Nereids Descending (Detail)

nereids descending

Acrylic, graphite, collage on canvas (2018, work in progress)

Size:  w 20″ x h 16″

My upcoming solo show at the wonderful music listening space at Art Noise gallery (Tri-Art paints) in Kingston Ontario is titled Restoring Balance:  Before and Between.  Works created using acrylic paint and media plus graphite, collage, pastel on stone, canvas, paper will be displayed.  Please drop in! the exhibit is up 23 August to 20 September 2018.

Fish Flying Home

Fish Flying Home

Mixed Media — acrylic, graphite, collage, ink (2017)

Size:  w 10″ x h 8″

I finished this piece today for the annual silent auction of the Union Gallery located at Stauffer Library, Queen’s University, Kingston (auction dates: October 14th to November 17th).  The theme this year is Place/Identity.

 

Summer (Detail)

Summer Detail

Acrylic over Oil on canvas (2015)

Work in progress

Size:  43″ x 29″

This work is part of a series I started many years ago, based on photographs taken my my husband, Steve.  Fall and Winter (oil on canvas) were completed in the early 1980s. Spring (acrylic on re-purposed marble) I did in 2013.  Summer languished unfinished for over 30 years, until I took another look recently.  Not finished quite yet.

Vera Later (after FH Varley, Vera, 1931)

Vera

Acrylic on canvas, 2015

Size:  h 61 cm x w 50.8 cm (same size as the original Vera, by FH Varley, 1931)

Vera Olivia Weatherbie was born in Vancouver, studied at the Royal Academy in London, and was one of the first graduates of the Vancouver School of Decorative and Applied Arts in 1929. She won many awards for her artwork during her association with the VSDAA and afterward. She exhibited regularly and taught drawing, painting, and composition at the BC College of Arts, an institution founded by FH Varley and Jock Macdonald in 1933.

Vera Weatherbie’s portrait of her VSDAA teacher FH Varley (of the Group of Seven) was exhibited in 1931 at the National Gallery of Canada (http://projects.vanartgallery.bc.ca/publications/75years/exhibitions/3/1/artist/55/86.178).  It caused a sensation.  Blodwin Davies wrote in the Toronto Star Weekly that Weatherbie had “invaded the world of metaphysics in a daring effort to commit to paint the immaterial qualities of personality.”

Later that year, Varley painted what is arguably the most famous portrait painting in Canada, Vera. http://www.gallery.ca/en/see/collections/artwork.php?mkey=7516

Strangely, Vera Weatherbie (at least, outside of her native British Columbia) is known more as a subject and muse for artists, than as an artist in her own right. Her work received a revival of interest in the 1980s, 1990s, and recently in the early years of this century.  But it is Varley’s compelling portrait of her — sensual, aggressive, spiritual (see the discussion of Varley’s grandson Christopher in F.H. Varley, #6 in the Collection: Artistes Canadiens, ed. Dennis Reid) — that is apparently her primary legacy in the art world.

My painting imagines Vera later, after the intense years of creativity in the 1920s and 30s, beyond her time as model and muse for Varley and the photographer John Vanderpant, past her marriage to Harold Mortimer Lamb. She remains sensual, aggressive, spiritual.