A Tourist in My Own Town

Tourist in My Own Town
Some days fill you with a deep sense of gratitude for your life. For me, today was such a day.

Justin at Georgia OKeeffe

Justin is home after a week visiting his father in Curacao (who is there staying with a friend). It was so good for him to go and so weird for us to be apart. We Skyped every day and throughout the week Justin would send me fun pictures of his adventures, from the surprise of iguanas to grocery shopping with his dad.

My fear of flying made the beginning and the end the hardest part of the trip, even though it wasn’t me that was getting on the plane! On each travel day, I loaded Justin’s airline number into a tracker and watched its progress with anticipation, sending love to the flight and everyone on it. I am so thankful he arrived and returned safe and sound.

Georgia O'Keefe at the AGO

Today we went on a wonderful Saturday adventure to the Georgia O’Keeffe exhibit at the Art Gallery of Ontario. This year I decided to become a member and I am so thrilled I did. There is such joy in not only being able to go whenever I like but also in being able to share. I went to the Mystical Landscapes exhibit three times, once by myself, once with Justin and once with Shannon. Plus, I’m surprised by how much I feel like (and like feeling like) a part of the gallery.

I knew I would enjoy this exhibit and I did, especially the abstract pieces and yes, of course, the flowers. I was captivated again and again not only by colour but also by composition.

But even more than the art, I was fascinated by the artist. I searched through the gallery’s write-ups for clues about who she was as a creative and as a person. I was struck by her strength and her presence. I wanted to sit with her at a table under the night’s sky with a glass of wine or a cup of tea and listen to her talk about her life and her work for hours.

After our visit to the gallery, Justin and I kept with our tradition of going out for a bite and chatting about what we had seen. Of course, we also stuck with our tradition of taking a while to choose a place to eat! It didn’t matter. The sky was blue, the sun was shining and the temperature was idyllic. We walked by our old apartment building right behind the Art Gallery and meandered through the familiar Queen West neighbourhood. We remembered Justin’s late night walks and remarked on how so many of the stores and restaurants on the street had changed.  We reminisced about Taro, The Tequila Bookworm (still there but much changed) and Velvet Underground. (The photo is of the door to that club.)

We stopped for a coffee and perused Yelp for a good spot for a bite. We decided on Beast and it looked like a treat but by the time we arrived they were wrapping up lunch service. We put it on our list for another day. In fact, it inspired a fun idea. Perhaps you’ve seen people create their 40 in 40 lists – 40 things they want to do in their 40th year (or 30 in 30, 50 in 50 etc.) Justin and I have decided to do a similar list based on the years we’ve been married – our 15 in 15! So far we’ll be making homemade gnocchi and going to the Scarborough Bluffs.

For today, we ended up at Canteen on King Street, sitting on the patio with a view of the CN Tower and having a lovely meal. It was so good to be together, chatting about art, eating lovely food, having walked 10,000 steps in downtown Toronto, through old haunts and new finds, doing it all together.

Reading, Stories and The Arts Belong to You (plus there’s a unicorn on my shoulder)

Every Monday, Wednesday & Friday morning I invite you Behind the Scenes at my studio.

Today: Some new books, continuing to consider our stories and reassessing our dreams.

Mentioned in Today’s Show

Neighbourhood Iris

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Creative Living with Jamie: Oto Kano

Oto Kano on Creative LivinOto Kano on Creative Living with Jamieg with Jamie



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Creative Living with Jamie (episode 260): Interview with Oto Kano

What if you left the shoulds behind in favour of what comes easily? That’s exactly what Oto Kano did when she decided to become an artist.  Step by step, she moved from a life full of shoulds to one that worked with her bipolar instead of against it. In this episode, Oto shares how she made the transition from feeling guilty about doing what she loved to truly owning her gifts.

Oto Kano is a Japanese-British abstract painter and jewellery designer based in Edinburgh, Scotland. Her work focuses on encapsulating chance encounter of colours, and her bipolar. She paints the energy she sees in her mind during depression and mania. She moved away from her university lecturing job teaching computer science to becoming an artist at 36, in order to follow a creative life that worked with her bipolar, not against.

