Gallery - December 2020

Breanna Barrington - Jam Today

Breanna Barrington, Lift Off, 12 x 16 inches, mixed media on canvas

Breanna Barrington, Lift Off, 12 x 16 inches, mixed media on canvas

This December, we welcome Breanna Barrington’s Jam Today to The Carrot Gallery. The exhibition will be showing from December 1st to 24th, 2020. All artwork is available for sale. Help support local this holiday season!

Artist Statement

The Queen said to Alice; “The rule is, jam to-morrow and jam yesterday – but never jam to-day.” Well I say, Jam can be lots of things if you get creative about it… so why not to-day? This body of work explores themes of making do with what you’ve got; whether it be time, friends, ideas, or little scraps of paper. 


About the Artist

Breanna Barrington is a multimedia artist based in Amiskwaciy-Wâskahikan ᐊᒥᐢᑿᒌᐚᐢᑲᐦᐃᑲᐣ (Edmonton) on Treaty 6 territory - Land that has been a historic meeting place for many people, across deep time. She holds a BFA from the UofA (2018) and has shown at multiple venues, from the United Nations  Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, to the Alberta Council for Ukrainian Arts. Through painting, drawing, and bricolage, she works to arrange visual metaphors which explore the relationship between modern urbanity and the not-so-distant past. With recycling philosophy and cultural identity at the backbone of her practice; Breanna creates work to invoke whimsical awareness and an ethos of care around our shared environmental heritage.

For more, visit www.breannabarrington.com

Gallery - November 2020

Hollis Hunter - Touch Starved: A Masculine Mass Media Series

Hollis Hunter, Love Seat, 19 x 24 inches, oil on canvas

Hollis Hunter, Love Seat, 19 x 24 inches, oil on canvas

This November, we welcome local artist, Hollis Hunter, to The Carrot Gallery. This will be his first exhibition since graduating from the BFA program at the University of Alberta.

Artist Statement

Hollis Hunter considers figurative painting to be a strong medium for exploring the politics of trans and queer identity, bodies, and representation. In this series, each painting is based on a film still, magazine clipping, or printed photograph. Hunter references these mass media images of masculine-coded bodies to visually deconstruct social ideas about sex, gender, and sexuality. Abstract figurative painting challenges the perceived “authenticity” of photographs and addresses assumptions about what certain bodies or identities look like. Hunter adapts these mainstream images of “men” into his own narrative: feelings of vulnerability, and a search for intimacy as a man who is queer and transgender.


About the Artist

Hollis Hunter (he/him) is a recent graduate of the BFA program at the University of Alberta, and is working as a visual artist in amiskwaciy-wâskahikan (Edmonton). Hunter is passionate about activist art involving transgender rights and visibility. Within his practice, Hunter aims to address the challenges of LGBTQ+ representation through personal narratives. Transfeminist activism paired with visual arts is powerful for navigating our precarious socio-political climate.

For more of Hollis Hunter’s work visit Instagram @ poisondartist.

Gallery - October 2020

Pam Baergen and Rick Rogers - Home, Home on the Brink

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This October, we welcome local artists, Pam Baergen and Rick Rogers to The Carrot Art Gallery.

Artists Statement

It began with a conversation. We talked about the scarcity of clear choices while navigating our new normals. We thought of people being 'out of their element,' and adapting to otherness that they aren’t ready for. We talked about the edges of being human...what are we willing to change, or lose, to survive as a species? We imagined other worlds. We discussed how gains in resilience can come at the price of a loss of natural habitat. We talked about control. We discussed how distance can create otherness and lead to adversity. We saw value in visually exploring these concepts together, and so we agreed to collaborate at each stage of the creative process as safely as we could. Face masks were donned, hand sanitizer became as necessary a tool as our brushes and blades, and we took advantage of online tools like Pinterest and videoconferencing.

