The book of selected photos from my mother's albums is now ready at Lulu.com. You can order a copy from Lulu, for $52 plus shipping, or download the PDF from my dropbox file: It is called Gladys's Photo Book.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/9sluwrcyzszd6m6/coverfinal.pdf?dl=0
https://www.dropbox.com/sh/q7u5y8m4n0auvxy/AABW8FVH8BbyvIWDpCkloVEta?dl=0
This provides an ideal way tp preserve the archival photos she had in her collection, as well as to disseminate them to the whole family.
The originals are in a small album on my shelf.
Many of the pictures actually look better than the originals. In many cases the originals were damaged by being stuck into an album then torn out, or faded, or in the case of color photos some colors had faded more than others.
In all there are roughly 230 pictures documenting her family and her life. Enjoy!
Please note that I am not including anything in the price for my time on this project. Unfortunately since Lulu does not insert page numbers in photo books, I had to put a text block on each pair of facing pages, and so I had to completely reorganize the book. And also it took more pages to place all of the photos and the price is a little higher.
Saturday, March 26, 2016
Saturday, February 13, 2016
Mandala, a process
Mandala, a process
The theme of the
Nuit blanche in Montreal this year is Red, and Christ Church
Cathedral, my church, is hosting and exhibition of art by its
members. I am calling my paintings “ painting RED.” I
looked around the Christ Church Cathedral where the exhibit is to be
held, and found a number of red objects, including, I thought, the
triangular red windows at the top of the stained glass windows in the
front of the church.
I photographed these
windows. I enlarged the photo of just one of the small windows to
get the detail. I studied them in in the most revealing way possible,
by attempting to draw, then paint, them.
The triangular
window had a three-fold symmetry. The corner red panes seemed to be
painted as poppies, perhaps as a commemoration of The Great War. (It
turns out to have been made in the 1930's, so this is not unlikely. )
What looks at first
glance a red window is in fact quite complex, and makes me think of a
mandala, a symmetrical depiction of the universe used for meditation.
I wonder if anyone has the code to its meaning.
In order to study
the structure of the mandala I hand drew it. The structure is an
equilateral triangle. Inside is a circle, the radius being such
that it touches the sides of the triangle.
Inside the circle is
a six pointed knot, incorrectly drawn here in terms of which strand
lies over which, with the sides of the knot being part of a circle
with a radius greater than the distance from the side (i.e. the arc
that forms the side is that of a circle with centre outside the
triangle). There is another circle concentric with the first and
running between the corners and the sides of the knot.
There are additional circles centred on the corners of one of the
triangles making the knot. Outside that circle in each
corner of the triangle is a circular pane resembling a poppy. The
smaller mostly blue mandalas on either side of the triangle were
added to complement the red one.
This hand drawn
mandala was done to explore the complexity of the window. My hand
drawn mandala is much less beautiful than the original window, in
part because of the brilliance of the transmitted light from behind
the window as it is seen in the church during the day.
I then decided I
should make a mandala of my own life. What was central to me? I have
always valued my intelligence. Now my brain cells are occupied with
Lewy bodies, due to Parkinson's, and my brain has gone haywire.
My roles as mother,
physician, and artist are at the corners of the triangle. The
diseased neurones are impairing both mother and physician roles.
Researcher, worshiper, and Parkinson patient roles are also shown.
The past (my
origins) are represented by the circle on the lower left,
representing my mother and father as parents, teachers, actors,
craftsman, and priest. On the right is the future, with my children
occupied in computer science, artistic endeavours, and giving a
helping hand (occupational therapy).
Technically this
drawing has problems, in part because I wrote on the yellow and
orange bands before the second layer of paint and the ink of the
writing ran.
I redid the mandala,
with less writing and and larger illustrations. It shows my support
system: my husband (Hendrik) and children (Henk, Alice, and
Geoffrey), people with Parkinson's (PWP), and what holds me together
(singing, dancing, and swimming). If Parkinson's can be cured, at
some point, its effect on my ability to work and mother will be
gone, and my brain will be able to do its job again.
Jung believed that
the exercise of making a mandala could lead to understanding of our
interior life. He also said that people often make mandalas at times
of psychological growth. Though the results of my mandala making are
not new or profound, they do help me to see more clearly where I am
going and hope to go, and how.
Thursday, February 11, 2016
painting RED
Red door
Mixed media on watercolour paper
11"x15"
2016
This year I am showing some of my new paintings in a show at Christ Church Cathedral, at the corner of University Avenue and Ste Catherine St in Montreal. The exhibition is on February 27, 2016. The show will be up before the concert at 4:30 PM, and ends at 2 AM. (There will be additional concerts all evenong; for the specifics see the Christ Church Cathedral post (below). ) Unfortunately the paintings will only be up for this one evening. February 27 coincides with Nuit blanche in Montreal, where we take back the night, and celebrate all night.
For information about Nuit Blanche at the Cathedral go to:
https://www.facebook.com/ChristChurchCathedralMontreal.
For more information about Nuit Blanche in Montreal, go to:
http://www.montrealenlumiere.com/fr-CA/programmation/index/nui/
The theme of Nuit Blanche this yearis "Red" so I have been using a lot of red paint. Here are some of my new paintings.
Still Life with Red Stethoscope
Oil on paint board
11" x 14 "
2016
2016
I decided that to get the brilliant intense reds I wanted I should paint in oils, and my brother Robert had taught me how to do so in a relatively non-toxic manner. I collected all of my red fruit, took some avocados for variety and there on my desk was my stethoscope, which, since I was a hematologist, had to be red. It was a little hard to capture the intensity of the color in the painting with a photo, since the flash produced glare on the photo and it was not a bright enough day to use all natural light.
I photographed various red things around the church, and these paintings are from my photographs.
I photographed various red things around the church, and these paintings are from my photographs.
Red door 2
Mixed media on sketching paper
7"x 9"
2016
The top part of the front windows of the church look, at first glance to be red. However on further inspection they are a multicoloured mandala. I believe these windows are in memory of The Great War, given the poppies in the corners, and the date at which they were made (1930's).
Front windows
11"x 15"
Mixed media on watercolour paper
2016
Before Christmas Catherine knitted herself a beautiful red hat, and I tried to capture that wonderful hat.
Red hat
Mixed media on sketching paper
5" x 5"
2016
Red hat 2
Mixed media on watercolour paper
15" x 22"
2016
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