Tuesday, September 8, 2015
Friday, August 7, 2015
Sunday, July 26, 2015
Insectile Duality
If you happen to find yourself in northern Michigan, I hope you'll consider visiting a very special (at least to me!) exhibition at Three Pines Studio in Cross Village.
This little beaded caterpillar (more about him here) was the inspiration for this project and show - my husband and I each choose six insects,twelve total, and interpreted them in our separate types of media. Robin used three different types of printing techniques; linoleum block, white line and reduction. I worked in a mixed media style, starting with painted canvases and adding all types of fiber techniques including, embroidery, beading, applique, needle felting and more.
This was Robin's first show and it was a joy to be able to share it with him.
In the gallery, each of our pieces hung side by side.
Those of you familiar with my work might notice that the pieces are a littler looser and more whimsical than is typical for my work - I'm not really sure why, it just moved in that direction and I decided to follow.
This is my favorite of Robin's pieces, an inchworm done using the reduction printing method, with eight layers of color.
Joann and Gene, the owners of the gallery, our delightful to work with and they have displayed our work beautifully - at the opening reception there was even these super cute "ladybug" bites!
Labels:
ART,
beads,
exhibition,
insects,
linoleum print,
mixed media,
reduction print,
white line print
Tuesday, July 21, 2015
Beneath the Lilac Canopy - "Telephone" is Published!

Thanks to generous donations in the name of a former summer cottager, the Mackinac Island Community Foundation is pleased to announce publication of “Beneath the Lilac Canopy: Mackinac Island in Poetry.”
A fund created by friends and neighbors to honor Lorabeth Fitzgerald after her 2009 death makes publication of the poetry anthology possible. “Lorabeth loved poetry and she loved Mackinac Island,” says anthology editor Glen Young. “Her love of both lives on in this wonderful new collection,” he adds.
Mackinac Island Community Foundation executive director Robin Dorman appreciates Fitzgerald’s influence on not only the anthology, but also the wider community. “In the short amount of time I was blessed to share talking about books, poetry and other forms of art with Lorabeth, I was indeed given a great gift,” Dorman says.
Including the work of more than 50 writers from the Mackinac region and beyond, “Beneath the Lilac Canopy” comprises more than 150 pages of poems inspired by Mackinac Island and the entire Straits of Mackinac area.
Those who knew Fitzgerald found motivation in both person and place. Jim Lenfesty, poet and Fitzgerald’s summer neighbor, says, “She saw poetry as a lifeline and guide, and said so. After her death, we established a fund in her name at the Mackinac Island Community Foundation, and the result is this wonderful collection of Mackinac inspired poems. It is an honor to be in her company again.”
Peter Olson, who divides his time between Mackinac Island and Petoskey, likewise found motivation in his longtime friendship with Fitzgerald. “Every time I had a conversation with Lorabeth, I felt like the traveler from Thoreau's ‘Walden.’” Olson, vice president for academic affairs and student success at North Central Michigan College, adds, “I was continually and delightfully surprised at the depth and breadth of what she knew and of the new paths she was willing to tread in search of the beauty and power of language.”
Jim Bogan, a lifelong Mackinac Island summer resident, filmmaker, and author of several volumes of poetry, also appreciates Fitzgerald’s generosity and inspiration. “What a delightful opportunity to join poets old and new in celebrating Mackinac in memory of dear Lorabeth Fitzgerald,” he says of the anthology’s impetus.
Bogan believes, “An anthology is a ‘gathering of blossoms’ and this metrical bouquet will add to the tradition of all those who are launched into flights of observation and of insight by the Island.”
In addition to the poetry, “Beneath the Lilac Canopy” features the work of several visual and performing artists as well, thanks to the inclusion of the “Telephone” section of the book. “Telephone” is a collaboration interpreting Mackinac Island in music, painting, pottery, and more. The process started with a musical composition, sent to Bogan, who was asked to write a poem in response. His poem went to painters, and so on, in the manner of the childhood game of telephone.
Tess Miller, adjunct flute instructor at Olivet College, helped coordinate the “Telephone” program, appreciates having the works included in the anthology. Miller says, “It was fascinating to see how various threads of ideas were maintained as well as which were either lost or picked up again later.” She believes, “While artists can become very adept at using their own materials to express such ideas, there are also many examples of cross-influence between the arts.”