Even the show title was collaborative. It started with Old Ways for New Days as a proposed title and next came many ideas: Resettle, Remix; Evolution of the Commonwealth; Moving Forward, Standing Still and many more. When we discussed these we realized we wanted the concept of an alien-ness or change to be included in the title. This resulted in The Uncertain Frontier and Strange New Worlds, which triggered the words edge, verge, threshold and brink, and the title Home on the Brink. The addition of sentimentality and idealism in the form of a traditional song resulted in the exhibition title Home, Home on the Brink, an interesting shift of the same underlying theme as the original working title, but more evocative. And this title-finding process was an early indicator of success in our collaboration.

About the Artists

Pam Baergen obtained a Fine Art Diploma from Grant MacEwan University in 2005. During her studies, Baergen was exposed to a wide range of contemporary artists and artmaking practices, which inspired her to begin exploring visual art's communicative power and potential beyond reproducing a convincing image. She was compelled to learn more about the art that came before her - who made what, and why? What effect did it have? Enrolling in an art history program seemed like a logical next-step. In 2008, Pam graduated from the University of Alberta with a Bachelor of Arts Degree with distinction, majoring in the History of Art, Design, and Visual Culture, and minoring in Christian Theology. To see more of Baergen’s work, visit  www.livingportraits.ca

Rick Rogers’ background as a systems architect and scientist has been leveraged to experiment with various media, researching existing techniques and developing his own, and evolving his own processes for creating art. In Rogers’ words, “Science and art are never so far apart as our modern culture would make them seem. As an experimental artist, I see these ‘opposing’ bodies of knowledge as deeply intertwingled. The aesthetics and science of composition, the theoretical and practical pursuit of a deep understanding of the interaction of textures, and the physics and chemistry of paint manipulation are three areas in which I am particularly involved. My work is inspired as often by a scientific principle or an experimental eureka moment as it is by an aesthetic vision.” To see more of Rogers’ work, visit www.rickrogers.art

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Window Gallery - August 2020

Genevieve Ongaro - Promises

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We welcome Genevieve Ongaro to The Carrot Window Gallery.

“The main question behind my motivation for these works is what is the value of a promise, if not kept? What does it mean to make a promise, and why do we do it? The landscapes that I have chosen are metaphors for the in- transience of the world around us: constantly changing and shifting, yet permanent and stable. These hazy scenes are meant to evoke a sense of timelessness, and the sea is a representation of nature’s constant inconstancy, ever-changing and unpredictable, whereas the knots, built up by multitudes of tiny strokes or fibres at the mercy of time, space, and entropy, are symbols of human relationships and the promises we make. Creating the knot visually by means of small, intricate lines is an important part of how I want to illustrate these objects as entities that are both binding and incredibly fragile, delicate and at risk of unravelling.

The tension between the subject and its environment is meant to illustrate the question of whether fabrications of the human mind can in fact exist within the transience of the ubiquitous natural world. Do we make promises in an attempt to reach for transcendence from our impermanent lives? To create something that is larger than ourselves, and perhaps more beautiful and everlasting...which will live on beyond our short lives.”

Gallery - August 2020

Norma Callicott - Summer Dreams

Norma Callicott, Green River I, 6 x 8 inches, paper collage with resin

Norma Callicott, Green River I, 6 x 8 inches, paper collage with resin

We welcome Norma Callicott to The Carrot Gallery.

Norma Callicott started her artistic journey over 20 years ago working in oils, acrylics, and pastel. The artist started exploring various mixed mediums and processes since retiring in 2016. Callicott fell in love with working with altered paper to create paper collage. The artist alters the pages of discarded magazines by melting the ink with a solution then drying the pages on a clothesline on bright summer days. The result is an interesting array of texture and pattern, some of which the artist manipulates to the desired result. As Callicott sits at the studio table, the pages in front of her speak to and inspire her. Memories and emotion come out, each telling a unique story. The use of recycled materials and Canadian made birch panel are important and meaningful elements of the work.

