Between Heaven and Earth A Collaborative Exhibition of Paintings and Tapestries Inspired by Western Canadian Landscapes

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Between Heaven and Earth A Collaborative Exhibition of Paintings and Tapestries Inspired by Western Canadian Landscapes Dennis Evans, Richard Crack and Susan Crack

Between Heaven and Earth Foreward by Patricia L. Evans, BA(Hons.) In the collection of essays and companion exhibition entitled, Mystical Landscapes from Van Gogh to Emily Carr, Katherine Lochnan, Senior Curator, International Exhibitions, Art Gallery of Ontario organizes a collection of landscape paintings created between the late 1800 s to early 1900 s into eight categories. Among these categories are: the contemplative landscape, the mountain landscape, the wilderness landscape and the visionary landscape. She analyzes the iconography or symbolism used by each of the artists she s chosen to represent these categories to support her thesis that there is a strong spiritual content in all of the categories that crosses artistic instruction and personal experience. The body of work created by Dennis Evans, Richard Crack and Susan Crack for their collaborative exhibition, Between Heaven and Earth, expresses many of the spiritual characteristics noted by Lochnan. Intellectually and visually, each artist has incorporated metaphors for contemplation, communication between the human and divine, the infinite, transformation, and spiritual renewal into their pieces. Each of the works suggests that their creators spend time thinking about the visual language of landscape, extending their creative vision beyond the inherent aspect of scenery. Their landscapes are filled with thoughts and feelings. Each artist uses their expression of the landscape to reveal nature s story. Yet each work expresses two things at once the abstract and the recognizable. The landscape is the artists inspiration; paint and yarn are the tools to tell that story. The artists see something that they feel compelled to reveal through their chosen medium. This exhibition represents a trilogy. Three long-time friends and fellow artists show three collections. Each artist s work represents one element of that trilogy. Between, Dennis Evans; Heaven, Richard Crack, and Earth, Susan Crack. The totality of these works represents continuity, unity and the infinite. BETWEEN: The spirit residing in all things and the resonance emitted by the landscape. Its timbre links all that is between heaven and earth. Lochnan states that all mystical experience, like artistic creativity, begins with contemplation. Dennis compositions feature open spaces, inviting the viewer to bring their own experiences. Clouds and sky, emblazoned by the sun, exhale toward heaven as though a great breath has been pushed from earth. Like guardians or ghosts the iconic Celtic symbols emerge and recede to link the viewer with our human relationship with the land and remind us to embrace our place in the natural flow of life. The deliberate choice of a soft palette emphasizes the space as a place of mystery and solitude. The sun, the most ancient and powerful of images, is a universal symbol of the divine. HEAVEN: Mountains have long been seen as the connection between the human and the divine. Richard s paintings are punctuated by peaks, the bodies of which remain bound to the earth. Peaks touch the sky, as if reaching for the divine. The sense of power, the solitude of the climb to the summit and the power of the mountains physical and visual presence is conveyed using fields of colour and linear horizons that bridge the divide between the two realities. Characterized by minimalist, planar design elements, some textured, some flat, the built-up layers of colour and texture in these paintings convey the essence of the landscapes he has experienced. EARTH: In her tapestries, inspired by landscape and abstracted to its basic elements, Susan s work urges the viewer to feel the Earth s inherent sensual nature. All the colours and textures of sunlit meadows, fields, ponds and aspen woods are captured. Highly interpretative and conceptual, there is an intimate comfort within these landscapes, a result of the time she has spent observing nature. The woven threads of the tapestry are Susan s personal interpretation embodying a sense of place, season and time of day, creating joyous works inviting meditation.

Dennis Evans: Artist s Statement In this group exhibition, I chose to present the Celtic symbols, either in sharp focus or subtly emerging or receding in the landscape. The image highlights the non-physical aspect of the landscape. Just slightly out-of-reach, the image says, there is something else. As a colleague described it, the landscape is whispering to the painter to be captured in paint. The symbols connect with the sky, the earth and everything in-between. The shape of the symbol, its configuration in three or four, is key to the message that there is a spiritual connection with nature. I use three-sided symbols to represent the many different concepts of three such as mind, body and soul; past, present and future; life, death and rebirth; creation, preservation and destruction, Father, Son and Holy Ghost, thought, feeling and emotion; earth, air and water. Four-sided designs represent series of four. In my work, the four sided symbol represents the four seasons. The Celtic rope stands for infinity, continuity and longevity. With clouds and sky emblazoned by the sun, my landscapes exhale toward heaven as though a great breath has been pushed from the earth. Nature, as the subject of landscape painting, has long been a metaphor for the divine. In my collection of work created for Between Heaven and Earth, conceptions of life and death, existence and spirituality are represented by mountains, the sky and clouds. My intention is that there is no separation between human and nature. When measuring our human scale against that of the landscape, the viewer is the detail like those captured inside the frame. Now, like the rocks, the trees, the sky and the water, the viewer senses that we are all part of the infinite, and there is meaning to life. If You Want to Remain Naive, Don t Look at the Light 24 x 48 x 4 inches Breathe In / Breathe Out 36 x 48 x 4 inches Different notes played at the same time 36 x 48 x 3 inches

