Tag: Whidbey Working Artists

  • Visit Artists in Their Natural Habitats at the Open Studio Tour

    Visit Artists in Their Natural Habitats at the Open Studio Tour

    BY WHIDBEY WORKING ARTISTS
    Whidbey Life Magazine Contributors
    August 16, 2017

    For artists, creative space extends beyond their studio walls: It’s a way of observing interior and exterior landscapes. The studio becomes a place to distill, refine, and reflect on an interpretation or move into an abstraction of an idea or concept. As you choose from among the 44 studios and 61 artists participating in this year’s Open Studio Tour, you’ll discover bits and pieces of artists and their art. Is this a solitary artist? Does this artist thrive in social connection? What inspires him or her? What do artists take with them as they begin to work, and what do they shut out?

    Plein-air painters stay with their subject through all incarnations of weather and events. This dogged determination creates a bond with the environment that’s reflected in the painting. One of the plein-air painters on the tour, Brian Mahieu, never paints in his studio at all, choosing to use his space for staging events and as a gallery. His husband Tom photographs Brian’s painting trips, creating a unique diary of painter and landscape.

    Brian Mahieu’s “studio” is the natural world (Photo by Tom Harris)

    Natalie Olsen laughs when she says “People walk into my studio and rave about how beautiful and organized it is. During the two days of the Open Studio Tour, that is true! By Labor Day it’s usually back to normal, and it’s difficult to walk around the piles of fabric, paper, yarn, and other stuff—just the way I like it to be. I’m a weaver and mixed-media artist. I like to be surrounded by color and texture, so I keep things out for new ideas to play with. My husband Earl is a photographer. He’s a Virgo, too, so he’s very organized. He has the right balance of being technically precise with camera equipment, the computer, and printers—yet is creative, with a wonderful eye for color and composition.”

    There are two studios shared by a group on the tour. Blueschool Arts provides a large common space, inviting social interactions while working, a place to recoup, unwind, reflect, and critique; a space where the interaction becomes a creation in its own right, a deep and abiding friendship of art. Karin Bolstad, artist and Blueschool director, says, “Although my artwork is mixed media paintings with a romantic, fairytale, and sometimes gothic style, when I was designing the Blueschool, the idea became to embrace the concept of the perfect magical space to showcase my work. It really is another aspect of my artwork.” You’ll find this throughout the tour. The artist space becomes an extension of creativity as well as a conduit and facilitator for art.

    Freeland Art Studios is a rambling affair with a rabbit warren of wonders. Sculptors working stone, glass, and other media create in this 7,000-square-foot building. Sue Taves and Woody Morris are two artists participating in the tour this year, with stone sculptures, water features, and resin paintings. On any given day, you can see dust moving through the air and creations emerging from the stone like creative apparitions defining an extended moment in an artist’s mind.

    Sue Taves at work (Photo by Sharon Shoemaker)

    “Discovery, in the art-making process, comes with the acceptance that learning comes by repeatedly failing, and then possessing the courage to continue trying,” says glass artist Katrina Hude. “Let me believe in the value of my commitment to search for meaning through art-making.”

    Glass blowing is a dance, and glass artists are a wonder unto themselves. All glass studios have room to dance, to move in unison to a shared vision, an understanding of what the primary artist is trying to accomplish. All movement becomes focused to the vision of the primary artist.

    Felt artist Janet King describes her space as “controlled chaos” in constant motion, like a juggler always moving the ideas around in her head, each piece birthing and creating space for the next. By contrast, luthier Janet Lewis’ woodworking shop is spacious and organized. Once you take it all in, there is a realization that each table, each set of drawers, each rack was crafted by the artist’s hand. The heart of the shop is the hand-tool area. “This is where I work with chisels, carving tools and abrasives. The workspace looks out to an open field, where I and my dog Ollie watch the hawks hunt in the late afternoon.”

    Felt art by Janet King (Photo by Michael Stadler)

    Several of the studios feature spouses who work together as artists. A couple of studios have artists with separate spaces working independently in different media, as with Marianne Brabanski and Al Tennant. Brabanski is a master of the introspective art of painting. “I do not relate to my space in any visual or physical way, however I relate, in my mind, about what binds me to this environment. All work is from my mind’s eye.”

