My work has evolved from the discipline of a classical art education
at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts and Mount Allison University,
where I received a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree, and my experience
as a graphics artist translating idea into image with CBC Television.
In my 1995 exhibition HORIZON PAINTINGS, at the Art Gallery of Nova
Scotia, I explored the conflict of chronological time and the illusion
of space. Time was resolved as autobiography and experience in my 2001
exhibition IN TRANSIT at the Confederation Centre Art Gallery.
These paintings, influenced by the radiance of Impressionism, the energy
of Cubism and the elegance of Minimalism, take another direction, another
pathway, in the exploration of time.
I am drawn to the clarity of geometry and the aesthetic potential of
music and words. Combining these interests with the natural rhythms
of land, sea and sky, I have translated them into optical events where
spatial conflicts and their resolutions can occur.
Abstraction liberates colour and form from representational functions.
The simple shapes of squares and rectangles are transformed into thematic
sequences of number theory, fragments of music or language. Altering
their geometry
by repeating the patterns horizontally allows the shapes to become
more complex.
The rhythmic repetitive forms can suggest movement or meditation as
they emerge from the layers and textures of pointillist colour. The
shapes become positive or negative as colour, selected for its physical
and expressive qualities, defines their position and direction. The
picture plane becomes a place where the viewer may be part of the activity
and adventure of form and colour.
But optical events are only part of the exploration. Within the confines
of stability and instability (colour), stillness and movement (form),
are the pathways of my search for order and balance – something
beyond the material world.