Revealing what can t be understood 36 x 48 x 4 inches Where does the sunlight go after dark? 36 x 48 x 3 inches Turn up the melody! 36 x 48 x 4 inches

Richard Crack: Artist Statement Mt. Sir Donald Behind the Ochre Slopes on the Glacier Crest Trail 36 x 36 inches I am fascinated by the dichotomy of mountain landscapes. They can have aspects of similarity and diversity, atmospheres of threats and promises, moods of mystery and familiarity, auras of permanence and transition, monochromatic and vivid colours, and emotive qualities of emptiness and longing to abundance and joy. Mountains are complex natural structures sculpted by forces of nature over countless millennia. However, we witness these processes through the brief, ever-changing and chimeric lens of the planet s weather under sunlight, moonlight and starlight never the same twice, at least to our brief spans. My objective is to simplify these mountain moods and present some of their contradictions and changeabilities to create individualized paintings that capture aspects of mountains variable natures to which I am giving personal expression and meaning through my paintings. Night over Mt. Beatty Glacier 40 x 30 inches To this end I use artistic techniques of simplification limited palettes, large areas of plain or textured colours, plain shapes and lines, hints of atmospherics, basic perspective, and free-formed shapes contrasted with precision edges. The straight-edged horizon band in my paintings is a device that anchors both the composition and the viewer in the landscape; a compositional strategy that characterizes my style. Although they are non-literal in depiction and composition, these landscape paintings are still reality-based. Rather than literal renditions, my paintings convey my emotional and spiritual reactions to mountain landscapes. An observation by artist Dennis Evans, offered an astute and succinct summary of my painting style, It is amazing how strong graphics can capture the spirituality of the Canadian Rockies. New Snowfall: Mount Athabasca from Parker s Ridge (Detail)

Far Left Blue Mountain 40 x 30 inches Centre New Snowfall: Mount Athabasca from Parker s Ridge 40 x 30 inches Right Late Evening over Glacier des Poilus and Isolation Peak 40 x 30 inches Sunset Near Beauvais Lake I (Diptych) 80 x 30 inches

Susan Crack: Artist Statement River Sunlight 40 x 56 inches Each tapestry represents a creative journey from sketching a scene to the slow weaving of yarns at the loom. For me, sketching is more than just gathering visual material; it s a way of contemplating the landscape and becoming a part of it for a short time. The second stage of my journey is with a deeper, more conceptual approach. I create small collage paintings. Collage is a wonderful medium, shifting my interpretation from the linear mark-making of sketching to the arranging of colour and value shapes. I work intuitively constructing patterns that express the moods of the landscape, the seasons or the time of day. Some aspects can be seen as metaphors adding more layers of meaning: a river representing life s journey and the passing of time or a patchwork field with its implications of warmth and comfort. My favourite metaphor is the checker board. In addition to providing a bold, graphic pattern, it is a personal symbol of long-time friendships. I start a weaving by choosing a collage painting as a reference that I feel will translate well into a woven expression. The tapestry is built up slowly, row by row, on a large upright loom. I use an ancient weaving method, a modified soumak technique, to give a rich, tactile surface to the tapestry. From the hundreds of yarns in my collection, I mix the colours, values and textures that will best express the sense of place and the spirit of the landscape. The artistic process of distilling nature into its characteristic elements and then reconstructing it into a personal expression of landscape is at the heart of my tapestries. Morning Reflections 40 x 42 inches River Sunlight (Detail)

Cottonwood Slough - Copper 40 x 40 inches Aspen Spring 40 x 44 inches Golden Meadow 40 x 35 inches Autumn Lake Fog 40 x 40 inches

About the Artists DENNIS EVANS was born in Viking, Alberta. He is a graduate of the Alberta College of Art, majoring in ceramics and painting. He obtained a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the University of Calgary and a Master of Fine Arts degree from the University of Houston, Texas. Working for over thirty years in all areas of the arts, Dennis has been a teacher, an administrator, a production manager and an entrepreneur. He now lives in Naramata with his wife and operates his own gallery and studio. More examples of Dennis paintings and pottery can be seen at http://dennisevansnaramata.weebly.com or at his studio at 680 Robinson Avenue in Naramata, B.C Richard Crack was born in Comox, British Columbia. He graduated from a four-year program at the Alberta College of Art, earning a diploma in Fine Art. Richard has worked in a number of areas; as a draftsman, an audio-visual technician, a medical photographer, self-employed as a graphic designer, and as a graphic designer and prepress technician at a printing company. His current artistic interests are in the complimentary endeavours of landscape painting and photography, while his expressive literary interest lies in the writing and self-publishing of poetry and short fiction. He now lives in Kamloops, B.C. Contact Richard at silvertree@telus.net. Susan Crack was born in Calgary, Alberta. She graduated from the Alberta College of Art, majoring in fibre arts and has both a Bachelor and a Master of Science degree in biology from the University of Calgary. Susan worked for over twenty-five years as a medical illustrator. She now lives in Kamloops, B.C. Contact Susan at susancrack@telus.net.