Gallery - July 2020

Michelle Paterok - I Woke Up, It Was a Dream

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We are pleased to announce that Michelle Paterok will be the featured artist of the July Carrot Gallery. Paterok’s recent work in painting draws upon photographs as a means of tracing memory. These photographs, taken in rural Japan where the artist lived for two years, are used as a starting point for improvisation, allowing for abstraction and reinterpretation of the images. Through altering the original images, the artist aims to give an ephemeral experience a kind of permanence, reconfiguring these snapshots to reflect how the original place may be experienced and subsequently remembered.

Learn more about Michelle Paterok’s works here.

Gallery - November and December 2019

Yvonne DuBourdieu & Agata Garbowska - Impermanence of Things Remembered

We are pleased to announce that Yvonne DuBourdieu and Agata Garbowska will be closing the year off as featured artists of The Carrot Gallery. The Opening Reception will be on November 14th from 7 - 9 PM. Pop in for light refreshments and to meet the artists!

Impermanence of Things Remembered is a dual exhibition featuring landscape paintings that explore ideas of imperfection and impermanence.


Yvonne DuBourdieu, On This Day Clearly Seen, 36” x 48”, Oil on canvas

Yvonne DuBourdieu, On This Day Clearly Seen, 36” x 48”, Oil on canvas

About the Artists

Yvonne DuBourdieu has been a documentary filmmaker for most of her life, but now splits her time behind the camera and in the studio. DuBourdieu is an emerging contemporary expressionist painter working mostly in oil. She blends marks of realism, impressionism and abstraction to the subjects that populate her works: landscapes, birds, animals and humans. Always interested in things ‘other,’ she is continually exploring a sense of place and themes of belonging, often embracing the ‘outsider’ in an unexpected world of illusory spaces or imagined realms.

Each work in DuBourdieu’s collection invokes a memory of place, set in landscapes of invention, infused with an energy that comes with reliving or reimagining a moment through memory. These recollections have been roused and pieced together through looking back at photographs from her past and using the figurative imagery as source material for the paintings. The process of looking back can spark a flood of emotions that set off a chain reaction, unleashing seemingly disparate thoughts and feeding into one another till the connective emotions drift in and out of the imperfect, impermanence of things remembered.

To learn more about DuBourdieu’s work, visit https://www.yvonnedubourdieu.ca/

Agata Garbowska, These Fragments I have Shored Against My Ruins II, 24” x 36”, Oil on board, vinyl, and plexiglass

Agata Garbowska, These Fragments I have Shored Against My Ruins II, 24” x 36”, Oil on board, vinyl, and plexiglass

Agata Garbowska is a painter, printmaker and frequent lurker on the Edmonton arts scene. Her most recent body of work is an exploration of spaces in flux. These spaces are not inhabited, but suggest human presence with select objects and remnants. Panel and plexiglass, materials often used in the construction of everyday space, are combined with painting, collage, and sculpture, to construct pieces that echo with human presence. These pieces are informed by our ongoing ecological disaster—an attempt to reckon with the catastrophic consequences of our comfortable everyday domesticity.

To learn more about Garbowska’s work, visit https://agatagarbowska.weebly.com/

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Gallery - October 2019

Jay Bigam - Elements

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We are pleased to announce that Jay Bigam is October's featured artist of The Carrot Gallery! The Opening Reception will be on October 3rd from 7 - 9 PM. Pop in to meet the artist!

Bigam's exhibition, "Elements," will be showing at The Carrot Gallery from October 1st to November 2nd. His pieces are produced using oil paints, solvents, sawdust, metallic spray paint..and fire!

About the Artist

Jay is a self-taught artist who paints modern impressionist landscapes and skyscapes, with a special emphasis on severe weather in Alberta. Known for his use of colour and movement, his paintings are a reflection of his love of nature and science. Since 2016, he has been involved in the Alberta storm chaser community and has been basing much of his work on weather seen while storm chasing.

