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Private View night in LES

One of the great things about visiting New York is that it’s the perfect place to meet up with friends from different places.  While I was there, I was able to meet up with a few friends that lived in New York whom I met while I was living in London, a friend from Virginia who I met in Taiwan about 10 years ago, and my friend Adam Bridgland, who flew over with Jealous Gallery from London to help support Charming Baker’s NY solo show.

Adam Bridgland is a good friend from London who is also an artist.  I was actually able to see his work for the first time in the flesh at the Affordable Art Fair, where he was showing with TAG Fine Arts.  I timed my trip so that I could catch the last day of the AAF, see Adam’s work and visit an art fair with many younger galleries from around the world (although in my opinion, the ones with the best work were from London and Brooklyn).

Affordable Art Fair

Image courtesy of AffordableArtFair.com

The AAF was very busy, and I don’t know if it was because it was the last day or if it is always this busy, but a lot of sales were being made and people were walking away with their newest prized possessions.  It was very exciting to see, and I hope it means that the art market is picking up again.  I wish there was an art fair in Vancouver, but I think the closest one there is is in Toronto, and I’m not sure how well attended that is.

Adam’s framed screen prints definitely stood out from the crowd with their bold graphic style and text, and TAG Fine Arts was telling me about the pieces that were inspired by Adam and his wife Lucy Gough’s (another brilliant artist!) trip to Vancouver a couple of years back.

So Adam was in New York with a gallery that he works with, Jealous Gallery, which is also a print studio.  They were supporting the artist Charming Baker, who was having his first solo show in New York, and it was a very busy affair and also a very successful opening night…he sold all of his paintings before the show even opened!  It was definitely a good party, with a gallery space over two floors, an open rooftop deck, free Prosecco, mini cupcakes, a DJ and a small print studio set up by the Jealous Gallery allowing guests to pull their own prints.

Earlier in the evening...

Charming Baker's prints with Jealous Gallery

DJ on the main floor of the gallery

Cupcakes!

The popular makeshift print station

A guest getting creative...

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In my London studio (2005)

In my London studio (2005)

A running theme through my work is the past, whether it be recollections of memories, nostalgia or histories.

I met up with an old friend recently, and it got me thinking about how revisiting the past can be important in understanding our present.  This goes for life and also for my art, as I sometimes forget about certain paintings I did in the past, and it’s like unearthing a treasure when I find them again.  All the memories, thoughts and ideas that went into the artwork pop up again in my mind.  And then sometimes there is a sudden epiphany about where a “new” or current idea I am working on actually came from.

*****

Les Saltimbanques - Pablo Picasso

Pablo Picasso, Les Saltimbanques, 1901

In 2000, when I first arrived in Paris with my fellow UBC Fine Art classmate Jessica Gabriel, we found a postcard of Picasso’s “Les Saltimbanques”.  It is not one of his most famous paintings, so it is actually very hard to find the painting online or the proper title of it.  It was painted in 1901, with Picasso’s famous harlequin figure and his companion.  When Jessica and I first saw the postcard, we said, “That’s us!”, bought the postcard and then quickly forgot about it, with all the excitement of living abroad for the first time.

By the end of that year, after many highs and lows, our Paris adventure was coming to a close, and we thought it would be fitting to recreate the painting.  So with some art school creativity, we managed to pull together some towels and blankets and rummage through our closet and art supplies to recreate the look of the painting.  With a limitation of 24 shots on our roll of film, we were determined to recreate the painting in a photograph, but quickly got bored of that and well, here are the results:

Paris, France, 2001 - by Roselina Hung & Jessica Gabriel

Paris, France, 2001 - by Roselina Hung & Jessica Gabriel

After we returned to Vancouver, the series of photographs was exhibited once during our final year at UBC and then put away and forgotten about.  While I was working on my Painting Film exhibition, with my Art History series, I revisited this series of photographs and thought about the process of turning a painting into a photograph, or in this case a series of photographs, and I decided to paint the photograph and return it to a painting.  Here is a photo of the painting in my London studio.  Unfortunately I can’t find a photo of the finished painting on my computer at the moment, so this was a work in progress shot:

Les Echangeuses

Les Echangeuses, Oil on canvas, 60 x 90 cm, 2005

Jessica and I then revisited the idea in 2007, after I moved back from London and we were both in Vancouver again.  Some ideas were thrown around but nothing came from it.  I am almost positive that it will come up again in the future, and new work will spring from the past.

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Mary Porter

I feel very lucky that my studies have taken me abroad to two wonderful cities, where I have met many people that I feel privileged to call friends.  For anyone who is thinking about whether or not to study abroad or take part in an exchange program, I fully recommend it.  My experiences in London and Paris are some of my most cherished, and in both cases, it was the people I met and the city itself that left their lasting impressions on me.

Chandeliers in Paris
The splendour of Paris

It’s hard to believe that it has been 10 years since my year abroad in Paris.  I traveled all the way across the world only to meet a fellow Canadian student from NSCAD in Halifax!  Mary Porter is a fellow artist and painter and one of my very good friends, and she has just create a website to showcase her artwork at www.maryporter.ca

Installation of “The Space to be.” at Toronto Free Gallery, Toronto, ON, 2007
Installation of “The Space to be.” at Toronto Free Gallery,
Toronto, ON, 2007

She currently lives and works in Toronto, after receiving an MFA (Visual Arts) from York University.  She has exhibited across Canada and was also selected as an Canadian emerging artist to watch in Magenta Publishing’s Carte Blanche, Vol. 2: Painting.

Her most recent series, MONUMENTAL (2008-09), offers an intriguing perspective on landscape painting with such diverse influences such as science fiction, grand architectural schemes, nineteenth- and twentieth-century utopic plans, romantic landscape painting, and her own studies of the plants and animals in her urban setting.

Untitled (tapeworm), oil and acrylic on birch plywood, 24 in x 72  in, 2009
Untitled (tapeworm), oil and acrylic on birch plywood,
24 in x 72 in, 2009

To view more artwork by Mary Porter, please visit www.maryporter.ca

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