Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Pictures From Karen's Show...
Friday, December 12, 2008
Karen Casey at Bike Hounds
Her large scale paintings are fantastic--warm, bright and energetic. Many of them were influenced by her extensive travels throughout Spain and Mexico. Some examples below...
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
GritLIT
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Monday, November 10, 2008
My Dog Joe
Monday, November 3, 2008
New Shows
- A group of eight paintings, ranging in size from 4x4 to 60x30, will hang at Westdale's My Dog Joe for the month of November.
- The Home Recording painting I just finished will be part of the Winter Salon exhibition at Loose Canon this December and January.
- Mex-I-Can will be on display during the December members' show at Hamilton Artists' Inc.
Get out on the town and see some art!
Friday, October 31, 2008
Monday, October 20, 2008
One Down; One Up
If you're looking for one-of-a-kind gifts, it doesn't get any better than this. There will be rows and rows of crafty and incredible local artists selling their goods. I'll have old and new paintings, cards, T-shirts and framed prints -in case you're buying for someone who happens to be my biggest fan this year...heck, even if you're not. Just because my family is tired of my handmade gifts doesn't mean yours won't love them.
Trust me.
Friday, October 17, 2008
Makers' Market Part 2
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Bike Hounds Opening
Sunday, September 28, 2008
Vibewrangler Party
When: Saturday, October 11, 2008 from 9pm-12:30am
Where: Vibewrangler Recording Studio at 468 Cumberland Avenue
Tell Me More: A ton of Hamilton musicians will be playing short sets. I will be working on a giant SURPRISE SUBJECT (not the studio, as I had previously mentioned) painting.
Halloween theme + recording studio = dress as your favourite musician and bring $5 for cover so they can afford to give me free drinks all night.
Add "Sign Maker" to the List...
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Robyn Dell'Unto
Monday, September 15, 2008
Westitalia...
Sunday, September 7, 2008
Ferguson Station Makers Market
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
New Paintings
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
T-Shirt City
Thursday, August 14, 2008
Westitalia
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Makers Market
Saturday, August 9, 2008
08-08-08-0-awes8me
Friday, August 8, 2008
Downtown, Dine Alone, and a New Disc
“It’s kind of an amazing place,” says keyboardist Dan Griffin. “
Lead singer Max Kerman’s vocals, inconsistent and somehow flatter on the Charlemagne EP, are strong and controlled on
As far as The Arkells are concerned, Dine Alone deserves some of the credit for this.
If you missed them when they played the Casbah last week, you’ll have to head to
Friday, August 1, 2008
Matthew de Zoete Looks up from the Bottom of the World
Where the songs on his debut album were laced together by a thread of loneliness, his follow-up is more positive. Across the Sea evoked a strong sense of separation. It was infused with the suffocating sea of its title. De Zoete sang of time, distance, reaching out and being removed. Bottom of the World is more optimistic. Songs like What are the Odds? and Idiodyssey (I’m a Sailor), where de Zoete sings I’ll always make it home to you/Tie me to the mast and hear me say/I’ll be home today, offer a fresh perspective. They sound almost like an epilogue to Across the Sea.
The release party for Bottom of the World falls in the middle of a three-legged fall/winter tour that will see de Zoete playing more than 40 dates, coast to coast, including some in the
Breaking Down Borders
Since 1993, more than 5,000 would-be immigrants have died trying to make their way into the
“This is an important piece, not only as a documentary piece, but as a labour arts piece,” says Renee Wetselaar, executive director of the WAHC. When Asma and his longtime partner, writer Katrina Simmons, asked Wetselaar for feedback on a grant proposal in 2007, she immediately encouraged them to submit the finished project to the WAHC programming committee.
Asma’s exhibit showcases six weeks worth of photos, taken in 2006, at various points along traditional migratory paths in
Perhaps most central part to this story is the US-Mexico border wall; one of the main reasons the path from the south to the States has claimed so many lives. What started as 22km of fence along the San Diego border has grown to hundreds of kilometers of strong, steel barrier that run throughout California, Arizona and Texas. There are gaps in the border wall and there are simple sections of single-wall fence, but there are also segments that are triple-thick. The wall in
The Minutemen Civil Defense Corps is one of these groups. An organization comprised of 12,000 volunteers, the Minutemen believe that those who oppose border fencing actively “risk the security of [the] nation...by allowing a border wide open for terrorists, rapists and drug dealers to cross.”
“To be fair to the group as a whole, they have legitimate concerns about people being illegal in their country,” Asma concedes. “But after talking to many of the migrants, I understand that most pay taxes, but can’t take advantage of the health care system, and most are doing work that Americans don’t want to do.” Chris Simcox, president of the organization, says that in addition to border patrol, the Minutemen assist “lost and abandoned individuals” in need of water and first-aid. They build high-tech security fences on private ranch land. They destroy makeshift migrant camps. In Asma’s photos, they scan the horizon through binoculars, holsters on hips. They are armed, not for show, but for confrontation. Though Simcox maintains they merely act as eyes and ears for legitimate border patrol, there have been reports of Minutemen shooting at migrants before they even set foot on
It is these obstacles that force migrant workers to create routes where there are none. They spend days crossing deserts. They wade across fast-moving rivers, their belongings held overhead. Those that can’t swim pay exorbitant fees to be ferried across the
“[This] is an issue that is increasingly impacting
The Migrants’ Journey runs until December.
Installation
We decided that between my painting of Mex-I-Can and MM hosting A. Goldstein and his Espanola band, we had enough of a base to build a Mexican theme on so those of you who come to the show next week will enjoy big, fat piles of homemade guacamole, salsa and chips!
Aaron will be playing soft sets in the background most of the night, but there will be a full on 20-minute set at 9pm.
Because he can't be contained. And because your faces will be dying for some rock-induced melt by then.
Coffee with a Conscience
Fisher delivers During Live Recording
Even plagued by a cold, Fisher puts on the same high-energy performance he’s so well known for. It’s a one-man show, but he fills the stage by strumming guitar, switching between handfuls of harmonicas, looping vocals on the fly, and taking a seat in front of the studio piano. He plays over a dozen songs from his catalogue, including hits like High School, Lemon Meringue Pie and Cigarette, as well covers of Peter Gabriel’s Solsbury Hill and Greg Brown’s Canned Goods. He also test drives a few as-yet-unrecorded songs, but not before issuing the disclaimer that he’s still fuzzy on most of his new material.
This proves unproblematic. The charm of a Jeremy Fisher show is its laidback style. His casual, relaxed approach, his lengthy between-songs banter, his willingness to fail in front of you (during a show, he once asked a fan to read him the lyrics to a new song from the liner notes), and his genuine love of entertaining, combine to offer his audiences a concert experience that is refreshing for its lack of artifice. Fisher might be on stage, but he might as well be in your basement. There’s no pretense here; just solid songwriting. In sickness and in health, Fisher delivers.
Film Frenzy
August Show
The opening is Friday, August 8th -the same night as the semi-famous and super-awesome James North Art Crawl. This is also the last art crawl Mixed Media will be at its current address -and possibly the last crawl where they will be displaying art- before they move a few doors up to their new space at the very corner of James and Cannon.
In addition to my paintings and prints, Hamilton pedal steel guru Aaron Goldstein will be playing live and selling demo's of his new solo work. You'll be able to pick up a well-priced and nifty little package containing his EP, Espanola, and a print of the painting I'm doing for his upcoming full-length album.
Almost ditto Toronto songstress Robyn Dell'Unto. She won't be playing, but both her EP, The Bell Sessions, and her album, Bare Bones, will be available for sale along with prints of one of my paintings of her.