In 2016, Jay was a nominee in the Alberta Foundation for the Arts 25 Influential Alberta Artists awards.

Jay loves the experience of producing live art and interacting with the public while doing so. He has made art at numerous festivals and venues

To learn more about Bigam's work, visit earthskyart.ca.


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Gallery - September 2019

Jill Thomson - Urban Gardens

Jill Thomson, Flora, 60x 90”, Oil on canvas

Jill Thomson, Flora, 60x 90”, Oil on canvas

For the month of September, we are welcoming local artist Jill Thomson to The Carrot Art Gallery. Come in from September 3–28th, 2019 and see familiar neighbourhood scapes and urban flora.

On September 26th, 2019, The Carrot will be hosting the Closing Reception of Jill Thomson's "Urban Gardens." Join us to bid a fond adieu to the whispering leaves and sweet scents of our summer wildflowers.

About the Artist

Jill Thomson's artwork evokes her personal history of a small town/prairie childhood, an urban Montreal young adulthood and a settled life as artist and mother of three in Edmonton. Her rich colourful palette and complex compositions celebrate a creative life in cities with generous front porches, cafes, bookstores, bicycle paths, gardens and ravines.

You can see more of Jill Thomson’s work here: https://jillthomson.com/home.html

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Gallery - August 2019

Maria Pace-Wynters - Summer Mix

Maria Pace-Wynters, Orange Pekoe, 14″x28″, Mixed media painting on canvas

Maria Pace-Wynters, Orange Pekoe, 14″x28″, Mixed media painting on canvas

For August, we are welcoming local artist Maria Pace-Wynters to The Carrot Art Gallery.

Stop by The Carrot on Thursday, August 8, 2019 from 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm for the Opening Reception of Maria Pace-Wynters' "Summer Mix."

Maria Pace-Wynters’ “Summer Mix” represents a tension between the comfort of the mundane and thrill of adventure. The juxtaposition is portrayed in the demure disposition of the eyes in her subjects and the vivacious objects around them. There is also a sense of the ephemeral as the imagery on the porcelain is transcendent through time, but all else is fleeting.

Maria Pace-Wynters was born and raised in Victoria, British Columbia. She attended Victoria College of Art, Camosun College (Associate of Arts degree), the University of Victoria (BFA honour program) and Victoria Film School before settling down in Edmonton, Alberta. She sells her work online through Etsy and locally at The Carrot, Sabrina Butterfly and her Alberta Ave studio.

You can see more of Maria Pace-Wynters' work here: www.mariapacewynters.com

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Gallery - July 2019

Catherine McMillan - Stories from my Inner World

Catherine McMillan, Paper Lantern Dream, Acrylic and Oil on Wood panel, 18”x18”

Catherine McMillan, Paper Lantern Dream, Acrylic and Oil on Wood panel, 18”x18”

In July, we are welcoming Catherine McMillan to The Carrot Gallery.

“I approach all of my paintings intuitively, beginning with thick textured gesso, followed by layers of fluid acrylic paint and then oil paint repeatedly applied and wiped off until I feel the right atmosphere is created. Sometimes I start with a sketch or a clear destination in mind, but often my ideas come out of the work itself and simply evolve from somewhere inside of me. Over time, these paintings of little unfinished stories quietly tell me secrets about who I am and what I deeply believe about life.”

 McMillan’s intuitive instinct has taken her down many paths.  She has wandered the world as a street caricature artist, opened a commercial art studio/cafe called The Quirky Art Café, and spent many years teaching a variety of art classes. In 2014, she decided to close her café/teaching studio so that she could focus on her own painting.

A notable accolade of McMillan includes having her painting, Lullaby, be accepted in the “I am a Woman and this is my Legacy” show at the Laura I Gallery in London, England. She was also invited to participate in Double Vision 2018 show at the Paper Mill Gallery, Toronto, Ontario. Catherine is represented by Gossamer Treasures Gallery in Wabumum, Alberta and her artwork is in collections throughout Canada, the US, Europe and Australia.  

