Yesterday was my first work day in the studio in the new year. I’m currently thinking about the driftwood I saw on my trip to Dungeness and the color green. I bought some green acrylic inks and some paints to use for printing and spent yesterday working on paper. It’s a good way to loosen up. I can work very quickly and the materials aren’t expensive so I’m not as attached to an outcome. Here are some working shots.
Author Archives: Cameron
Looking Forward, Looking Back
“I hope that in this year to come, you make mistakes. Because if you are making mistakes . . .
you’re Doing Something.”–Neil Gaiman
My family and I spent just spent two nights in a house near the Dungeness Spit in Sequim, Washington on the Strait of Juan de Fuca. We had incredibly good weather for late December and enjoyed several long walks on the beach. It’s always good to get out of town and the unstructured time in a beautiful location gave me some time to look back over the past year and look ahead to the next.
2013 was a year filled with travel and shows. It was also a year filled with the challenge of moving my art studio. Reading through my blog of the last year I was surprised to be reminded of so many really great experiences when during most of the year I was consumed with anxiety about the move. Of course, it all worked out and now, at the beginning of 2014, I am poised to move forward in a really great space, both mentally and physically.
Some of the highlights of 2013 included:
• my solo show, Madrone, at Foster/White Gallery
• having my work at both Bellevue Arts Museum and in the opening exhibition of the Bainbridge Island Museum of Art
• installing Susurration in Bellevue as part of Shunpike’s Storefronts program
• being featured on the Daily Art Muse blog
• going to the SDA Conference in San Antonio
• writing two articles for the SDA Journal, both for 2014 issues
• developing new surface design techniques working with positive and negative imagery
• working with my terrific interns, Jesse and Annie
• designing and building my new kick-ass studio
• travel including big trips to Costa Rica, Paris, Hawaii, San Antonio, Burning Man
• smaller trips to Oregon Country Fair, Orcas Island, Tieton, Dungeness Spit
• witnessing my older daughter transition in her Senior year of high school into a beautiful, capable, college-bound woman
Right now 2014 is an open book with a few plans penciled in. I have a few group shows coming up with existing pieces. I have a proposal out for some new work that I’ll hear about in February. It looks like I’ll have a second intern for the Winter quarter. We’ll be traveling to the Southern tip of the Baja Peninsula in Mexico in February for some sunshine. Perhaps another trip for Spring Break in April and some college visits with my daughter.
Now that my studio is set up I’m excited to open it up as a teaching space. In the next few weeks I’ll be putting together a schedule of workshops. One of the benefits of having my own space is flexibility. Let me know if there’s something you’d like to study with me or want to set up independent or small group workshops. I’m planning on sending out a short survey to see what you would like to see offered.
And new work? Well, I’ve got a glimmer or two of that. I was inspired this last weekend by the trip to the Dungeness and the driftwood I found there. The shapes, the visual textures, and the rusted remnants of human touch left upon them spoke strongly to me as you can see here in images accompanying this post. I’m hoping to both expand my work in the picture plane and also get back to my free-standing sculptures.
Last year started with a laser sharp focus on making work for my solo show in March. This year, I’m easing in without much of a plan. It’s a little scary for me not to know, but I’m sitting with it. I have faith that doors will open, that the phone will ring, and the days will fill with adventures, community and creative pursuits.
In the coming year I wish you all creative challenges and hand-won satisfactions.
Susurration
I installed Susurration in Bellevue in the Elements Complex on 10th NE and 112th. It is visible through the windows day and night and is quite lovely at dusk, when this video was shot.
Susurration means a whispering sound or murmur and evokes the sound of gentle waves as they wash up against the boulders of our Northwest coastline. Susurration, the installation, shows the sea bed, where waves cross and eddy, creating complex yet repetitive patterns.
The fabric for Susurration measures 12 feet in height by 40 feet in length is made up of 28 separate panels of hand-dyed shibori silk. The installation is scheduled to be up as part of Bellevue Storefronts, supported by Shunpike through mid-March 2014. Like all the storefronts projects, the installation time is dependent on availability and will be shortened if the space is leased. I am currently looking for other spaces to install Susurration. Let me know if you hear of an opportunity.
