Art in the Street – September 2014

Featuring Vengai Chiwawa, Gary Blundell, and Jane Eccles and Frances Ferdinands

ZimArt's 2014 artist-in-residence Vengai Chiwawa poses with his "Romeo and Juliet". A remarkably similar story to the Shakespeare play is told in Zimbabwe. (Photo: Paul Hodgkinson)
ZimArt's 2014 artist-in-residence Vengai Chiwawa poses with his "Romeo and Juliet". A remarkably similar story to the Shakespeare play is told in Zimbabwe. (Photo: Paul Hodgkinson)

ZimArt celebrates its 15th anniversary with Rice Lake 15

We came to our turn off County Road 2 so quickly that we missed the clear sign proclaiming “ZimArt’s Rice Lake Gallery 1 km.” As we doubled back to Second Line Road, an almost life-size figure in serpentine stone greeted us from the corner.

Along the driveway to the gallery, a 95-year-old man — the very personification of the “Old Farmer” — greeted us with “I’m just a grumpy old bugger,” admonishing us to slow down and mind his animals.

Vengai Chiwawa working on some of the finer details of a new creation. Even with him in soft focus you can see how focussed he is. (Photo: Esther Vincent)
Vengai Chiwawa working on some of the finer details of a new creation. Even with him in soft focus you can see how focussed he is. (Photo: Esther Vincent)
I had seen several gorgeous examples of ZimArt’s collection of hand-carved Zimbabwean stone sculptures, most recently at the Silver Bean Café. However, I wasn’t prepared for the incredible array of beautiful Shona sculpture at the Rice Lake Gallery location, a perfect outdoor setting.

“It’s sometimes hard to believe that Rice Lake I was an exhibition of only 40 sculptures in a small section of my garden,” says Fran Fearnley, ZimArt owner and curator of the annual exhibition.

“This year, Rice Lake 15 will showcase close to 400 stone sculptures from the more than 50 artists that ZimArt now represents.”

The exhibition covers two acres of treed pastoral oasis. Biggie Chikodz, Fearnley’s partner and liaison of 11 years, and this year’s artist-in-residence Vengai Chiwawa greeted us warmly as they built a fire by the barn to the sound of animated African music bubbling from a stereo somewhere. As we entered the grove of sculpture, they and Fearnley were close at hand to orient us.

With much to look at and take in, ZimArt’s collection is the most comprehensive in Canada and Fearnley has become a respected authority on Shona sculpture. She spends several months each year in Zimbabwe working with artist communities and brings the finest pieces back to Canada.

Vengai Chiwawa’s works are beautifully expressive and capture fleeting moments of emotion with a soft grace that seems almost inconceivable given the hard stone. Chiwawa pours his heart into his creations, and has the skill to see that this outpouring isn’t lost in translation. Women feature prominently in his work and he explains that their deep influence comes from the important role they play in society and because “women represent a vital life force whose strength, resilience, and gentleness much be respected.”

That reverence is evident in his work and in Chiwawa himself. When he speaks of his travels he speaks of meeting people and how “we can all change how we look on the outside. So we have to look beyond the image that is presented to us to find the truth that is within.” His vision for seeing that truth seems clear. He is a beautiful human being with a deep calming presence and genuine warmth. His exploration of philosophical themes about the stages of life and the importance of memories are infused with compassionate depth. He sees Zimbabwean sculptors as storytellers who celebrate and explore their culture as well as universal themes, through their work.

Vengai Chiwawa's "Listening to a Story" features incredible subtlety in the expressions and the bodies of these figures. (Photo: Paul Hodgkinson)
Vengai Chiwawa’s “Listening to a Story” features incredible subtlety in the expressions and the bodies of these figures. (Photo: Paul Hodgkinson)
This is every bit as evident in the works from other artists throughout the grounds. From a sculpted duck that would fit into the palm of your hand to a towering pair of elephants stacked one atop the other, there is a diversity that speaks of both deep tradition and a vibrant modern art movement alive with a new generation of talented, expressive artists. Shona sculpture is widely regarded as the most important art movement to emerge from Africa in the 20th century and here you can well see why.

You’ll also find yourself among the most knowledgeable and gracious of hosts in Fran Fearnley, Biggie Chickodzi, and Vengai Chiwawa. The afternoon I spent there quickly sped toward evening while I scarcely noticed — save for how the sculptures became even more beautiful as the sun lowered toward the horizon.

This place truly deserves its designation as one of the region’s most inspired and unexpected cultural venues. Shortly after I arrived, I knew I’d be coming back.

For past visitors to the Rice Lake Gallery, there will be plenty of new work to see at Rice Lake 15 as they celebrate this 15th anniversary. (Photo: Paul Hodgkinson)
For past visitors to the Rice Lake Gallery, there will be plenty of new work to see at Rice Lake 15 as they celebrate this 15th anniversary. (Photo: Paul Hodgkinson)
The Rice Lake 15 public exhibition runs from September 6th to 21st from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. There will be a public opening party on Saturday, September 6th from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m., featuring live music by Nhaptitapi Mbira. A Closing Party and Fundraising Auction will take place on Sunday, September 21st from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m., with live music from the Nyamamusango Marimba Ensemble.

Rice Lake Gallery is located at 855 Second Line Road, Bailieboro, Ontario K0L 1B0 (GPS: N44°09.517′ W078°16.865′). For more information, visit www.zimart.ca or contact Pat Maitland at 705-772-9191 or pat@patmaitland.com, or Fran Fearnley at 705-939-6144 or zimart@sympatico.ca.