You can see more of Catherine McMillan's work here: https://www.catherinemcmillan.com/

Prints of Catherine McMillan’s works are available for purchase at The Carrot.

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Gallery - June 2019

Karen Bishop - Living on the Land II

Karen Bishop, …and peace descends on the land, 26x40”, Watercolour on Yupo

Karen Bishop, …and peace descends on the land, 26x40”, Watercolour on Yupo

This June, we are welcoming Karen Bishop to The Carrot Gallery.

Stop by The Carrot on June 6, 2019 from 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm for the Opening Reception of Karen Bishop’s "Living on the Land II."

“I have always been a landscape painter. I enjoy little more than heading out to Jasper National Park and finding a spot where I can let my creativity run wild as I capture the spectacular scene in front of me.”

Bishop translates her deep reverence for the natural world in her watercolour paintings. Rather than using traditional cotton rag paper, Bishop uses yupo, a smooth, white synthetic paper that does not absorb watercolour paint easily. This allows  Bishop to use a reductive technique where she paints a background layer with wild and intuitive colours, then lifts away parts of the painting to reveal shapes. Wildlife and landscape are emerged. The animals are difficult to discern, creating a mysterious, ghost-like quality. Bishop’s technique articulates the symbolism that animals and landscape are dependent on one another.

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Gallery - May 2019

Haylee Fortin - An Assemblage of Natural Things

Haylee Fortin,  Clark’s Nutcracker, 24x30”, Oil and acrylic on canvas

Haylee Fortin, Clark’s Nutcracker, 24x30”, Oil and acrylic on canvas

For April, we are welcoming local artist Haylee Fortin to The Carrot Gallery.

Stop by The Carrot on May 2, 2019 from 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm for the Opening Reception of Haylee Fortin's "An Assemblage of Natural Things"

These paintings focus largely on collages of local flora and fauna. Re-contextualizing and isolating the figures in new or unnatural environments brings attention to their form and expressiveness. The compositions play with perceptions of nature and our interactions with the wild.

Haylee Fortin is an emerging artist based in Edmonton, Alberta and graduate of the University of Alberta BFA program. Fortin's work involves collecting and fragmenting media from online sources which are then reworked through collage, painting and new media.

You can see more of Haylee Fortin's work here: https://hayleefortin.weebly.com/

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Gallery - April 2019

Becki Petersen and Runa Gedam - Conversations

Runa Gedam, Oil on canvas, The one we love to hate, the Rickshawala, 24 x 30 inches

Runa Gedam, Oil on canvas, The one we love to hate, the Rickshawala, 24 x 30 inches

For April, we are welcoming local artists Becki Petersen and Runa Gedam to The Carrot Gallery. This exhibition is a conversation between two local artists who draw inspiration from an environment not found in their day-to-day.

Becki Petersen is a visual artist living in Edmonton, but her heart will forever stay in the mountains and among the clouds which is where she draws a great deal of her inspiration from. Petersen focuses on the shapes, movement and emotions of the sky using acrylic, her preferred method, to translate those sensations to canvas. For more of Petersen's work see her Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/BeckiPetersenArt/

Runa Gedam was born in India and moved to Canada in 2007. Gedam reflects that being so far away from home can be very lonely but also inspiring. The artist misses the colours, the chaos and the hustle of everyday life she grew up with in India, and those memories inspire the colours and subject of her paintings. You can find more of Runa Gedam's paintings on her Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/Runasart/

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Gallery - March 2019

Sharon Moore-Foster - Stilled Life

Sharon Moore-Foster, Antler I Stilled Life Series, 27 x 27 inches, Ink and Watercolour

Sharon Moore-Foster, Antler I Stilled Life Series, 27 x 27 inches, Ink and Watercolour

In March, we are welcoming Sharon Moore-Foster to The Carrot Gallery.

