VD XXIV – Carol Christie, Charles Haines, Joyce Liu

Bio:

A self taught artist, Carol Christie is new to painting having delved into it only in the last 4 years.

Vibrant colour is her inspiration as well as texture. She uses acrylic, charcoal, chalk and oil pastel and collage techniques on paper and canvas.

As well as living in the beautiful and wild East Coast of New Zealand, Carol has travelled to many places in the world and has lived in Asia for more than 12 years – colour, texture, flavour, light and feel all have their influence.

Now living and teaching in Taipei.
Has previously exhibited at Café Vergissmeinicht in 2016.
Whatever will happen next………

Statement:
Diving Deeper

I discovered the painter in me in the last few years……moving to Taiwan to start another chapter created a space to dive in and go for it

I have always loved colour and have always created ……..be it gardens, houses, writing, knitting, sewing, drawing and painting with 5 year olds but had never painted for myself

I have made up for lost time experimenting with any materials I can get my hands on – oil, acrylic, collage, pastel, charcoal, paper, canvas – large and small

You can never quite tell what will happen and what the end result will be as each piece has a life and story of its own as it unfolds before you

There is tension and struggle as you try to control the materials but in the end you must surrender to colour, the push and pull and the way it sings

Be bold
Be fierce
Dive in

Visual Dialogues XXIV
Carol Christie, Charles R. Haines, and Joyce Liu

Artist Bio
Charles R. Haines has two spirits that work together in his art. One is the crow spirit that has been part of him for many years. The other spirit is an Indiginous spirit. These two fuse together to give him his creative energy. It is with this energy he creates his art.

Charles creates in many mediums, though these days mostly in acrylic and marker. He has been known to carve wood, work leather and shape iron. His artistic spirits are happiest when he is creating and so he draws everyday.

Artist Statement
The Crow Spirit has awakened.
It stirs inside me and speaks
Drives me to create.
It can not be silenced. It will not stop unless I put brush to canvas, pen to paper, or chisel to wood.
Only then is the spirit satisfied.
My art is a result of this spirit inside me.
I must listen to its call.

Charles Haines
murder.of.crows.10.5@gmail.com

Visual Dialogues XXIV
Carol Christie, Charles R. Haines, and Joyce Liu

7 August 2016, Visual Dialogues X @ Red Room

vd-x-aug-2016-poster

Visual Dialogues X @ Red Room
balance – 平衡

Visual Dialogue X will be an exploration of balance. David Pipkin’s works with clay and Roma Mehta’s works on paper create a dialogue with the five elements in a search for balance.
這次的藝術對話<玖>,將延伸探討 – 平衡。藉由David Pipkin與Roma Mehta的陶藝與文筆兩種形式,創造五行藝文對話,尋求兩者間的平衡。

Red Room is a multi-cultural, multi-generational space. Points of view are varied. We ask that the participants take this into consideration.

Opening Reception:
August 7th 2016 4-6 pm
Entry: Free

Show runs until 2 September 2016. 活動持續至2016年9月2日
Email us : artist.redroom@gmail.com with inquiries or for details.


David Pipkin

DSC_8563

Born and raised in Oklahoma, where the wind comes sweeping down the plains, and….never a day is without red clay. I took my first ceramics class in Stillwater Oklahoma, the home of the OSU Aggies, while I was studying architecture and dodging Draft bullets. I was immediately hooked on the process of making pots; digging that often overlooked amazing red clay, processing it, my fingers learning to see and understand the differential pressures needed to mold and form objects, then comes the chemistry of the glazes, and finally the magic of smoke and fire. All aspects of making clay objects have always fit me like a glove.

After graduation I spent more time making pots or playing on sailboats, than working as an architect. Downturns in real estate always hit architects first, so when a downturn hit Oklahoma I was actually delighted to be laid off so I could focus on playing with clay. After spending the better part of a year being a fulltime potter, I to returned to architecture with an interesting job. Although making a living from pots is possible and the hard work was actually fun, I found I really did not like working alone and was happy to hang around the water fountain again. During the first 5 years out of school I had many exhibitions, won awards, and made the rounds of multiple craft fairs.

Fast forward 40 years, I have not regretted remaining in architecture as it has shown me the world. I have worked in Oklahoma, NY, LA then Taipei. I was always able to keep my hands in clay and look forward to spending more time with clay as I get older.

I consider myself a serious student of clay. Every place I have lived in has offered different types of clay with different work conditions. In Taiwan I was limited to electric kilns, which was not my first choice but I gradually learned to come to terms with it. Two years ago I decided I wanted to go back to gas-fired kilns and thanks to the help of a potter friend Jack Doherty, I managed to build a gas-fired ‘soda’ kiln on my roof. After 12 months of planning I built a 1 cubic meter beast of a kiln. I had built and fired many high temperature gas kilns but never a soda kiln.

Soda firing means taking the kiln up to a temperature of about 1200 C, then introducing bicarbonate of soda in liquid form, which interacts with the clay and slips in unexpected ways. The process is 10 times more difficult to control than normal gas firing. After my 5th firing, I now have a pretty good list of things not to do. Hopefully, after 5 more firings I will have a reasonable list of things to do. Firing a cubic meter soda kiln offers a physical challenge that I did not plan for. However it is all part of the learning process, and I expect to make pots until the day I die, if it doesn’t kill me first.


