Showing posts with label All My Fancey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label All My Fancey. Show all posts

Monday, July 14, 2014

Summer Studio 2014: Here we go...

Finally the Summer Studio is set up and work has begun. I do have a goal of completing several paintings by Labour Day as I think setting a number helps me to keep the whip cracking. Last year I completed 18 paintings between July 1 and Oct. 25th. That number reflects paintings that were to my satisfaction and ended up on the walls of a Gallery. It does not include the half dozen or so that were scrapped at some point and faced the the electric sander. I have no plans of being so prolific this year in the Summer Studio, but will do my best to turn out a small collection.
 I prepped all the boards I hope to paint  at the beginning of the month, but a wave of heat prevented me from working further on them as the temps in my loft were quite unbearable no matter how high I powered my oscillating fan or how tight the blinds were pulled against the sun. A wall of windows over the work space, two on either side and two skylights behind me proved too much even when covered and threaten to cook me alive up there. So, darn, I had to go to the shore to swim instead. Poor me.
Temps have been cool in the evenings now and I'm back on the horse. Started a painting 2 days ago (no title yet) but will post the progression for fun. I started with a board which has been coated with gesso and it's been sanded and a transfer of an antique photograph has been applied. I have been altering the scene with acrylics. So far, so good.
 Take note: I have been asked repeatedly as to why I bother with using a transfer as I do demonstrate my skills as a painter and could paint from the photo. Allow me to explain. I do so because I'm in love with the photograph and I want to give that subject another 'life', as it were. The transfers are grainy and 'ghostly" -further motivation as I do like a bit of dark to come through in the work-, and they are used as an underpainting. Hardly a bit of the transfer escapes my brush, unless I feel it must stay as is...that's creative license. I paint on top and change (sometimes drastically, sometimes minutely) their expression, clothing, pose and even the twinkle in their eyes. Doing this is my 'schtick' at the present time. No doubt at some point I will paint portraiture of my own, and I do have the chops to achieve this, but right now, I wish to give these nameless faces an encore in a theatrical presentation painted by me. The guestbook at my last exhibit had a few direct and almost terse comments about my decision to work this way. A short response would be: because I want to.
A wordy post, to make up for lack of posts in some time. Here we go...
work by Teena Marie Fancey in progress #1
work in progress by Teena Marie Fancey #2
work in progress by Teena Marie Fancey #3
work in progress by Teena Marie Fancey #4
work in progress by Teena Marie Fancey #5

work in progress by Teena Marie Fancey #6

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Teena + Tina = Inspiration

While visiting friends in Arizona, I had the good fortune to visit La Posada, the last of the Railway Hotels along the Santa Fe Line. La Posada, in Winslow Arizona, has been lovingly restored
 ( click here for a great story and history) by Allan Affeldt after he learned the property was in danger. 
Not only was La Posada an interesting place to learn about and visit, but it houses the work of Allan's wife, Artist Tina Mion. My dear friends Nancy and David had orchestrated this stop in Winslow because they knew I'd love the location, the story but most of all Tina's work. They know me SO well...
(read more below)


The timing of visiting this wonderful exhibit of work, was rather remarkable. I had been in need of some inspiration and this was it. I felt a connection with the work, both with a lot of the subject matter and the artist's style and emotion. After wandering through the exquisite rooms of the hotel and taking in Mion's powerful, large and bold work, the sparks in my brain lit up the circuitry there and ideas came pouring in. I
I also came away with a sense of courage to take back into the painting studio with me this summer.

From one Teena to another Tina, I thank you! You can count me as an admirer of what you do.

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Favorite Friday!


This week, my good friend Shari MacLeod (of Shari MacLeod Studio and the Rose of Cabot & Rose) gave me an early birthday gift. She had a 3D reel made for me using some of my favourite characters from my Altered Egos exhibit. Not only is this a fabulously creative gift idea but the company who makes the reels, Image3D, liked Shari's project and my work and posted the reel on their Favorite Friday page (with our permission) as inspiration. Thank you Shari and Image3D!


Saturday, November 30, 2013

What the Fox Says...

"So long, farewell, Auf Wiedersehen, goodnight...." says Trickster Fox.

Today is the last day for Altered Egos at the Craig Gallery. Thanks to all of you who got in to see the show and meet the characters. Thanks also to all of you who have followed this blog and saw most of the show via your screen. BTW, for any information on purchasing any of the work you see on my blog you can contact me at tmfancey@gmail.com

"...until we meet again."