“I have been and still am a seeker, but I have ceased to question stars and books; I have begun to listen to the teachings my blood whispers to me.” ~ Hermann HesseArt is a process, as is life. You acquire new information and integrate it with the old, as well as surrender to the present with a bizarre send of, “Okay, let’s go”. I communicate through various media. The drawings are curious organic investigations into human form and essence.

Transition: the flow of beings from one form to another—the flow of creation from one media to another. Searching for similarities and welcoming contradictions, this empty space requires trust. Intuition bridges the gap between here and tomorrow.”

Join us at The Carrot on March 28, 2019 from 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm for the Closing Reception of this phenomenal Exhibition.

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Gallery - February 2019

Keita Kwame Kankam - Light and Colour

We are celebrating Black History Month at The Carrot! We welcome Keita Kwame Kankam to The Carrot Gallery. Kankam was born in Accra, Ghana and studied at the Ghanatta college of art and design in Accra where in 2006 Kankam obtained a diploma in art and design. Recently, Kankam took part in the mentorship programme at the Visual Arts of Alberta last year which ended in May 2017.

To quote Kankam, "My favourite genres are abstract compositions, still life, landscapes, and village scenes. I prefer using acrylic colours, inks, pastels, and charcoal because once they are easy to use, one knows how to manipulate them. Starting to paint on my own as an independent artist has not been easy, there have been times of success and downfalls, but with the passage of time I have seen the beauty humor and value in all my work."

Keita Kwame Kankam, Busy Birds I, 14 x 18 inches, Acrylic on canvas

Keita Kwame Kankam, Busy Birds I, 14 x 18 inches, Acrylic on canvas

Gallery - December 2018

Ekaterina Vopiyashina

Ekaterina Vopiyashina was born and grew up in Russia, Volgograd. Vopiyashina studied academic drawing and painting at several art studios in Moscow. She moved to Calgary, Alberta in 2015 to pursue her BFA degree from Alberta Collage of Art and Design with a major in Print Media. Vopiyashina works in several traditional printmaking techniques, exploring themes of femininity and appearance.

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In honour of the season, Ekaterina has created and hand-printed a set of six Christmas cards, inspired by designs from the Victorian era. These unique cards offer a touch of humour and nostalgia for art lovers and collectors.

Gallery - October 2018

Maria Pace-Wynters and Mireille Péloquin

Show runs until November 17! Both artists have close connections to the Alberta Avenue community, and we are so happy to feature their work side by side at The Carrot for an extended showing. All work is available for sale at The Carrot.

Maria Pace-Wynters is a mixed media artist who lives in the Alberta Ave. area.  Originally from Victoria, B.C. she has made Edmonton her home for the last twenty years.  Her art is collected around the world through online auctions and her Etsy shop. Maria is also a featured artist at The Carrot where she her sells fine art reproductions.

Mireille Péloquin is the tenth in a family of 13 children, and has lived across Canada in Winnipeg, Montreal, New Brunswick, the high Arctic, and windy Lethbridge. Encaustic art dominates her current work as she is inspired by its ancient roots and her ability to use Alberta beeswax to reflect her own prairie roots and international travel.

Gallery: June 2018

Karen Bishop & Jared Robinson 

Gallery Reception (Wed, May 30) Details Here.

My work is not intended to be a faithful reproduction of the landscape before me.  Instead I paint by feel.  The paintings that evoke the most emotion are those completed on location where I am able to allow my surroundings and the weather to dictate how I proceed.  I try not to worry about the ending, rather I let the painting unfold and track its own course across my paper.  

For me painting allows that perfect quiet, where I am peaceful and at peace with myself, and my surroundings.  It's an escape from the everyday, a chance to experience the earth more fully, a chance to breathe and know that all is well.
To put it simply, I paint because it makes me happy. My hope is that the viewer can find a similar joy and peace in my work.

