|
|
|
|
Arctic/Arctos Flying keeps painter grounded Judith Currelly has just discovered that her upcoming show, Arctic/Arctos at the Diane Farris Gallery in Vancouver, was set to open earlier than she thought. As she is being interviewed, the painter is also getting used to the fact she will be leaving Atlin for the south in a few days. The impending departure threatens to be wrenching, especially so, because she will spend the winter working in her Victoria studio and wont see Atlin again until spring. Atlin is home, she declares. As well, this autumns trip out was going
to be a prolonged tear rather than a quick break: Her beloved Supercruiser
CF-PRY was in the shop for repairs, so she was going to be driving south
rather than flying. With that long road trip ahead of her
the artist reminisces about her first journey north. After visiting the coast, Currelly boarded a bus in Prince Rupert. From Watson Lake she hitched to Frances Lake, and there, of course, became enthralled by the North. Her future course was set, though she didnt realize that fully at the time. As she says, she spent her first winter in the North at the cabin alone with two dogs, just to get it out of my system. Not surprisingly, the experience had the opposite effect, and the next year found her building a cabin even further north, on the Yukon/NWT border. Accomplishment followed accomplishment. The second cabin was located on a small lake that could only be reached by air. If she had to pay someone to fly her in and out regularly, she realized it would soon cost a fortune. So, she returned to Ontario, studied for her private pilots licence, bought a small plane and then earned her commercial licence, just so I would know more". "It never would have occurred to me in Ontario to fly. (But) you live someplace like this and you meet people who fly and you see how its done and you say, I can do that. Up to then, she had never owned a vehicle. She was 26 when she bought her first plane. Her first car, a truck actually, came into her life two years later. Currelly has flown over every inch of the Yukon, and over much of the High Arctic from Herschel Island to Coppermine, to Ellesmere Island and along the coast of Baffin Island. How much does she think all this flying has affected her art? Oh, a tremendous amount! Obviously, what she saw from the air would find its way into her paintings the landscape, the animals but the effect of spending so much time in the air is many-layered and far more complex than that. First of all, she stresses, learning to fly, studying for it, demanded that she use a completely different part of her brain than painting does. She had to learn to deal with the immediacy of flying you cant be up in the air daydreaming or trying to figure out some philosophical problem if youve got to figure out your gas and the wind". The thousands and thousands of hours that Ive flown have helped mould who I am, and that must come out in my work. She notes that flying in the Yukon and northern B.C. is far different than flying in Ontario. In the North, one flies through the land; the mountains are often to port and starboard rather than below a plane. "Youre so much in touch with whats going on between the earth and the clouds, she says. Youre not in some ivory box floating along. For me, its a major expansion of my universe. In Currellys paintings, as in her flying life, so much of what is going on between earth and sky is animal life. Birds, caribou and bears are especially prevalent in her work, though the animals that appear via her hand are much different than the animals that usually show up in wilderness paintings. She is not a wildlife artist. Her creatures are independent of the artist, not posed, not staged. Its as if the artist herself is merely tolerated. Its the animals and the landscape and, perhaps their Creator that are in charge of these surfaces. Only rarely, as in the lower-centre panel of the 1995 Totem, do we ever get glimpses of animal eyes in this case, wide (frightened?) caribou eyes. By usually hiding or avoiding animal eyes Currelly tends to discourage our retreat into comforting and controlling anthropomorphism. I grew up on a farm, but all our land was game preserve. I grew up in an environment where hunting was strictly taboo, she says. Since then she has hunted her share of winter
meat, and was once a partner in an outfitting business. But
while she enjoyed the outdoors, the cabins and horses, she couldnt
make peace with trophy hunting. She avoids farmed meat
as much as possible. Theres nothing in my mind more strange
than the concept of farming animals and then killing them. By way of an example of our conflicted relationship with animals, she recalls her years flying for Renewable Resources, spotting grizzlies and then, being there when they were drugged and collared. Ive sat there with this huge grizzly bears head on my knee this curly hair, your hand in his fur, how he smells, or she; often its a female Shes lying there with her tongue out and eyes open. Shes completely immobilized for us and this is all for research. That animal is killed twice, is terrorized. One immediately thinks of her oil on wood "Dancing Bear" (1990), and realizes that unintentionally, perhaps, she is giving something back to the creatures whose lives she helped disrupt for science. Her dancing bear is oblivious to human presence. The creature isnt stylized for our titillation and consumption. In fact, her paintings are not created to sell, to meet current market appetites, but are created to reach a place of clarity in the artists own mind and soul a function more akin to that of prehistoric petroglyphs than to that contemporary facile consumer item, the wildlife painting. Diane Farris, who has been showing Currellys works for about a decade now, underscores this when she describes Currelly's work. There is so much history, so much of times gone by And animals are treated on equal footing as humans. Where people do appear on the scene in Currellys paintings, they are unobtrusive; they appear to have just arrived after a long trek from that more balanced past Or perhaps from a more hopeful future. Arctic/Arctos opens Saturday and runs until October 17. The Diane Farris Gallery is located at 1565 West 7th Ave. in Vancouver. The gallery can be reached at (604) 737-2629. If youre in the city, the show is well worth a visit. For that matter, its a good reason to visit Vancouver in October in the first place. Erling Friis-Baastad,
Yukon News
|
|