    Flicker Feather Press is the studio of Buffy Cribbs and Bruce Morrow, who interact in a dance created by years of working together creatively. “The area is divided into ‘his’ and ‘hers’ by a small amount of wall and a large redwood sliding door salvaged from a San Francisco Victorian Mansion,” says Cribbs. “The door, which is almost never closed, serves as a gateway conduit through which ideas and suggestions are shared. We offer help and/or ideas when the other is open to that. Sometimes we just need encouragement, sometimes the horse’s leg bends in the wrong place or the man’s arms are too long. Sometimes we defend our position, and sometimes we get out the eraser.”

    The work of Buffy Cribbs Bruce Morrow (Photo by Buffy Cribbs)

    Cook on Clay is a partnership of two women, Robbie Lobell and Maryon Attwood, who bring ceramic cookware to the world with a vision about an observance of daily rituals using handmade objects in the kitchen and on the table. “Authentic home cooking is a fine art. It may announce its presence in the form of yeasty, garlicky, lemony, peppery aromas wafting from the kitchen or the sounds of chopping, slicing, and laughter. It is what happens in the home kitchen —the deeply gratifying, universal act of cooking.” Their clay cookware speaks to a way of life centered in the studio and around the kiln producing pots for cooking and dining.

    Jordan Jones, a potter who carves animal designs into her work, speaks of the intimacy of her 10×10-foot space that also creates camaraderie. “My studio-mate and I spend a lot of our time together in the studio, sharing ideas and critiques. We are bonded. I’m pretty much constantly thinking about making good, functional pots and imagining how people will use them. I draw my animals generally from experiences with the wildlife around me, and hope to capture and convey the liveliness and playfulness of those animals.”

    Pottery by Jordan Jones (Photo by Jordan Jones)

    For some artists, art is a solitary pursuit, and Dan Ishler defines them when he says, “I enjoy working quietly by myself, listening to music, or playing my guitar.”

    Ultimately, each space reflects how individual artists work, their relationship with their media, and the needs of that media. Stone sculptors and clay artists have accepted dust. Glass blowers have the space to accommodate the collaborative nature of their medium. Painters want to know that, when they reach for a brush, it’s exactly where it’s supposed to be.

    Boxes by Janet Lewis (Photo by Michael Stadler)

    By seeing the artists in their studios, you can begin to understand the reality of the daily creative process that is their way of life. Come discover the studios, the artists, and the art.

    More information

    Dates: August 26 and 27
    Time:
     10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily
    Location: 44 studios throughout Whidbey Island. Artists will demonstrate their work, and their artwork will be available for purchase. Information is available online about all participating artists with directions to each studio.
    Catalog: You can download the 72-page catalog here or pick one up at Island businesses, chambers, and visitor centers.
    Websitewhidbeyworkingartists.com
    Emailwhidbeyworkingartists@gmail.com

    Read the other story published this week

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    Enjoy more articles in the print edition of Whidbey Life Magazine, which you can purchase at local and off-island retailers or receive in the mail via subscription.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. You may link to this story. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, please contact us.

  • Pigments, Perspectives, and Pandas || Second Acts and Early Exits

    Pigments, Perspectives, and Pandas || Second Acts and Early Exits

    BY ANNE BELOV
    June 7, 2017

    In my life as an artist, I have been the fortunate recipient of numerous mentors and influences. One of these talented people from whom I learned so much, passed away in May.

    I met Kent Lovelace around 1981, the year I graduated with my MFA from the University of Washington. At the time, he owned Stone Press Gallery in Pioneer Square. His printmaking studio was in the back, complete with several lithography presses and the stones used to make prints. I had wandered in to see the current show, got to talking with the woman staffing the gallery, and before I knew it, I had an invitation to show her my work for possible gallery representation.

    Kent Lovelace

    Living in Seattle, being an artist, trying to make enough of a living, is a time-consuming endeavor, and like most friendships in your twenties and thirties, ours tended to wax and wane, depending on proximity. We were occasionally represented by the same galleries. He introduced me to a gallery owner he showed with, where I ended up showing for more than a decade.