Trickster Fox by Teena Marie Fancey
mixed media painting
custom frame by Shari MacLeod
 
Trickster Fox Detail


 
 

Friday, November 29, 2013

Lionhearted


I had a lot of fun working on this piece because I'd finally found the perfect opportunity to use some fur that I was gifted and I knew it was a piece that could be looked at or petted...should the viewer need to pet something.
Lionheart was inspired by my oldest daughter, who is a Leo and is brave and strong but has heart so big, it could crush this town. The Strength card in the Tarot deck also influenced this piece, noted by the lemniscate floating above the subject's head.
Lionheart can be seen at the Craig Gallery in Dartmouth NS at Alderney Landing until day's end this Saturday, Nov. 30. Drop in and meet her and her 21 Altered Egos friends.

Lionheart by Teena Marie Fancey
8" x 10" mixed media painting
upcycled fur, vintage curtain pins, acrylics

Thursday, November 28, 2013

She was framed!

This is Deerheart. She came about due to my interest in shape shifting characters and the Celtic mythologies about the Bean Si aka the Banshee. The Banshee has been typically portrayed as a screaming, wailing hag but further reading of lore proved to be quite enlightening. So the result was the shape  shifting Deerheart and her accompanying poem.
Once the painting and poem were done, I tasked my good and talented friend Shari MacLeod to create a frame that would serve my bean si well. The results, as you can see, were fabulous! Hand woven with dyed rattan, some cane and embellishments of driftwood and feathers, Shari managed to build a housing that is a true extension of the painting.
I present the finished Deerheart (completed poem to follow below). Deerheart is part of my exhibit Altered Egos.
 
 

Dear Hearts

By Teena Marie Fancey

 

 

Gather you gentle ones,

where the boney birches stand

Where moss and lichen soften steps you take across this land

 

Gather you gentle ones,

you creatures of the wood

Stay shy outside the fairy ring as you have learned you should

 

The keening sounds to summon us, and echoes through the trees

And shakes them with its sadness and moves them like a breeze

 

Inside the ring she changes skins and shows to us her youth

While sobbing with the knowledge that she sees the bitter truth


A fellow soul will fall this night,

a dear heart in our midst

By means of claw or teeth or jaws, or arrow in their breast

 

Blood will stain the forest floor and mingle with the dirt

Their bones will end up underfoot, their soul will wait rebirth

 

Once death has taken what it claims, she’ll wipe away her tears

She’ll step outside the fairy ring and show to us her years

 

Off you go, you timid ones,

and take your leave at morning

She’ll come again with a breaking heart
 
and cry to us her warning
 

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Sparking an Idea Pt. 2



A while back while working in the studio, I posted Sparking an Idea--a work in progress inspired by some paper cuttings and vintage welding glasses my friend gifted me. As you can see, the paper made it into the piece but the glasses did not, even though they inspired the composition etc. That is not unusual...sometimes things just need to be added or not.  There is no doubt that the glasses will make a future appearance and the paper cuttings will appear again and again, I'm sure.
So I give you the finished work: Static. She will be appearing for the rest of this week in at the Craig Gallery, Alderney Landing in Dartmouth.  

Monday, September 2, 2013

What Women Want


Chanteuse Mae West will tell you all about it.
 
And while you're listening...
 
What do you get when you take Mae West ...




Gibson Girl Camille Clifford
and the Mighty Goddess Aphrodite
and mix 'em with paint?


Why an Aphrodisiac, of course.
 
Aphrodisiac by Teena Marie Fancey
11"X14" mixed media on board, single pearl
Coming soon... 
to the Craig Gallery, that is
November 2013
 






Saturday, August 24, 2013

Oh, Canada and our love of a summer day!

Toronto Artist Elizabeth Lennie knows how to capture a moment in time spent around and in water. Can't you feel your feet on the warm boards of the wharf? Hear "one, two, three, GO!" ? The cool water and the race back to the wharf to do it again?
She's painted right to the heart of a memory.
The Speed of Light by Elizabeth Lennie
 
 

Monday, August 12, 2013

Oh, Canada's shining Knight

I just love Kris Knight's portraits.
Not just because of the portrait lovin' fool that I am. 
Or for the soft skinned, innocent faces that most definitely have edge and make me want to slowly look over every eyelash, blushing cheek, and fresh lip.
BUT because the Canuck in me is so greatly satisfied by the touches of Lopi sweaters, Hudson Bay Blanket stripes, bits of feather and foliage and those reddened cheeks and noses that clearly have spent some time out in the crisp, Canadian air.  
 