Part of me see the cross-section of a hill and a groundwater channel, part of me sees a ribcage or a muscle. (Photo: Gary Blundell)
Part of me see the cross-section of a hill and a groundwater channel, part of me sees a ribcage or a muscle. (Photo: Gary Blundell)
Life is encoded in patterns that have been laid down over millennia. The muscles of the land expand and contract in the course of lifetimes. The seasons are recorded in the rings around heartwood. The blood in our veins finds its origins in the primordial seas.

Gary Blundell has been studying these formations for much of his lifetime. His work has focussed mainly on geological bodies, but in this latest exhibition he gets closer to the meat of things.

Running at the Gallery in the Attic, Blundell’s exhibition “Bodies” investigates the substance of the animal form and cuts its way toward the sinews of ourselves.

Blundell continues in his signature style with seven large-scale oil paintings rendered onto hewn wood. He follows an artistic tradition including Rembrandt, Chardin, Soutine, and Bacon with these wood pieces depicting images of hanging game captured during a hunting season several years ago.

The exhibition also includes some smaller works on paper of animal carcasses in some more familiar domestic forms.

In broaching this visceral subject matter, he throws our relationship to our animal form and the grander scheme of how forces shape things into relief.

Blundell gets a little whimsical in naming this smaller work on paper, "Seared With A Kiss". (Photo: Gary Blundell)
Blundell gets a little whimsical in naming this smaller work on paper, “Seared With A Kiss”. (Photo: Gary Blundell)
With respect to his chosen medium and the way the wood bridges the pattern between rock formations and those of dead animals forms, he does so quite literally.

Given Blundell’s artistic refuge at Hotspur Studios out in the boreal forest near Gooderham with his partner (artist Victoria Ward), the connection he experiences with the land may be something of what he wishes to convey to the viewer.

This is best understood when you can pour over the landscape of these large carved pieces and feel the somewhat disquieting tension between animal and mineral.

The exhibition is on display until Sunday, September 28th at the Gallery in the Attic, which is located at 140 1/2 Hunter St. West in Peterborough. For more information, call 705-740-1162 or visit littleredhengallery.wordpress.com/.

Its official opening will be on Thursday, September 11th during Artsweek, when it will be presented along with the Artsweek exhibit “Day Job” by Gallery in the Attic curator Elizabeth Fennel and Trout in Plaid writer and artist Annie Jaeger.

My wires get crossed looking at these pieces. I don't see one form, I see many. (Photo: Gary Blundell)
My wires get crossed looking at these pieces. I don’t see one form, I see many. (Photo: Gary Blundell)

Frances Ferdinands might seem to suggest to us that our ideas about glamour might not be so glamourous. (Photo courtesy of Art Gallery of Northumberland)
Frances Ferdinands might seem to suggest to us that our ideas about glamour might not be so glamourous. (Photo courtesy of Art Gallery of Northumberland)
Artists Jane Eccles and Frances Ferdinands interpret textiles and fashion to share perspectives on the personal histories of women and how women are portrayed.

Eccles does so by breathing life into vintage dresses she acquired primarily through a 1983 auction kept in a collection she once displayed in her 1865 farmhouse. Through research into the stories of the dresses’ original owners and her own reflections, she seeks to extend the memory of these women in her acrylic paintings. Eccles has built a career as a painter and performer and is recognized as a supporter of the arts.

“This current exhibition assembles historical dress paintings that represent Canadian women’s stories — stories of famous women and others we may know,” Eccles says. “Often sewn to fit a single soul, the dresses carry the shape and spirit of the women who once wore them.”

The theatrical flamboyance of Eccles' "Margaret's Dress" seems a sunny contrast to the wintry background. (Photo courtesy of Art Gallery of Northumberland)
The theatrical flamboyance of Eccles’ “Margaret’s Dress” seems a sunny contrast to the wintry background. (Photo courtesy of Art Gallery of Northumberland)
The dress in this painting is attributed to Pauline. I wonder what Eccles can tell us about her? (Photo courtesy of Art Gallery of Northumberland)
The dress in this painting is attributed to Pauline. I wonder what Eccles can tell us about her? (Photo courtesy of Art Gallery of Northumberland)
This piece by Frances Ferdinands may ask us both if we notice the woman, and if we notice her work. (Photo courtesy of Art Gallery of Northumberland)
This piece by Frances Ferdinands may ask us both if we notice the woman, and if we notice her work. (Photo courtesy of Art Gallery of Northumberland)

Where Eccles’ work is more reflective, the messaging in Ferdinands’ work is often clearly more overt. Her work is generally created in series with a thematic focus on social or environmental conditions present in post-modern society.

“My work uses garments to express concerns about historical and contemporary portrayals of women,” Ferdinands explains. “I have become reflective and drawn to early life to explore identity and memory. My paintings pose questions about notions of beauty that are still relevant today.”

This exhibition will at the Art Gallery of Northumberland from Tuesday, September 9th to Saturday, October 18th. Eccles and Ferdinands will attend the opening reception on Saturday, September 13th from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.

The Art Gallery of Northumberland is located on the third floor of Victoria Hall at 55 King Street West in Cobourg. The gallery is open Tuesday to Friday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Saturday from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. For more information, visit www.artgalleryofnorthumberland.com.