A Little Note Regarding the Audio: Despite an unexpected power outtage, I managed to get this week’s episode to you. I record the extro on the fly so it sounds a little rougher than usual. I hope the message gets to you all the same!

Connect with Oto Kano

Website: Oto Kano
Facebook: Oto Kano
Instagram: @otokano_art

Shine a Light ~ Spread the Magic

Whether this is the first episode that you’ve listened to or we’ve been hanging out for years, I am so glad that you’re here.  I love knowing that we’re hanging out in your studio, folding your laundry or that we’re hanging out while you’re walking your dog or going to work. Wherever you are and however you listen, I want you to know, I cherish you. And if you cherish this show, if it has been a blessing to your creative life, please spread the magic! Take a moment to leave a positive rating or review on iTunes. Share the podcast with your friends! You really can make a difference by shining a light on the show so that it can be found by other creative hearts just like you.

BTS – Live!

Every Monday, Wednesday & Friday morning I invite you Behind the Scenes at my studio.

Today: Now here’s something new! Because the power was going to go off in the studio, I decided to dive in and do a YouTube Live for the first time. I’m glad I got in some wonderful show and tell!

Mentioned in Today’s Show

  • Visit the Academy and check out the spring/summer classes.

Two Frogs

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Gentleness, Hypotheses & Affirmations

Every Monday, Wednesday & Friday morning I invite you Behind the Scenes at my studio.

Today: This weekend I actually took some time to do some reading and it’s left me thinking about the impact of our hypotheses on our lives. I hope you’ll think about it too.

Mentioned in Today’s Show

Bright Peony

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Art School: Paper Cutting and Collage

First Day at Art Class

A couple of years ago, I braved registering for a collage course at the  Toronto School of Art, facing my creative desires and working through my fears and negative experiences with this kind of an environment. I learned a lot about collage, about myself and about the stories I had about art school. This summer I am returning for a second class: paper-cutting and collage. I feel free, inspired and at home. It helps that I’m working with the same teacher. Let me share with you a little of what I’m learning.

Warrior Queen

The first exercise we did was adding collage materials to abandoned paintings. Our focus was the face. It  is admittedly a rather unnerving experience to cut the face down into component parts.  (I talked about this a bit on stART.) It had me thinking about the nature of collage, the messages of deconstruction that are inherent in using this art form.

Unsure

Then we created another portrait, this time using the offcuts, making use of negative space. It was magical to see characters come to life as we built them up from scraps that might have been left behind, papers that would normally have been be put into recycling.

Next we created geometric collages. I made this one based on the Three-Part Harmony Quilt taught by Anna Maria Horner  on Creativebug. I loved its strategy of creating with a tonal palette of lights, mids and darks. I completed two collages, one with the darks being predominant and this one, where the lights are.

Our next assignment was paper weaving. We chose two images, making slits in one and strips out of the other and then brought them together with weaving. This process takes patience and a bit of dexterity but it is fascinating to discover what emerges when the piece is complete. I experimented with a gradual expanding of both the width of the strips and the the amount of space between them. I wondered if this would create a sense of growing expansion.

Art School Sink

My favourite unofficial activity during class is scanning the room for found art. You won’t believe what this piece is. Take a moment and see if you can guess…. It’s the art school sink after a good cleaning and scrubbing.

Art Boards

Some beautiful boards tucked away for student use.

Found Painting

And my favourite: the well-used tabletop.

Art is everywhere.

The Creative Unknown, Perspectives & Wild Drawing

Every Monday, Wednesday & Friday morning I invite you Behind the Scenes at my studio.

Today:   Today I am excited about the start of Journal Club! Plus I’m thinking about learning spirals, the power of intentional perspectives and facing that creative moment when you have no idea what you’re going to do next.

Mentioned in Today’s Show

Jamie Ridler

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