I was born in Cheltenham, England, in 1968 and moved to Kingston, Ontario, in the winter of 1992. When I first arrived in Canada I was unable to work while I waited for my papers, so I made use of the time by enrolling in some art classes which I enjoyed very much.  In 2002 I graduated from the University of Alberta's Extension centre with a Fine Arts certificate.  Since 2007 I have been pursuing my art full time and in May of 2011 I opened The Daffodil Gallery in the heart of Edmonton’s Gallery district which sadly closed early 2016.

More of Karen's creations here!

Living on the Land: Artist Statement

About a year ago I began painting bears. I’m not sure why, I think I just woke up one morning and thought I want to paint bears, so I did. As I began to create I became more and more fascinated by the bears - their shapes and how they were so much a part of the landscape that
surrounded them. I decided to explore a technique that was quite different and a little risky. I thought, as the bears and the landscape were so dependant on each other, why not make the bear appear from the background of the painting rather than painting the bear on top or beside it. Using a reductive technique I began to lift the watercolours from the yupo paper (such is the beauty of this synthetic paper) and slowly began to reveal the shape of the bear.

After the first painting I knew I was onto something special. The bears were less obvious, you had to work a little to see them and they took on a mysterious, almost ghostlike quality.
I spoke to a well-respected Cree friend of mine and explained to her how I was feeling when I painted the bears - it had become a spiritual, meditative process. I asked her her thoughts on calling the collection “Spirit Bears”. She encouraged me, telling me it was important to follow
my creative process and my heart. I did a little research on these special bears and discovered that they are neither an albino nor a polar bear, but in face the Spirit Bear is a rare white North American black bear with an unusual recessive gene (similar to the gene that causes red hair in humans) found almost exclusively in the Great Bear Rainforest. Officially named Kermode bears, they were named after Frank Kermode, former director of the Royal B.C. Museum.
In the Tsimshianic languages the Kermode or Spirit Bear is known as moksgm’ol.

Kermode bears hold a prominent place in the oral traditions of the indigenous peoples of the area. There are various telling of how and why the bears became white but the story goes something like this: Raven, The Creator, wanted something to remind him of the Long White
Time, when the earth was covered in snow and ice. Raven chose Black Bear, the keeper of dreams and memory to help him. Black Bear was found, as he always is, as a constellation of the stars in the night sky. Black Bear agreed to let one out of every ten Black Bears turn white to remind Raven of the misery of the great ice age. In return Raven set aside a special area of the world for these bears – now known as the Great Bear Rainforest. It was a remote paradise where the bears were to live in peace forever.

I wanted to thank my friend for her encouragement, Michelle Nieviadomy is an incredible woman with many accolades and well respected in all she does. She is speaks Cree, freely shares her heritage and knowledge only asking for respect and love from those, like me, who now call themselves Canadian. To express my gratitude and bring some awareness to the
roughly 60 distinct indigenous languages I decided I would name each of the Spirit Bear Moksgm’ol, paintings an indigenous word relating to the bear and the painting.
I have since developed the collection and have widened the focus to include other Canadian Wildlife. I wanted to capture many animals in the same way I had the bears and so all the paintings you see are painted in a reductive technique. All the paintings are not intended to be true representations of the animal. I prefer to feel the subject out, creating the animal from the
background. The organic nature of the background allows the colour of each creature to blend into and from the paint, making that animal part of the surroundings, a being that lives in harmony with the land. If only we could learn to do the same...

Jared Robinson 

In 1987 when I was 8 years old, I created my very first paintings named “Pooh Bear on a train track with some honey by a window”. Since then, my art has developed through self-education, some formal education, and life experience. I like to take an idea, whether a moment of connection or a situation felt, and create a time and space around it on the canvas. The inspiration caused by seeing something evolve from nothing, and the effects that it can create, has spurred me on to developing my art.