Storefronts Bellevue
Back in July I posted about some shibori dyeing I was doing for an installation that was to be somewhere in Bellevue on a date to be determined for Storefronts Bellevue.
Back in Seattle Again and It’s All Part of the Process
The project is coordinated through Shunpike, a local non-profit that helps artists and communities with the business of art. They manage Storefronts programs in Seattle, Bellevue, Auburn, and Mt. Vernon which match vacant storefronts with artists to activate the spaces. Artists get a small honorarium to create temporary (3 month) installations to enliven these empty spaces. I was juried onto the roster for Bellevue in late Spring but it’s been slow to get going. It’s a new program there and it seems that it’s taking a while to get all the cogs to line up.The coordinator I’m working with, Anne Blackburn, has been very helpful.
I finally have my location and my install date, December 18th, so it’s a good thing I got all that dyeing done this Summer!
Anne and I did a site visit last week. The space I’ve got is beautiful. Many of the vacant spaces are kind of grimy, or unfinished, but I lucked out. Apparently, the former tenant was a gallery, so it’s a clean open space with nice lighting. The main challenge of the space is that the ceilings are about 30 feet high. My original concept to hang my piece from the ceiling just isn’t going to work. I wouldn’t even want to be up that high on a scissors lift, even if I had the budget to rent one. Time to think outside the box. It was great to toss ideas around with Anne and I think we came up with a good solution. It involves cables, and no, I haven’t worked with them before, but it should work. Faith, remember?
Today my intern, Annie, helped out at the studio so I took advantage of the extra hands (and her young knees) to hang all the panels and determine their order. There are 28 panels, each 18 inches by 12 feet long, that will be sewn together into a single piece of fabric 12 feet tall by approximately 37 feet long. Because each panel is different, it took some looking and moving them around, and looking some more, to figure out the best arrangement. I think it has a nice flow.
Tomorrow, I’ll take a trip to the hardware store to talk about cables and connectors. Then, back to the studio, where I’ll set up my serger and start making a really, really big piece of fabric. It should work.
Just Add Color!
A Sense of Place
I spent this week finishing up my studio move. I had done all the heavy lifting, literally, and had a very nice Open House last weekend. This was more about unpacking the rest of the boxes that were stuffed under the tables and coming up with systems. I have hopefully bought my last plastic storage box and now have everything stashed away, yet accessible and clearly labeled.
Now that it’s all organized I’m going to take everything out from under the printing table so that I can paint it and pad the printing surface. I was originally thinking that I’d paint it white but now am leaning toward a light gray, just to ground it and make the inevitable splatters less obvious.
I also moved in the last van load of stuff yesterday. Phen, the owner of Foster/White Gallery where I show, had offered me some things for the studio that came from Alden Mason’s last apartment. Foster/White had represented Alden for many years and Phen, and the other employees there, were a big part of his life. They helped him move, drove him to events and openings, and were supportive way beyond the usual relationship between a gallery and artist.
I’ve always felt a connection with Alden Mason, probably because of the shared last name, but I started paying attention to his work long before I started making art. Being represented by the same gallery, getting to meet the artist, hear some of his stories, and sharing a table at the Gallery’s holiday parties were special. It’s not often we get to meet living legends and Alden was always so full of life, even as it was clear that his was near its end.
It makes me happy to have a few things from Alden’s studio in my studio: a wooden ladder, a metal stool, some fans, and a very comfortable wicker chair. They are all well used and have touches of paint from his hand. I also still have and use silk screens that I got from Su Job’s estate, a vibrant fabric artist that passed on a few years ago. These objects, pedestrian as they are, give me a sense of history and continuity and the feeling that I am part of something larger. Using them is a way of honoring those that have come before me, a way to keep their memories active and alive. Their presence in my new studio is part of its becoming more than a numbered room down a hall. It is part of its sense of place, a place to create.
