Martin Greenland’s Hyper Reality

Martin Greenland, Northern Landscape (detail), 2011, oil on linen, 48 x 60 ins

Martin Greenland, an artist living in the Lake District, is about to open a show at Art Space gallery in London (16 September – 14 October).

His obsessive renderings of nature are not just pretty postcards; they have an urgency that seems to speak of a world in decline that the artist is compelled to record.

Check out his amazing work in the gallery’s online catalogue.

Some Artists to Look At in Vancouver

Paul de Guzman at Black and Yellow

Paul de Guzman

Anne Palmer and Andrea Taylor at Elliott Louis Gallery

Anne Palmer, Untitled #6

Andrea Taylor, Peter

The Residency Experience

I’ve just completed a residency at the Vermont Studio Center. In Vermont I met some wonderful artists of like minds. We visited each others’ studios, talking late into the evenings while we tussled with the various states of our practices. Some of us were there to make a specific body of work, some were taking the time to start anew. For myself, I was not interested in “production” at this time in my career; I wanted the time to step away from old habits, try some things I had wanted to investigate but hadn’t had time to do because of deadlines and professional commitments of the past eight years.  I wanted to take a big reach outward, even court failure–in fact, I gave my residency a title: Joyful Bungling.  Intense, vigorous, and puzzling, the experience endowed me with some new friends and a re-engagement with my initial compulsion to paint and to draw. This is slowly developing within me as I take time in my own studio back in Vancouver to develop my next body of work.

The American painter Philip Guston, in the newly released book Philip Guston: Collected Writings, Lectures, and Conversations (2011, University of California Press), talks about reaching very far, and then when the work shakes down, it can end up outwardly being only a little more advanced than the last painting you’ve done. We keep circling back.

When I returned to Vancouver, I spent four weeks as artist-in-residence at St George’s School, where I spent time painting in the wonderful Visual Arts Centre there. Some of the boys were at the early stages of learning how to paint and draw, some quite advanced. The energy of the place was contagious, so I obviously needed to respond to that. The final work I made there was this painting of the grade eights in their drawing class.

Learning to Draw, 36 x 48 inches, 2011

VAL NELSON STUDIO PAINTING WORKSHOPS

I just wanted to let you know that I’m planning a couple of painting workshops in the spring: a reprise of my “Loosen Up!” workshop, and “The Language of Paint” workshop. This time you have an opportunity to work on your goals over 6 classes, which take place once a week. Please let any of your painter friends know about it. I look forward to seeing you there!

Please see below for details:

Loosen Up! Painting Workshop
This six-week session is for painters with some experience who are interested in creating more flow and energy in their work. Oil painters and acrylic painters can all benefit. Bring your ideas: photographic references, drawings, or a still life––the class is open-ended in terms of subject matter in order for you to push your own ideas and develop what interests you.

When: Tuesdays, 7-10 pm, April 26 – May 31
Where: 322B-1000 Parker St, Vancouver
Fee: $300.
Materials: Bring your paint supplies and a pre-gessoed canvas or hard support such as wood or MDF, both of which should be available at your local art supply store.

Easels and tables will be provided.
To register please contact: val@valnelson.ca

The Language of Paint Workshop
This six-week workshop is for painters with some experience who want to further their painting process. Oil painters and acrylic painters can all benefit. Val will facilitate participants in recognizing and developing their own unique painting language. Bring your ideas, a sample or two of your work, some goals for the course, and an open mind.

When: Saturdays, 3-6 pm, April 23 – June 5 (one week off for Victoria Day holidays)
Where: 322B-1000 Parker St, Vancouver
Fee: $300.
Materials: Bring your paint supplies and a pre-gessoed canvas or hard support such as wood or MDF, both of which should be available at your local art supply store.

Easels and tables will be provided.
To register please contact: val@valnelson.ca

Testimonials:
Amazing workshop. One of the best painting classes I have taken. Val  seems to know what everyone needs and has the skill and insight to
convey that information in a way that is understood by her students.
– Dorothy Doherty, Vancouver 2009 workshop participant

Val gave each participant a great deal of personal feedback. Her lovely personality and interesting anecdotes added to the overall experience. This painting weekend reignited my passion for painting! - Miyeko Nabata, Vancouver 2009 workshop participant

Surface Tension

If you’re in Vancouver, be sure to check out the thoughtfully curated show at Malaspina Printmakers on Granville Island. Andrea Pinheiro has brought together five conceptual printmakers whose work contains “traces of an interaction with a material surface; marks recorded through evocative acts ranging from violence, to tenderness and devotion.”

One of my favorites is Denise Hawrysio’s  installation which consists of a copper-plated “brick” (presented on a plinth), each side of which was etched and printed, the resulting work on paper accompanying the sculpture possesses an arresting beauty in its bold black-patterned marks. The other artists in the show are Jennifer Bowes, Joyce Wieland, Jessica Jackson Hutchins, and Niall McLelland.
February 10 – April 11, 2011
Malaspina Printmakers
1555 Duranleau Street,
Granville Island, Vancouver

Joyful Bungling: Vermont Studio Center Residency

I have received an Artist’s Grant from the Vermont Studio Center, where I’ve been invited to attend a four-week residency in March. Founded by artists in 1984, the Vermont Studio Center is the largest international artists’ and writers’ Residency Program in the United States, hosting 50 visual artists and writers each month from across the country and around the world.

After the Residency I’ll visit Montreal for a few days, then undertake an intensive gallery/museum-hop in New York City for a week. Super excited!

Drawing in the Dark (Part 2)

Vancouver Opera premiere of Lillian Alling, Act 1

Excerpt from Vancouver Opera’s Blog

The things people do in the dark of a theatre.

Some people sit riveted and try to taking in everything that is happening on stage. Others glance upwards and down as they read the surtitles. And others may close their eyes and simply let the music and singing overtake them.

Not artist Val Nelson.

Val draws the opera when the lights go down. Ever so discretely and imperceptibly that her fellow seatmates do not even know this was happening. Val first came to our attention when she drew at Madama Butterfly last season.

On opening night, she was once again armed with her drawing pen to help us record the world premiere of Lillian Alling.

(read more…)