In moments of inspiration, my best work is developed amidst the pounding beats and rhythms of music, or a movie playing repeatedly in the background. On occasion I have found myself painting in isolation on a mountaintop, while other times I paint in the midst of many others. I enjoy experimenting and getting my ideas out in a way that words may not do justice.

When I experience the world, I know in those moments that I am only experiencing a snapshot of reality. Because of the experience of both that which I can and cannot see, and because of the enormous scope of our world, my faith both informs and interprets my experience. When I consider that scope, I am filled with a deep, inner awe for life. I often find it hard to stop life and think about
it …my hope is that my art will help allow a space for this reflection.

More of Jared's creations here! 

 

Gallery: May 2018

Cindy James & Dilys Kulchitsky

Gallery Reception on Friday, May 18th. Details here. 

Cindy James

Cindy James lives in Edmonton, Alberta, and has worked as a court reporter and television closed captioner since 1992. 

In 2010 Cindy participated in an encaustic painting workshop and fell in love with the vibrant colour and versatility of the medium.  She has learned her craft through various encaustic workshops both online and through travel to the United States.  As her encaustic studio has expanded in size and scope, so has her understanding and appreciation of encaustic painting and the numerous opportunities for discovery that the medium affords inquisitive artists. 

Cindy continues to focus on the exploration of the ancient medium of encaustic wax and all that it offers.

Artist Statement

Encaustic medium is a perfect fit for my inquisitive nature and my passion for learning.  I am as enamoured with the glassy smooth surfaces as I am with the textural capabilities of wax, and the ability to transform a painting into something sculptural is a constant source of wonder and delight.

Encaustic painting lends itself well to abstract depictions, and although my paintings often start with that intention, I am most drawn to emotive, sparse, surreal landscapes.  I search out the joy of small things to be found in a melancholy subject, and I seek inspiration through simplicity in a complex and chaotic world. 

I often use my original photography in my work, and I continue to explore the versatility of encaustic painting and the near limitless potential that the medium offers through mixed media.

Check out more of Cindy's work here! 

Dilys Kulchitsky

Born and raised in Edmonton Alberta, Dilys Kulchitsky, a wife, mother, Registered Nurse and Opera Singer didn't start painting until late 2014.

Photography classes in 2014 was Dilys' first foray into visual arts.  She soon took up painting with acrylics and mixed media until the summer of 2015 when she was introduced to Encaustic Medium her current medium of choice.  

With no formal training Dilys paints intuitively and reactively.  Encaustic medium (bees wax and damar resin)  allows Dilys the opportunity to explore, expand and experiment. Because of the versatility of encaustic medium she paints different styles using various techniques from landscapes and mixed media to photo-encaustic and mono-printing!

Artist Statement

Why I paint with bees wax: Bee's wax and tree resin ( aka encaustic medium) are not what initially came to mind when I thought  of painting pictures but I can't think of anything else I'd rather paint with!

An encaustic painting's final outcome is quite unpredictable as the process of transferring the molten wax onto a cool surface hardens the wax immediately.  It isn't a medium that you can manipulate much once it's on the panel.  Fusing each layer of encaustic medium with a blowtorch provides some ability to manipulate but the medium itself decides  it's final outcome and how it will interact with the previous layers and how it will move when reheated. I love this unpredictability and it is the surprise endings that keep me engaged and enthralled with the art of painting with encaustic medium.

I don't have any formal visual arts training so I paint intuitively.  My experiences and inspirations come from many different aspects of my life- an opera I'm singing in, photographs I've taken on my travels, current events, music, my geographic location, the seasons and nature.

My techniques are as varied - sometimes smooth, sometimes textured, sometimes nature inspired and embedded with dried plants, sometimes abstract and geometrical.

My goal is to continue to discover the many opportunities that using encaustic medium provides and to use and manipulate this medium to express and share my many versions of my world!

My goal is to continue to discover the many opportunities that encaustic medium offers and to use and manipulate this medium to express and share my version of my world!

Check out more of Dilys' work here!