Like so many artists, many of my summer plans shifted because of the pandemic, but I’m still thankfully able to teach live and online, via zoom. My first online workshop was a puppet making workshop for kids for Odyssey Theatre, which was great fun. Next week, it’s paper mask making with older kids. I love these paper mask workshops - they’re great for any age, and they give me the opportunity to talk about the principles of mask making and design. Also coming up, a mask workshop for Art Your Service (July 17) and a shadow puppetry and music workshop with Kornel Wolak for Canada Culture Days in September. More on those two workshops soon.
Updates
Not a Creature Was Stirring
It’s pretty fun to design and make window displays for Minotaur Games & Gifts. Here are some progress shots and the two finished windows for the 2019 holidays season.
Eating Animals in Catbird on the Yadkin Press
Two of The Enormous Elsewhere's puppets are included in Catbird (on the Yadkin) Press’s gorgeous book, Puppets One Ought to Know: An ABECEDARIUM. Alexa Fraser (the other half of the Enormous Elsewhere) and I are honoured to be included in such a beautiful book and with such good company.
Thanks, Canada Council for the Arts
A great big thanks to the Canada Council for the Arts. I recently got word that I was awarded a professional development grant to fund my time at the Eugene O’Neill Theater Center’s National Puppetry Conference to study materials and movement with Alice Gottschalk. It was a great experience - days and nights working with fellow puppet people and learning from them and from Alice. I left with a bunch of new skills and my thoughts on the difference between animation and manipulation and the relationship of the puppeteer to the puppet. I am grateful for the support from the CC.
TVO Kids & Carnevale
A few months ago, I spent the afternoon making a worbla Carnevale mask with an awesome and creative kid named Gabriel for TVO Kids It’s My Party. At one point, I asked a crew member if I was loud enough (I’m soft spoken) and he said something along the lines of, “Remember you’re on a kids show.” I took that to mean I needed to uptalk, but not sure if that is what he meant or if I even managed it. It was a fun afternoon. My two-minutes of TVO fame is ten minutes in, but my favourite part of the episode is when the kids learn commedia (beautiful masks!).
Summer Workshops
I’m teaching a couple of workshops this summer.
First up is a mask-decorating workshop for the TD Niagara JazzFest. The JazzFest is hosting a super-cool Mardi Gras event on July 20th, featuring a parade, cajun cooking, and music by the Shuffle Demons, Heavyweights Brass Band, Turbo Street Funk, The Vaudevillians and others at the Henley Grandstand. You’ll need a mask. Come make fancy masks with me on June 13th so you can attended the event in Mardi Gras splendour. Details: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/mask-making-workshop-tickets-63982088148/amp
On August 6, I’m delighted to be giving a mask-making demo at the Macpherson House at the Lennox & Addington Museum & Archives. Come on out to Napanee and decorate a mask. Details: https://lennox-addington.on.ca/museums-archives/mask-making-birds
June is for Masks
June has been a solid month of making. I am exhausted, but happy. I think of working a bit like I think of the runner’s high. There’s always a point in a project when I think I’m too tired and I can’t go on, but then I’ll get just the right angle in a sculpt or start painting and the paint moves just as I want it to, and a work high will kick in. This month, I’ve made masks for private commissions, River Valley School in Alberta, and for Odyssey Theatre in Ottawa. The masks for Odyssey are for The Bonds of Interest by Jacinto Benavente, translated by Catherine Boyle, and directed by Laurie Steven. You can read more about it here, and if you’re in Ottawa July 25-August 25, please check it out.
This happened….
My daughter and I were both fairly excited.
A really nice thing happened to me last weekend. I won the 2019 Established Artist Award for the City of St Catharines. It was a surprise, for many reasons, but especially because my competition was fierce! The other nominees are all brilliant and accomplished artists, and my money was on one of them. As a result, I didn’t plan what to say, so standing in front of a theatre full of people, I winged it. I think/hope my gratitude and enthusiasm came through. St Catharines, you are an inspiring city, filled with opportunities for artists. Thank you.
And a big thanks to the Niagara Artists Centre (NAC) for the nomination!