new year

Looking Back at 2021 and Moving Onward to 2022

A few weeks ago I broke my left (dominant) arm while riding my bike, so I will keep this review of 2021 short and sweet (since I’m typing one-handed)!

Notable Moments from 2021:

Still image from video recording of artist talk, Feminist Craft of Care for Times of Crisis, 2021

  • Remnants of the Manmade series was shown as part of the virtual group exhibition, "Seeking the Periphery" at the Paul H. Cocker Gallery

(Cover) Invisible Labour: Cross-Stitching, Feminism, & the Collective Strength of Women, 12” x 12”, hardcover book, 2021

Installation shot, Society Reboot: A Guide for Humans, video, 2021, ArtRich 2021, Richmond Art Gallery

Installation shot, Society Reboot: A Guide for Humans, video, 2021, ArtRich 2021, Richmond Art Gallery


Coming up in 2022:

  • Moving in to my first private studio space!

  • Preparing for two solo shows:

    • Back to the Future: Digital Art Through Embroidery, Doris Crowston Gallery, Sechelt, BC (October-November 2022)

    • Womanmade: Crafting Architecture and the Mundane, Morey Family Gallery at Art Reach of Mid Michigan, Mt. Pleasant, MI (February 2023)


Uncanny Cross-Stitch (2), 7 x 5.5 inches, embroidery floss, Aida cloth, 2021

I’m truly excited to see what this new year will bring. But for the first month or so, my focus will be on recovery (due to this darn arm injury!) and getting set up in my new studio. Can’t wait to share more about the studio and all the new work/explorations that will surely take place within it!

Until then, wishing you all a healthy and happy new year!

 
 

January 2021 - Update

Well it’s been one hell of a year and I’m happy to finally say goodbye to 2020. COVID aside, this past year actually allowed me more time in the studio and there are things that I’m happy to say I’m proud of. This year I submitted my first Canada Council for the Arts grant application (pending results by end of February), I participated in my first virtual exhibition, and I read several books, not only for research, but also for my own personal enjoyment.

I took a much needed hiatus from September - December 2020, since it’s always busiest time of year for my job. I now feel rejuvenated and ready to get back into the studio. I spent my most of my holidays cross-stitching, painting, and jotting down ideas in my sketchbook. Sometimes the hardest thing for me to do is to settle on the idea(s) I should execute and which ones I should leave behind.

I finished the third and final piece from the System Failure series. Overall I’m really happy with how the series came together. All three pieces may stand alone, each with a unique colour palette and various levels of “completion”. The cross-stitch patterns are based off of digital glitch images that have been disrupted or “glitched”. The series is a representation of a “glitch within a glitch”. However, the glitched or unfinished cross-stitch is a forced visual that alludes to a machine error or malfunction.

System Failure 03, 8x10 inches, embroidery floss, Aida cloth, 2020

System Failure 03, 8x10 inches, embroidery floss, Aida cloth, 2020

I finally finished a series of paintings (currently untitled), that I originally started while I was an artist in residence at the Vermont Studio Center (in September 2019). They were only meant to be tests while I was trying out the painting technique I ended up using for the Translation Series that I also began in Vermont. The paintings were painted square by square, section by section, using tape to mask out various areas at a time.

Lastly I spent time on Stitching Loose Ends, an ongoing project that I started back in 2018. I used up all the loose ends lying around my apartment, which I guess means I need to get going on another cross-stitch project! I also finished another row on the second painting from the Translation Series. I’ve been making slow progress on this series since the process is quite tedious with all the tape masking. One day I’ll have a studio where I can have the painting out at all times and work on it in little spurts while taking breaks from other projects. Currently I don’t have that luxury and it takes a lot more motivation to get a painting station all set up in my apartment.

Looking forward to seeing what’s in store for 2021.

Happy New Year!