    In the mid-’90s, I did three more lithographs at his printmaking studio, which, by this time, had shed the gallery and moved to the north end of Lake Union, near Gasworks park. By then, I had moved to Whidbey Island, and again our friendship phased out for a while, still crossing paths at the occasional gallery opening. Doing these lithographs with Kent led me to further explorations in printmaking.

    I can’t remember how I found out he had moved to Whidbey, or even when, but the artist community on Whidbey has its own inter-webs, so it was inevitable that our paths would cross again.

    The other evening, at a Whidbey Life Magazine get-together, Harry Anderson reflected that there were many people who had moved to Whidbey for the “second act” of their lives. It made me think about Kent again. He spent decades being a printmaker, but eventually, he was ready to move beyond that into full-time painting.

    You could say that Kent had gone well past the second act and was on the fourth or fifth, as he moved from printmaker, to gallery owner, back to contract printing for other artists, and then to painting and a new life on Whidbey Island.

    The things I remember about Kent are these: He was always generous with praise for other artists’ work, he was kind, and he was never afraid to take his art in a completely new direction from where it had previously traveled.

    I am grateful that I was one of the many satellites in his orbit, and that his paintings will survive him. I know people will miss his ongoing creative work and his personal presence. I am sad that I will never have another “Payless moment” in the produce aisles with him, to talk about art, to gossip about mutual acquaintances, and to experience the day-to-day turnings of life as the days whoosh by.

    His early exit was a cruel one. I’m so sorry there are no more acts in his play.

    The afterlife, according to pandas/ Anne Belov

    View the other stories published this week

    Anne Belov lives and works on Whidbey Island, in an undisclosed location. Her paintings can be seen at The Rob Schouten Gallery in Langley and at The Fountainhead Gallery on Queen Anne Hill in Seattle. You can find her peculiarly political panda satire at Your Brain on Pandas, and her books at Moonraker Books in Langley or on Amazon. Feel free to follow on Twitter where she is @pandachronicle and visit The Institute for Contemporary Panda Satire on Facebook. Her latest collection of panda satire is The Panda Chronicles Book 7: Don’t Call Mee Boo Boo has just been released! She has just launched a new Kickstarter project, to raise money for an art inspiring (and panda cuddling) trip to China!

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    Enjoy more articles in the print edition of Whidbey Life Magazine, which you can purchase at local and off-island retailers or receive in the mail via subscription.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. You may link to this story. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, please contact us.

  • Whidbey Working Artists’  Studio Tour Showcase 2016: Week Five

    Whidbey Working Artists’ Studio Tour Showcase 2016: Week Five

    August 24, 2016

    THIS WEEKEND: Don’t miss the Whidbey Working Artists annual Open Studio Tour this Saturday and Sunday Aug. 27 and 28. This year’s tour includes 52 artists at 37 studios across Whidbey Island. Spend time with these working artists in their studios while experiencing the beauty that attracts them to magnificent Whidbey Island. Learn firsthand the inspiration and process that goes into each artist’s work while enjoying scenic island vistas en route.

    This week’s post features the final 10 tour artists, in the order they appear in the tour brochure (north to south). Get your copy of the colorful brochure/map/guide at selected locations on Whidbey Island and Western Washington, or download the PDF from WhidbeyWorkingArtists.com. Then come on out and see what these artists have been working on!


    STUDIO #33
    BRUCE MORROW
    Flicker Feather Print Studio
    painting/ printmaking
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
    wbm1 wbm2
    STUDIO #34
    SUSAN JENSEN
    pastels
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
    wsj3 wsj5
    STUDIO #35
    SHERREN ANDERSON
    studio glass
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
    wsa1 copy wsa3 copy
    STUDIO #36
    KATHLEEN SECREST
    pastels
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
    wks1 wks2
    STUDIO #37
    KARIN BOLSTAD
    Blueschool Arts
    acrylic mixed media painting
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
    wkb3 wkb5
    STUDIO #37
    MELISSA KOCH
    Blueschool Arts
    mixed media

    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
    mk3 wmk2
    STUDIO #37
    SHEILA MOHN
    Blueschool Arts
    painting
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
    wsm2 (1) wwsm1
    STUDIO #37
    SARA SALTEE
    Blueschool Arts
    mixed media assemblage & collage
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
    ss3 wss2
    STUDIO #37
    TAMMI SLOAN
    Blueschool Arts
    jewelry, mixed media sculpture & painting
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
    tws2 wts1
    STUDIO #37
    ZIA GIPSON
    Blueschool Arts
    mixed media including garments, paintings & sculpture 
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
    wzg1 wzg2