Roma Mehta

I grew up in Calcutta, a densely populated city where the entire spectrum of human experience was in plain sight everywhere you looked. From a very early age i found joy in art and painted every chance i got. It was a way to connect with my inner self and provided an escape from the sadness and misery around me. I could not fix what i saw, but i could create something beautiful.

I decided to study graphic design in college so that i could ensure a living while continuing to paint in my free time. Art and design merged as the years went by and became a way of seeing and understanding the world around me.

My art is a collection of episodes that afford glimpses into moments of clarity and have been essential in my journey.

Portraits, lines and shapes, energy, colours, all blend and become the lens through which I see the world. Art gives me the insights I need to understanding the world I have chosen to live in. India remains the vibrant inspiration, the chaos of my soul and my palette. It disturbs my senses and calls me to become involved. Taiwan brings order to the chaos of things beyond my control. Helps me linger longer in the creative space.

with the first brush stroke

the canvas becomes the master

and leads me through a spirit journey. 

i remain receptive as thoughts unscramble and a story unfolds on a living canvas.

inspired by the energy of india,

the spirit of taiwan,

the beauty of our planet,

the embrace of its people.

Artist Bio:

Roma Mehta is originally from India. A graphic designer, an artist, and a committed community member, she has made Taiwan her home since 1987.


Visual Dialogues 藝術對畫
between people, spaces and ideas
Two artists from different cultures with be featured in a monthly art show at the Red Room International Village, opening on the first Sunday of each month.
紅房會邀請兩位分別來自西洋及東方的藝術家來展出他們的作品,讓藝術氣息繚繞在紅房國際村的樑柱之間。
在每月的第一個週日,邀請您們一同享受創意與空間的對談。

GALLERY HOURS
Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays, Sundays 3pm-7pm
TAF LIBRARY 2F No. 177, Sec.1, Jianguo S. Rd, Taipei
空軍總部「圖書館」2樓 台北市大安區建國南路一段177號

玉米
1991年出生於基隆市
2010年加入台大登山社
2014年畢業於台灣大學生化科技系
2014年於下田窯向 徐興隆老師與 洪瑩琪老師拜師學陶兩年
2016年創立迷你窯工作室

作為一個冒險家,我爬山,我溯溪,我攀岩,我樂於奔向自己的所愛。
作為一場人生冒險的開始,我選擇了不平凡的荊棘之路。大學的最後一年,我拋下一切,挑起了一場人生的賭博,賭的是夢想的實踐、博的是不後悔的人生與渴望創作的悸動。曾經挨餓,曾經迷惘,曾經害怕,曾經痛哭,我一步步地拔除身上的刺,一步步的越挫越勇,終於有了機會辦了第一場展覽,雖小卻美,更是我短短三年邁向陶藝創作之路的里程碑。

如果沒有當初放手一搏,今日恐怕來的更晚,甚至不會實現

Joyce

1991 Born in Keelung City
2010 Join to the NTU mountain club
2014 Graduated from Department of Biochemical Science and Technology, NTU
2014 Learned potteries from 徐興隆and 洪瑩琪 in 下田窯
2016 Set up 迷你窯

As an adventurer, I go mountain climbing, river tracing, rock climbing. I enjoy doing what I love.

As a beginning of my life adventure after graduating, I chose a much harsher way-a thorny road to my freedom. In the last year of my college, I cast away all my own profession and devoted to a whole different art world. It’s literally like the gamble. Gamble on my dream, Walk through the life without regret and my heart burns again for creation.
Even though, I was once lost, confused, terrified, and even shed tears. Step by step, I lived, savored every difficulty and consumed. I believe that the more frustrated I am, the stronger I will be. Finally, here comes to my first show in this lovely place, not too grand but fragrant. Now it’s the time to create.

Without giving it a shot, there would be no today.

Statement

一株草的價值

世界上有很多奇花異草,擁有我們的珍惜。世界上有許多野花野草,卻常常遭到我們的踐踏。在花草的世界,我也許就是那野花野草,在人類的世界,我用陶器,將平凡變不平凡,將野花野草納入陶器的時尚界。
你曾經以為自己平凡又弱小嗎?在我的生活圈裡,認識很多駐足不前的人,很多生活迷惘的人;在這個世代,有很多擁有夢想卻屈服於金錢之下的人;在我做陶的日子裡,不斷思考人生的問題。想不透,便看看天空,再不透,看看地上。世界如此之大,而我就像那野花野草,擠身於世界之牆的一道狹縫,透過花瓶,我才能脫離縫隙,被人看見。花瓶象徵一個希望,化腐朽為神奇,化平凡為不平凡。

人生苦短,至少曾經美過。試著找尋屬於你的容身之所!

Title

The price of the weeds

There are many unique plants, we cherish them. There are many unknown flowers and grass, we trample on them. In the world of plants, I may be the grass which means nobody. In the human world, I help nobody to be somebody by using pottery. Take nobody to the red carpet of the plant world.

Have you ever been normal and weak? I know a lot of people hesitating to proceed, confused to their lives. In this generation, people give up dreaming and give in to money. Every day I pot, I keep thinking a lot about the philosophy of life. Life is truly hard to manage. When it makes no sense, then look up to the sky. When it happens again, then look at the ground. I am like the weeds in the gap, as the small dust to the world. Nevertheless, with a vase, the weeds can be seen. Turn bad into good. Turn nobody to somebody.

Life is short, at least we were once beautiful. Try to figure out who you are. We are not only nobody and let Nature heal you.

Visual Dialogues XXIV
Carol Christie, Charles R. Haines, and Joyce Liu