The weather was really quite mild for middle of February. I love the avenues of bare winter trees in front of the elegant buildings. Above is the Hotel des Invalides.
Our daughter Grace came with me.
The weather was really quite mild for middle of February. I love the avenues of bare winter trees in front of the elegant buildings. Above is the Hotel des Invalides.
Our daughter Grace came with me.
There is a special exhibition at the national gallery of Canada this month about Joyce Wieland’s lipstick prints.
Joyce Wieland (1930 - 1998) lived in New York between 1962 and 1971. Living in the States heightened her awareness of her own Canadian identity and she became inspired her to create artwork about her love for Canada. She said that she thought of Canada as female.
Wieland made a series of lipstick (lip-synch) prints between 1970 and 1974
One of her most famous is her lipstick print of Canada’s national anthem, Oh Canada.
Joyce Wieland then created an embroidery of red lips and white teeth singing O Canada. I wrote about it in 2008 on modernist aesthetic. here
She continued this series with an animated film of her embroidered lips and our national anthem.
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Image of Joyce Wieland with her embroidered O Canada lip-synch animation (York university digital library) |
Read more about Joyce and this original work at the Art Canada Institute.
Also on display this month at the National Gallery of Canada is the lithograph The Arctic Belongs To Itself made in 1973.
It is activist art, made to create awareness in the viewer of resource exploitation and indigenous rights. Joyce Wieland used a wide variety of media including quilts and film, before the time when such a multi disciplinary practice was common.
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The Arctic Belongs to Itself lithograph, silkscreen and etching on wove paper by Joyce Wieland, 1973 |
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Floating World by Linda Finn acrylic on canvas 24 x 30 inches |
It's also about some other late artists from northern Ontario Canada, a place I have lived for over 30 years. I feel that each of them worked very hard to support art and artists in our beautiful, spread-out community. I’m writing this post to sing out their names with respect.
Linda Finn's paintings, prints and assemblages were a constant at the Perivale gallery here on Manitoulin. I sought out her innovative work whenever I visited the gallery.
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detail of Linda Finn's assemblage of bible pages printed with repeated images of a soldier |
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Essie's letter, monoprint with chine colle on paper, 2008 (detail) by Linda Finn |
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ear hear earth heart by Ann Beam, acrylic on paper, 24 x 30 inches |
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Mermaid Quilt by Judy Martin, heat transfer on polyester, dyed velvet, hand stitched, 28 x 33.5 inches 2025, original painting by Grace Martin when she was five years old |
I made a small quilt this month. I'm calling it dream cloth.
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bundle of old sweaters |
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Veiled by Anna Wagner-Ott |
They climb the high ice-covered mountain, then they fly away.
But you and I don't do such things.
We climb the same mountain;
I say a prayer for the wind to lift us but it does no good; you hide your head so as not to see the end..
Downard and downward and downward and downward is where the wind is taking us.
And then we are simply falling....
And the world goes by, all the worlds, each more beautiful than the last;
I touch your cheek to protect you.
Poem by Louise Gluck
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January 14 1:50 pm |
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February 16 7:16 am |
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March 14 7:22 am |
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May 15 6:54 pm |
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June 12 8:25 am |
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July 14 8:48 am |
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August 16 6:23 am |
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September 23 9:34 am |
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October 7 6:48 pm |
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December 21 4:34 pm |