A new year

January 15th, 2008

2008. My resolutions.
- Smaller paintings
- Artists Statement

I have been enjoying CBC podcasts as I run along the Fraser River. Laughing to Vinyl Cafe, listening to Tapestries interesting interview with Bruce Feiler, Goldfarmers in World of warcraft… and the news. It has been a big adjustment for me, as I find the news too sad and unbearable to listen to daily. How do children addicted to opium in Afghanistan, the poor, the innocent compare with the strategies of political elections. The Kite Runner devastated me for a few days! Slowly I’m trying to shed the Canadian cocoon. Working on my artist statement is helping with that.

I have been accepted by Shorewind Gallery in Tofino, and have had interest from Minnesota. Fantastic to be distributed in the US. And how fantastic to have an excuse to go to Tofino for inspiration!

I am travelling this month to pursue other galleries outside of Canada. My current struggle is working in smaller sizes to meet clients requests. The energy is very different. You try express exuberance in a little brush hair. I always appreciate the commission challenge— when they are finished!

Sisters on the Dock

This recent one was for the daughter of Dan McIvor (Martin Mars) A very sweet commission of her memory. A present for her big sister. Inspired by an old photograph, the two waiting at Skaha Lake for their dad to fly in from a days work. How wonderful it must have been for Dan to come home, to see his daughters waiting on the dock for him. I wish I could have known Dan McIvor longer. I think of it as an honor to know his extended family now.

ROUGH DRAFT
(See final version online)

Rough draft of Sisters on the Dock

Holidays

January 2nd, 2008

Enjoyed Tofino and Ucluelet for the first time over the holidays. A nice way to bring in 2008. The beautiful trails, the dense and furry lined rainforest, Long Beach and the high-end restaurants like The Schooner. theCabins.ca was a great place to stay, exactly what we were looking for. Tofino inspired series coming soon.

Aislewalk - The Fine art of Weddings

December 10th, 2007

Wow. What a Launch party!

Amazing to keep an entire collection of work secret for so long. Painting bridal portraits without knowing the brides, and not having them ever see it, until now. Erin Gilmore and Tammy Lyon did an incredible job on the magazine, and what a launch party! They had such vision for the new book. I am looking forward to how brides respond to the Art of Weddings Collection.

See the paintings from Dec 6-Jan 8 at the Pacific Palisades Art and Soul Gallery. I really enjoyed showing here. They have a fantastic wine hour from 5-6 pm everyday where I was able to meet collectors and talk about my work.

An Artists’ life

December 6th, 2007

It seems some collectors are interested in the artists’ life. How artists work, what their studio looks like… their habits. I think we are all creative, that my life is just like anyone else’s, and find it hard to believe we would be of interest. (With that in mind, I will try to make this interesting!)

I am always trying to make individuals and the collective similar, versus different. I see professional similarities: artists have deadlines, commitments, managing their career path in a competitive environment. Focus, dedication, perseverance, attention to detail; allows for mastery of your career, and brings clients back for the rewards of a timeless piece of art. The only professional difference lies in the perspective: managing a business or being an employee, but remaining motivated and disciplined regardless.

My life filter of “OOoh, that’s interesting!” is what I rely on to keep me engaged with my work. If I demand a constant feeling of interest, I will either seek it out when needed, or let it flow through my work when it exists. I paint when I’m “on”. Since painting is a happy daily habit, I am cranky when I’m not working. I listen to high energy music during rough drafts, and quieter more relaxing music when I am finishing, or needing more focus.

My mornings are generally informing my work: reading, writing, organizing, meeting with clients or colleagues — which often inspires me. By afternoon I am engaged in the act of painting. The balance of rendering/producing vs. writing/reflecting the choice of subject, the intent is constant. I can flesh out a work quickly and have time to review. Layers of work complete a final piece that I’ve had a month to review. There is always time to reflect and find meaning and purpose in your work.

A piece of paper and pen is all you need — is something I always remember when discussing glorious gothic windows and a gleaming hardwood floor for studio requirements. Painting and selling work since high school, I was used to working in small spaces. Previously my live/work studio at the Calgary Grain Exchange, last year it was my kitchen wall. Now I live in a quiet community neighborhood, and 600 sqft dedicated studio space definitely helps with production, being more organized and saving my marriage.

Being a mom dictates my routine. Part-time daycare allows me a full day to concentrate, or have meetings. I work from home, which allows me to add a layer of varnish after picking up my children, or before I drop them off. It also (hopefully) gives my children an introduction to my business where they can pick up habits and routine.

In my studio, they have their own easel, toy box. When possible, I work on projects that require shorter periods of focus (exuberant rough drafts, varnishes, organizing, administration, website) when they are around, and leave the intense focus (final finish, working out drawing/painting problems) for when they are napping, or in daycare.

They sit patiently in car seats, underneath 6 foot canvasses packed in the minivan. During deliveries they mimic me on the phone “BremerPark, Karen speaking.”. They ride their toys around the studio commenting “Nice painting mom!”. When I was painting a portrait they ask “when are you going to paint me?”. They remind you that running a business can only have so many overtime hours. Balance, time for friends, family, and life tasks; building a rewarding life is the big picture, the successful career just a piece.

Like running your own business, you have only yourself to complain about. If you don’t like the work environment, job, the income, you sit yourself down and have a one-way conversation. Karen (employee) and Karen (sales, marketing) bring their suggestions to Karen (director) to decide on how to manage tasks. Gossip and office politics, are minimal — I live vicariously through others.

