to play!
Friday, May 07, 2010
Hands of Time
This is my grandmother and grandfather Mary and Alden Hartling, taken around the time of their marriage in 1923 - my grandfather was 30 years old and my grandmother was 19. I could not begin to guess how many quilts she made in her life, many of which were made and sold, but I have three. I have many fond memories of sitting beside her in the evenings while she cut out quilt pieces using templates she drew on cereal box cardboard. She died in 1980, when I was 15 years old.
The picture on the right is of my great grandmother and great grandfather, Libby and Donald "Big William" Cameron, taken after the birth of my grandfather, William Hugh Cameron (the baby in the picture) in 1896. Libby outlived three husbands and one daughter, and died in 1945. I inherited an unfinished embroidered table cloth that she was working on at the time of her death, which is included in the exhibition. My grandfather in the picture, Bill, died three months before I was born, on December 24, 1964. My great grandfather, Donald "Big William", was a carriage and furniture maker, and made the spool bed, chairs, and spinning wheel in the exhibit.
If you are in the area between May 8 and June 12, please drop by the gallery, and drop back to this blog for pictures from the exhibit.