Editor Young believes there is something for every reader here. “There are poems about forts, fudge, and ferry boats. Just about every conceivable Mackinac icon or memory is here,” he says.
WooHoo - I'm published!!!!
I was very excited when the decision was made to include "Telephone" in the anthology; while it doesn't truly capture the effect of seeing all the pieces sequentially in person, it at least does document the project.
For more information or to order copies of “Beneath the Lilac Canopy,” visit the Mackinac Island Community Foundation website. Books are $10, plus $5.75 shipping, which covers up to two books.
Sunday, June 21, 2015
Playing Telephone - or the Artistic Response Chain
But what happens when a group of artists (composers, poets, painters, etc.) play the game?
An Artistic Response Chain!
Tess Miller, musician, asked that question and set the game up. It started with her husband, Scott Harding, who's "message" was the first movement of his suite Scenes of Mackinac, called North Shore at Dusk, which evokes the sound of the waves lapping against the beach on Mackinac Island at dusk.
An interview with Tess and Scott can be heard here, as well as a portion of the inspiration music.
It then passed to poet, Jim Bogan, who wrote "Antiphon", which definitely focuses on the water surrounding our island. And remember, this was inspired by only the sound of the music.
The next team in the chain, Amanda and Joel Wyse, created a large diptych in collage, based only on the poem.
And then I was next...
I was very excited to be asked to participate in this project; the entire concept was so unique, especially the combination of visual art, music and the written word. I was also more than a little bit nervous about participating – it’s quite intimidating and somewhat presumptuous to attempt to interpret another artists’ work and the time limit was a huge concern, as it takes many, many hours to combine thousands of tiny glass seed beads into a finished cohesive piece.
After seeing the diptych created by Amanda and Joel, I chose to focus on four aspects of their work:
1.) The gridded background
2.) The colors blue and rust, and
3.) The map imagery.
Water and boundaries are frequent themes in my work, for this piece I decided to focus on the interaction of the Island’s rocky shore and the surrounding water – after all, an island is defined by water. I collected stones from the beach and created a beaded bezel around each one, then joined them together vaguely in the shape of the Island as shown on a map and then added beaded water. This was mounted on a rusty wire grid, left over from the construction of our home. This in turn was mounted on a piece of driftwood, which was again found on the shoreline. A small compass and a reproduction an antique tintype depicting both sail and stem driven ships docked in the harbor finished the composition.
The piece is titled “Charting the Boundaries” and while it was intended to be an interpretation of the preceding diptych, I also wanted to express the intent that is needed to reach Mackinac – you don’t end up here because you took a left instead of a right, it usually takes planning and effort. But sometimes if we allow ourselves to drift, like the base of my piece, we may end up here. You have to want to be here, but sometimes, like the driftwood, something out there says you need to be here.
Due to my tendency to see things very differently than most people, I was concerned that the project would take a massive left turn when it reached me, afraid I might send it in an unintended direction. At the first reveal, Scott shared his intent that his music sound like waves reaching the shore and I was thrilled – He started with water and my piece continued that theme exactly!
Pam Finkel, painter, was next. In her artist statement, she commented the following:
“What struck me,” about Mrs. Dorman’s artwork, “was the sense of nostalgia and melancholy— a longing for times gone by,” which harkened back to how Mr. Harding described the feelings expressed in his song that initiated the game.
“Kelly included a small, oldtime compass in her piece, so I used the compass image around her representing all the roads leading away from her, but she remains in the middle, holding down the fort, with the feeling of home, sweetness, and comfort to which we may always return.”
Next was another musical piece, by Alex Graham, who was inspired by the compass points of Pam's work.
This was followed by filmmaker Rob Kalmbach used to direct him while filming a six-minute, winter documentary of Mackinac Island, which can be seen here.
Mauve Croghan, felt the film expressed the warmth of the community, and chose to use warm colors in here painting seen above.
Those warm colors and plant life depicted in the painter inspired, potter Julie Porter to create a large serving platter of stoneware pottery meant to be used while sharing a meal with a group.
The final artist in the chain, was another composer, Whitney Ashe.
He said the flowers painted around the platter’s border largely inspired his piece “Last Call.”
