The Georgia Straight

Painters show their colours at the Crawl

- By Janet Smith

Apicture can paint a thousand words, but the flip side of that, as proven at this year’s vast Eastside Culture Crawl, is that there are a thousand ways to paint a picture.

Among the hundreds of artists taking part in the massive studio open house, painters make up one of the strongest contingent­s. Here are just a few of the brush masters who are worth checking out, from Thursday to Sunday (November 14 to 17), between the boundaries of Columbia Street to Victoria Drive and 1st Avenue to the waterfront.

KATE MacDONALD

Hamilton Bank Building

This New Brunswick–born artist deals in video and digital collages as well, but check out her rich, haunting oils on canvas, where blackberry brambles might overtake a Chevy truck or an old fence, or hydrangeas threaten to engulf an antique chair. There’s something about the roiling clouds and toogreen greens that gives her everyday subject matter the heightened feel of a dark fairy-tale storybook. MacDonald is best-known for her series “Last Meals”, in which she not only eats but paints the real final dishes served to death-row convicts.

HELEN ALEX MURRAY

East Side Studios

On Murray’s fluid abstract canvases, the colours that roll and swoosh across white background­s sometimes conjure crashing waves, the insides of oyster shells, or gushing rapids. They feel inspired by West Coast nature, and by interior landscapes as well.

REBECCA CHAPERON

1861 Franklin Street

The surreal, the sacred, and the sci-fi meet in Chaperon’s alternativ­e dimensions. Strange female figures, portals, and deep, mysterious pools of water recur amid lush forests and flowers. For a more stripped-down, ethereal effect, look to her mesmerizin­g paintings of single crystals floating in space.

IRIS MES LOW

William Clark Studios Netherland­s-born Mes Low has become inspired by the way the wilderness edges up against the city in her adopted West Coast home. In her abstract landscapes, on view at the Crawl for the first time, cherry trees look like puffy cotton candy, evergreens point sharply skyward, and distant mountains undulate in blue.

BRONWYN McIVOR

Studio 580

Instead of classic still lifes depicting perfect, untouched pomegranat­es, apples, and pears, this Emily Carr University of Art and Design grad’s lushly painted oils depict rigorously squeezed limes, banana peels, and roughly sliced-open peppers. Her “The Undiscover­ed Kitchen” series both plays with historical forms and celebrates, in rich colours, food preparatio­n and the everyday byproducts of cooking.

BRAZEN EDWARDS

Parker Street Studios

The Edmonton-born Edwards, debuting at the Crawl, gets at the unconsciou­s in her richly rendered abstracts. A moody textural series features exposed layers and drips, in reds and pinks or blues, greys, and blacks; titles (I Could Corrupt You, Tear You Apart) suggest a turbulent undercurre­nt beneath the serene surface.

LISA OCHOWYCZ

The Mergatroid Building

This Crawl veteran, celebratin­g her 14th year, creates contemplat­ive work with acrylics and inks, often on panel or canvas. Some are washy and atmospheri­c, inspired by the great outdoors. Others interpret classical music via dapples, squiggles, and drip marks that, at a distance, look like serene, delicate rows of flowers.

 ??  ?? Helen Alex Murray’s abstract That Moment;
Helen Alex Murray’s abstract That Moment;
 ??  ?? Rebecca Chaperon’s surreal Spellwork.
Rebecca Chaperon’s surreal Spellwork.

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