Smell the Magic by Kris Knight
Oil on Canvas
 

Thursday, July 7, 2011

The Weekend Dance-(Get your glad rags on!): THE BACK STORY


The back story: So much goes into bringing an idea to fruition. Hours of pondering, reading, and selecting/searching for the very right combination of colour, imagery and found objects to bring a story together on a 2-D surface. So, here is the story of The Weekend Dance (SOLD) ( mixed media on board with found object embellishments), a triptych ( 3 panels) featured in my exhibit When She Was Bad...now showing at the Cape Breton Centre for Craft and Design until July 22nd, 2011.

In creating The Weekend Dance (Get your glad rags on!) I was inspired by the contrast between our Saturday night and Sunday morning behaviours, vintage photos from postcards, as well as two tales of deadly apparel: The Red Shoes, a work of fiction by Hans Christen Anderson, and the true story of a stunning ball gown made of arsenical green tarlatan.


 The girl in Anderson’s tale wore her red shoes everywhere, and they were perceived as evidence of her vanity. Once cursed, the shoes took control of their owner’s feet. The shoes forced the girl to dance until she died from exhaustion after she boldly wore them to church.

 The 1862 documented gown was made for a socialite’s ball using a shining green imported textile. The twenty yards of fabric was dyed with a compound of arsenic and contained about 900 grains of the poison. While its owner danced, the dress scattered a dusting of arsenic about the ballroom making many of the guests ill and poisoning the wearer as she twirled about the floor.

 The subject in The Weekend Dance (Get your glad rags on!) is dressed in a fetching green frock and red shoes, ready for Saturday night. She hopes the weekend will bring something exciting and new. She throws off the shackles of the mundane and hurls herself into the dance with abandon; her red shoes move her through the hours. She will knowingly take risks tonight; she will be reckless and perhaps self-destruct in the complete surrender of her inhibitions.

 Things will look very different in the harsh Sunday morning light and she will feel a tinge of guilt. As the workweek begins she will start looking forward to its end, and once the weekend arrives she will do the dance again. She is compelled to.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

An Unusual Fish

This wee mermaid (SOLD) has found a treasure. A beautiful green gem! The perfect thing to wear to have her portrait painted. Mermaids  love to adorn themselves as we do. This little mixed media painting embellished with a nugget of seaglass will be available for sale at the PEI Mermaid Tears Sea Glass Festival in July.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Or would you rather be a fish?

Would you like to swing on a star?
Carry moonbeams home in a jar
And be better off than you are
Or would you rather be a fish?

A fish won't do anything but swim in a brook
He can't write his name or read a book.
To fool all the people is his only thought
And though he's slippery he still gets caught
But then if that sort of life is what you wish
You may grow up to be a fish...

Inspiration for this piece, 'Baby Boy-Would you like to swing on a star?' (SOLD) came from an old photograph I found of a little baby in a very archaic looking 'jolly jumper'. The photo made me laugh out loud. The song Swing on a Star immediately came to mind! So, I put him in outer space, and painted his little knit hat to look a bit like a helmet. I cut a thin sheet of mica and put it over the jar of moonbeam Baby Boy is carrying to give the contents a bit of shine and to give the illusion of glass. The stars and blue 'bubble'-like embellishments were sparkly bits from a container of found odds and ends I have.

I do have more 'situations' planned for this Baby in the future. So, you can expect to see him again.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Myth in the Mist





I came upon this picture/postcard in a collectables shop. Apparently, she was a silent film star of note, the back of the card was autographed. I decided she would be front and centre in a new painting for an upcoming group exhibit that will run in conjunction with the Celtic Colours International Festival. Myth in the Mist is an exhibit to celebrate the Otherworld of Faeries, at the Cape Breton Centre of Craft and Design.



Not long after I found this beauty, I picked up a 1950's comic of Shakespear's A Mid Summer Night's Dream. I decided then that this lovely lady would be Titania, the Faery Queen of Shakespeare's play and I would submit her for exhibit in
Myth in the Mist.




After working on Titania over several weeks, this was the final result. She is lulled to sleep by her ever present subjects, the faeries that reside in the woodlands and as she drifts off images of a hummingbird searching for nectar, fishes swimming in the silence of the deep water and the glow of the moonlight that attracts the Luna Moth from the darkness fill her mind.
She is on cradled board, (size: 11" X 14"), is done in acrylics and is titled:
Titania's Dream-"Sing me now to sleep" (SOLD)

Myth in the Mist opens Thursday, October 8th at 7PM at 322 Charlotte St. Sydney, Nova Scotia.
All are welcome!