“Also important was the way that the stems are positioned on the outer parts,” he said. “They lend a kind of spiraling, swirling motion to it so that the overall effect of the piece becomes one of something essentially serene juxtaposed against a subtle yet inconsistent motion, like the wind off the lake as it passes through a flower bed...The piece itself begins in an almost perfect stillness before being transformed through the swirl of eddying winds that lift it to its peak before allowing it to fall away at its end.”
At the first reveal, it was amazing to all involved that the first piece of music evoked water and the final piece of music subtly echoed it - different, but yet the same!
The discussion after the reveal was quite interesting, looking for all the echoes of the initial inspiration music and it was fascinating to see all the pieces all together.
An article with more information is available here.
It was a fantastic project, and I'd love to do it again - but not to soon!
Labels:
ART,
beads,
beadwork,
collaboration,
Mackinac Island,
sculpture,
seed beads,
telephone
Thursday, June 11, 2015
North of 45 Opening - 2015
We were able to attend the opening of this years North of 45 and I loved the placement of "Our History: On the Table - right near the front, sure to be seen!
I spent quite a bit of time talking to attendees, and was pleasantly surprised at the reception the piece received - it's certainly not a mainstream example of art, but people really seemed to enjoy seeing history shared in an alternative manner.
I had encouraged fellow Mackinac Island artist Jamie Andress to enter - he did and had TWO pieces accepted!
And he sold one - congratulations Jamie!
Labels:
ART,
beads,
buttons,
found objects,
historic preservation,
history,
Mackinac Island,
MackinArt,
mixed media,
museum,
sculpture,
seed beads,
wool
Thursday, June 4, 2015
North of 45 - 2015
The North of the 45th is an annual juried exhibition of artists living in the geographical area north of the 45th parallel in Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota. This line is known as the halfway point between the equator and the north pole, and crossing this line from the south is often associated with being "up north." This exhibition showcases the breadth and depth of artists living in this upper Midwest region from both rural and urban areas. Each year a different juror is asked to select pieces for the exhibition from an open call for entries.
Currently Curator of Exhibitions at the Racine Art Museum, where she oversees the production and implementation of 10-15 exhibitions per year, juror Lena Vigna has a particular interest in the contemporary fields of adornment, sculpture, fiber, and installation. Lena has curated numerous solo and group exhibitions and written several essays that explore issues relevant to contemporary art and society.
A Juror's Choice award will be selected by the juror, with a prize of $500. An Audience Choice award in the amount of $250 will be given at the close of the exhibition, based onvotes by visitors to the exhibition.
Featuring work by: Will Agar, Kjellgren Alkire, Jamie Andress, Ezra Asohan, Brendan Baylor, Julie Benda, Kimberly Benson, Gregg Bruff, Tomas Co, Eileen Cohen, Samantha Corbett, Debbie Covart, Melissa Davidson, Dominic M. Davis, Andy Delany and Lauren Flynn, Gretchen Dorian, Kelly Dorman, Pete Driessen, Michael Eble, Jonathon Engelien, Kiera Faber, Nina Fiorucci, Jessie Fleury, Cynthia Foley, Michael Friend, Stacy Giroux, Greg Green, Mike Hainstock, Lindsy Halleckson, Lindsey Heiden, Matt Hirvonen, John Hubbard, Steven Hughes, Carol Irving, Dustin Johnson, Brian Kakas, Keith Kaziak, ReneƩ Kirchenwitz, Jim Krausman, Barret Lee, Scott Leipski, Christine Lenzen, Michael Letts, Alex Maier, John McCoy, John McKaig, Renee Michaud, Susan Mikutowski, Jessica Mongeon, Eric Mueller, Craig Neeson, Paul Nelson, Tilton + Oeler, Russell Prather, Kyle Rambatt, Amy Rice, Eileen Rieman-Schaut, Paul Rose, Patrick St. Germain, Alanna Stapleton, Holly Streekstra, M. Parker Stuart, Tracy Wascom, Lyz Wendland.
My piece is "Our History: On the Table; it's a history of the people of Mackinac Island, from the distant past to the present.
For a full explanation of the piece and many more photos, click HERE.
For a full explanation of the piece and many more photos, click HERE.
We'll be at the opening tomorrow evening and can't wait to see the entire show!
Labels:
ART,
beads,
buttons,
found objects,
historic preservation,
history,
Mackinac Island,
MackinArt,
mixed media,
museum,
sculpture,
seed beads,
wool
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