I pursue mastery of rendering, a high level of authenticity, paintings that have personal meaning for myself and collectors. Commissions, different subjects increase my rendering skills, as do galleries, pop culture, and my memories. A mastery of technique that aids the emotional connection between painting and viewer. I persevere, and hopefully will look back on a series of successful decisions in my lifelong career.

New York thoughts

November 2nd, 2007

New York is incredible in it’s grime and grit surrounding the high fashion and glamour of the shops. The huge MAC store open 24 hours, the beauty of Central Park, and of course the performances everywhere. You could go every night to the theatre.

We enjoyed a 10 dollar show in some old makeshift stagehouse, “Ten Tablespoons of Crazy” was so well written and beautifully performed. I absolutely loved “Hairspray”, the cast was incredible and did justice to John Waters Film. I asked the girls sitting next to me if they had seen the original film, and they replied, “Yes, we saw it yesterday!”

Had mixed feelings about “Rent” — maybe i’m just not a New Yorker! Didn’t like the stereotype of artists can’t be professionals, and professionals can’t be artists. “Leave your conscience at the door” when we are all doing our best to balance our ethics, and make our world a better place. But Angel character was absolutely Incredible giving out so much energy to the show. Maybe it was just the hard rocker musical score that rubbed my ears raw.

Another play about a boy at 9 who witnesses an argument over a parking spot that ends in a homicide. He realizes that the murderer “capo di tutti capi” is well aware he witnessed the whole event. His father tells the 9 year old who gets rewarded for his silence, “You think they’re tough guys? I’m the tough guy. The working man is the tough guy.” Chazz Palminteri writes an autobiographical play inspired by his father’s quote. “Always remember what i’m saying to you. The saddest thing in this world is wasted talent”. A quote he has kept in his back pocket, even at 55. It’s unfortunate I won’t see that one.

Shepard Fairey

November 2nd, 2007

So inspired by Shepard Fairey. Great article in Juxtapoz, among many. I would like to have some connection between my fine art and graphic design work, and Fairey is a great model for connecting the two successfully.

In the same magazine, Saelee Oh has her utopian pretty cutouts. Ideal designs for a girls bedroom nursery, the contrast is striking.

Shepard Fairey

Art Show in Chelsea

October 10th, 2007

Karen Lorena Parker New York show 2007
The show went very well, with lots of people attending and great response to my work. The galleries in Chelsea are a string of 6 floor buildings with at least three galleries on each floor, times… how many buildings… incredible. A nice way to go from opening to opening.

Pictures of the show from the gallery,
still need to upload all of mine, along with the pictures and comments from the Guggenheim, MoMa,
Metropolitan… as I settle back into Vancouver life and it’s deadlines.


New York Quotes

“Thinking is more interesting than knowing, but less interesting than looking.” — G O E T H E

“We should treat our minds as innocent and ingenious children whose guardians we are — be careful what objects and subjects we thrust on their attention.” — T H O R E A U

“I want to get to the stage where nobody can tell how a picture of mine is done… Simply that i want nothing but emotions given off by it.” — P I C A S S O

“The French Collector is at ease with dust and scratches,” — Phillipe Julian

“Nobody respects blue collar.” — Taxi Driver in response to conversation about shortage of labour.

“I have no interest in villains.” — Jonathan Demme, director of Jimmy Carter’s memoirs.

The Daily Show

October 1st, 2007

Stood in line for the Daily Show, after stopping by the gallery to see my work. Bought myself some flowers for the hotel room, and had the vendors singing Happy Birthday to me down the street. A sales clerk is talking to herself, “Get an Office!” as the man that stopped inside to take a message from his caller has already left. It’s Monday and I had to put the sad book down that I was reading. There is too much life here to enjoy.

Enjoyed Caffe Linda, and the recently opened Casellula. The “little hut” cheese bar, great food, ambiance, my ideal studio. I’m looking forward enjoying all the local businesses… no Starbucks in my 10 days.

Posted in Personal - Karen Lorena Parker | No Comments »
New York
September 22nd, 2007

Getting excited about my New York show. I went in ‘94, when I graduated from art school; to make the decision if I would pursue the arts after college. Every minute in that city I felt so alive, and woke up with energy. Hours at the gallery in the morning, then distracted by the colorful characters, the amount of people walking by, and of course the shopping, and back to the galleries… The decision was easy enough, I knew I had to persevere.

It will be nice to meet the other artists from Canada in the “Beyond Borders” exhibition. But I hope to have a solo show one day in New York. That will be the next goal.

I wonder how it will change my work. Coming home from a polluted Taiwan inspired the clean westcoast landscapes. I see the New York work as very bold, colourful, plastic and edgy. I can’t wait. Hopefully I can put it into words daily, on my blog.

Frenetic Storms

September 19th, 2007

Frenetic Storm I

Frenetic Storm I
60×40 acrylic on canvas

Frenetic Storm II

Frenetic Storm II
72″x36″ acrylic on canvas
at Novo Furniture

Novo Nights

The opening of my solo show was really incredible for me. To see so many people come out, for just me. No other artist, just my work filling up 15000 square feet. Landscapes, florals, night skies and west coast shorelines that added life and energy to the room.

This piece was completed just before the show, a series of two, that connect with “Abstract Skies” which was done last year.

Favourite Quotes

June 15th, 2007

The harder i work. The luckier I get. — Samuel goldwyn.

“Your memory is a monster; you forget - it doesn’t. It simply files things away. It keeps things for you, or hides things from you - and summons them to your recall with a will of its own. You think you have a memory; but it has you.” John Irving