Susan Strachan Johnson has been on Retreat

…. At the Creativity Centre, La Grange, Texas. She has been working on painted art quilts for Eight Dimensions, and she will have several works in the same theme: Animals in Camouflage. It’s not finished yet, but here’s a work in process. Don’t miss our show, over the weekend of May 2, 3 and 4, 2014, at Studio 404, 404 York Road, Guelph, Ontario. For more information, call Gail Root at 519 856 4143, or Susan at 519 856 2364.  See you there!

lion looking at me

Kim’s Work Included in Elora Art Centre Show

Kim Johnston has work in the Harris Gallery, Elora Arts Centre, Elora, Ontario, until April 6,  2014, along with Francis Baker, Sharron  Begg, Mary Helps and Peter Skoggard. This show will be in conjunction with Mediated Landscapes which is showing at the same dates in the Minarovich Gallery (Colin Carney, Lida Risacher-Copp, Barry McCarthy and Alex McLeod). Don’t miss the Panel Discussion and exhibition tour with the artists and Curator, Phil Irish!

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Alex McLeod, Stonehenge Candy Mountain (detail)

Latest News from Members!

Our members have been very busy! First of all, don’t miss the opening of the latest show by Connections Fibre Artists, titled Celebrating the Group of Seven, which includes work by our own Helen Hughes. It runs from April 5 to June 8 at Wellington  County Museum, and the opening reception is on  Friday April 4th, from 7 to 9 p.m.
Connections show, April to June

Show poster

If you want to see a spectacular Tom Thomson type work in textile, don’t miss this piece by Helen. The Museum charges a nominal entrance fee during regular daily open hours, but no fee is charged the evening of the opening. So that’s a good time to go!
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Another show, which involves work by Helen, Deb and Leslie, will open this week of March 24th, at the Boathouse on Gordon St in Guelph, and it will be up until the first week of June. This show represents current art of the Studio Tour membership.
Just longing for Spring? Seen any robins? Well, they’re coming! Here is a lovely watercolour by Kim Johnston, which is currently included in her solo show in the main lobby of Groves Memorial Hospital, Fergus, as part of Art in Public Places (organized by the Elora Arts Council.) Kim’s work will be there until the end of April.

Robin's Nest, K Johnston

Watch this space!

 

MOSAIC ARTIST JEAN LONEY

Jean LoneyLoney, Little Blue Heron, cropped

Biography

Jean Loney was born in London, England, raised in Toronto and then settled in Fergus, Ontario with her husband to raise their two daughters. Jean studied art at high school, however, while attending the University of Toronto she focused her studies on Sociology and English, and later pursued a career in elementary education. During her teaching years, Jean concentrated her artistic talents on creating a perennial garden for her century home. Digging in the dirt turned up shards of pottery, iron spikes, medicine bottles, and an old porcelain doll’s face. These buried bits of history led to a fascination with underground strata, shown in Jean’s sea- and earth-scapes.

Jean studied watercolour techniques with Nan Hogg in Guelph and Jack Reid at the Haliburton School of the Arts. After her retirement from teaching, Jean changed her artistic focus after taking a short course in mosaics with Guelph artist Deb Dryden. For a former primary teacher, “making mosaics is like cutting and pasting for grown-ups! It’s the colour, texture and sparkle of the glass that calls to me”. Although glass is not a fluid medium, Jean shapes it to represent air and water, making something effortless and flowing out of this concrete material.

Jean has taken classes from North American masters of modern mosaic technique, such as Lynne Chinn, Yulia Hanansen, and Sophie Drouin. Currently, she teaches mosaics at the Maplestone Gallery in Creemore, Ontario. Jean’s work is in private collections in Canada, the West Indies, Australia, and Great Britain. She is a member of the Society of American Mosaic Artists.

Artist’s Statement

Intangible elements from my life are expressed in my mosaics. My work, like many contemporary mosaics, incorporates a variety of materials other than glass, including stone, tile, pottery shards, beads, and found objects. The choice of material is suggested by the image and the image is then shaped by my vision of its essence. My current series of bird studies provides an entry to the magic of a natural world which for me is best expressed in glass mosaics.

Loney, Low Tide with Little Blue Heron

Loney, Earthscape for Carolee

Loney, Cafe des Arts

 

Loney, Birches