Sunday, February 21, 2010
painting hope for Haiti
"Forest Green" oil 32 x 42 inches 2009
For three days, February 26, 27 and 28, Squatters' Gallery in Flesherton will be home to a fundraiser for the Foundation for the Children of Haiti. Artists from everywhere are welcome to participate in this very worthy cause. We will have our own inventory cleared out, so there will be plenty of wall and floor space available for two and three-dimensional (any medium) pieces.
cooking on boats
I like cooking on boats
I bought the boat because
I liked the stove-
and the way she moved
boat meals:
onions
green & red pepper
olive oil
green beans
tomatoes
roasted eggplant
garlic
oregano
L&P
portabello tomatoe sauce
black pepper
on basmati
buttered
or pasta
ground beef (optional)
note to self:
build in stoage
for mason jars
and invesigate
two forestays
oh,
so now i'm a
food photographer
Thursday, February 18, 2010
projecting
projecting imagination
into the night
is less distracted than
had it been day
cooking with road kill
no, wait it's not what you think
worse
it's about doing something
with the "leftovers"
into the night
is less distracted than
had it been day
cooking with road kill
no, wait it's not what you think
worse
it's about doing something
with the "leftovers"
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
perhaps
I'm prone to
noticing
but
for some strange reason-
and it has been reassuring-
that the idea of
"following ones passion"
has been getting some press lately
i've been enjoying
the winter
out doors
with
a respirator,
ear protection
ski goggles
and insulated overalls
working on the boat
removing hundreds of pounds
of anti-fouling paint
with 24 grit on a grinder.
first the build-up of the red chalky stuff
which blows across the snow
like a Santa Fe dust storm.
then a couple of layers of
brass-coloured metallics
and then
into the white
(polyester gel-coat)
it seems that the ubiquitous
white fiberglass boat hull
has issues with water - no kidding-
the stuff absorbs water,
blisters and starts to dissolve.
Luckily,
if you care to grind back through
the toxic layers,
and through the gelcoat
and let the hull dry thoroughly-
who would have thought...
it reminds me of when the old timers
encourage the kids to become
newly-weds...
"come on in,
the water's great!"
Luckily they've come up with
an epoxy barrier coating
that seals the polyester sub-straight (the boat)
and bonds with the anti-fouling
bottom paint
It's like archeology
geomorphology, deconstructionism
and cultural anthropology all in one.
patches of the first layers
of metallic bottom paint
flake off as i begin to grind.
Hmm
what they leave behind is a hand-sanded
layer of gel-coat with a green residue
that looks like algae
Hmm
so, it was in the water
prior to getting that bottom paint?
and
there seems to be two layers of gelcoat.
the outer layer seems to be in fairly good shape
with small voids here-and-there that look like trapped air bubbles
but
grinding through into the second layer reveals
a pock marked surface
so
off comes all of the gelcoat
Sunday, February 7, 2010
snow
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