Up and Down the Ladder
It’s been a long two weeks since I last posted. In that time I’ve taped, mudded, (repeat as necessary), sanded, primed, painted, mounted insulation foam for two large pin/design walls, painted some more, covered the foam with fabric, overseen an electrician installing outlets and track lighting, landlord installing my sink, and a carpenter installing molding.
And yesterday my good friends and family helped me move everything from the old studio to its new location–either the new studio or home for storage.
It has been exhausting and exhilarating! I have been sore and tired in ways I didn’t think possible. I haven’t had the mental energy to keep up on the blog until now. (I have posted along the way on Facebook, so like my “Cameron Anne Mason” page there if you want the up to the minute updates.)
Today is the day to take a breath, do laundry, get some groceries for the family, and finish up a few things at the old studio. I still need to take down some shelves, take a few things off the walls, give it a good scrub, and go to the dump.
Tomorrow I will start unpacking and putting away at the new studio. It’s and exciting time, full of beginnings.
Change is Good, Remember?
First, don’t worry, this story has a happy ending.
Last Friday, I arrived at my new studio building to pick up the keys to my studio space. In my car, I had an 8-foot-ladder and supplies to start mudding and taping the drywall. I had arranged a small celebration in the space that night with some of my closest friends to show it off and drink a toast to new beginnings. My landlord texted me that he wanted to talk–I figured it was about the electrical work.
Nope, not electrical.
Turns out that he actually wanted my space for his studio and wasn’t sure that he would renew my lease if we went forward with it. He was telling me now because he knew I was about to put money into installing a sink and having furniture made for the space. He offered to exchange my space for any one in the building that was available, even a larger size for the same money, plus he would pay to install my sink. He told me he had never done this in 20 years of leasing spaces to artists, but that for a number of reasons, he really wanted the space he had leased to me.
I was pretty stunned and disappointed. I had already moved in to the space in my mind, arranged all the furniture, imagined the work I would do there and the classes I would teach. But still, I respected him for telling the truth and trying to make it right. I could choose to stand by my lease, but I would never feel secure about putting time and money into the studio, knowing that I might have to leave in 12 months. Plus, I’d have an unhappy landlord working down the hall from me. Once I got over the shock, I realized that it made more sense to be flexible and figure out something worked for both of us.
We spent some time looking at the available spaces. My husband left work to come over and help figure it out. Turns out that the space we settled on will be even better for me than the original, I think. Ironically, it’s the one I wanted when I first looked at the building.
The new space is a little smaller (and cheaper–which is very nice) than the first one but still, at 20 by 30 feet, the 600 square foot space I wanted. This one has walls that go all the way to ceiling, which will give me more privacy and sound insulation. Plus, I’ll have my own heater with my own thermostat. I have a nice, big, North facing window that I can open. The view of the gasket factory storage yard next store is pretty industrial, but I can also see the Bardahl Oil sign, a Ballard landmark. Plus, I don’t have to pay to get my sink and hot water heater installed, which will save me a couple thousand dollars!
It’s really a win/win situation.
So now I’ve got my graph paper floor plan out again trying to figure out a plan for the space. I don’t think I’m going to have room for that 14-foot-print table, after all. But I can make ten-foot-table work, which is still four feet more than I had before. There will still be plenty of wall space, a great location, and a community of artists. I’ll have to wait just a little bit longer to get into the space, but it’s a happy ending and another lesson that change is good.
Work in Progress
That Sinking Feeling
Okay, every dye studio needs a sink and did I find a beauty! I found a used, double bay, restaurant style, stainless steel sink in great condition on Craig’s List. I just had to get out to North Bend with a friend and truck to pick it up.
Next step is getting it installed. Unfortunately, even though my new studio is very close to the water supply in the building, apparently it is not so simple to get it hooked up. It’s nothing that can’t be solved by throwing money at it, but my budget is blown already if I can’t find a lower price than the first one I got. I’ve got another meeting today to see if there’s a simpler, and cheaper, workable solution. Here’s hoping!