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  • WWA Studio Tour Showcase: Week Five

    WWA Studio Tour Showcase: Week Five

    [vc_row full_width=”” parallax=”” parallax_image=””][vc_column width=”1/1″][vc_column_text]August 27, 2015

    THIS WEEKEND: Don’t miss the Whidbey Working Artists annual Open Studio Tour, Saturday and Sunday Aug. 29 and 30. This year’s tour includes 50 artists at 33 studios across Whidbey Island. Spend time with these working artists in their studios while experiencing the beauty that attracts them to magnificent Whidbey Island. Learn firsthand the inspiration and process that goes into each artist’s work while enjoying scenic island vistas en route.

    This week’s post features the final 11 tour artists, in the order they appear in the tour brochure (north to south). Get your copy of the colorful brochure/map/guide at selected locations on Whidbey Island and Western Washington, or download the pdf from WhidbeyWorkingArtists.com. Then come on out and see what these artists have been working on!


    STUDIO #28
    JULIE HOUGOM
    paint & pencil
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
    28hougom1  28hougom2
    STUDIO #28
    BJORN LUNDEEN
    painting
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     28lundeen1  28lundeen2
    STUDIO #29
    SUSAN JENSEN
    pastels
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     29jensen1  29jensen2
    STUDIO #30
    DAN FREEMAN
    sculptural objects
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     30freeman1  30freeman2
    STUDIO #31
    KARIN BOLSTAD
    Blueschool Arts
    acrylic mixed media painting
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     31bolstad1  31bolstad2
    STUDIO #31
    CARRIE WHITNEY
    Blueschool Arts
    oil painting

    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     31whitney1  31whitney2
    STUDIO #31
    SARA SALTEE
    Blueschool Arts
    mixed media assemblage & collage
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     31saltee1  31saltee2
    STUDIO #31
    LAUREN ATKINSON
    Blueschool Arts
    drawing, photography & sculpture
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     31atkinson1  31atkinson2
    STUDIO #31
    TAMMI SLOAN
    Blueschool Arts
    jewelry, mixed media sculpture & painting

    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     31sloan1  31sloan2
    STUDIO #31
    MELISSA KOCH
    Blueschool Arts
    mixed media

    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     31koch1  31koch2
    STUDIO #31
    ALICIA LOMNE
    Blueschool Arts
    glass
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     31lomne1  31lomne2

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    CLICK HERE to read more WLM stories and blogs. Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

  • Inside the Studios: A Glimpse at the Whidbey Working Artists Open Studio Tour

    Inside the Studios: A Glimpse at the Whidbey Working Artists Open Studio Tour

    BY ARRYN DAVIS
    Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor
    August 26, 2015

    Experience the plethora of working artists Whidbey has to offer this weekend at the Whidbey Working Artist’s Open Studio Tour. From Clinton to Oak Harbor, artists will open their doors for visitors to view their workspaces, see finished and unfinished pieces and feed their artistic curiosities. With over 50 working artists participating in the tour, the only question is—who will you visit first?

    Perhaps Lane Tompkins, a stone and metal sculptor working out of Freeland Art Studios… Tompkins discovered his artistic calling post-retirement, and knew immediately that it was how he wanted to spend his time. Beginning with representational sculptures of horses and camels, Tompkins soon developed an interest in the abstract. He now sculpts more organic forms, and is currently working on a series of wall sculptures from Carrara marble.

    “Specter,” marble sculpture by Lane Tompkins (photo by Michael Stadler)
    “Specter,” marble sculpture by Lane Tompkins (photo by Michael Stadler)

    Interestingly, he hollows out the interior of his marbles to decrease their weight, a technique drawn from the work of Elizabeth Turk. When asked about the source of his creativity and ideas, Tompkins, a delightfully pithy and adventurous conversationalist, replied with a laugh, “There’s nothing mystical about my work. I don’t want the stone to have anything to say about it, I just want to create this form out of stone.” His studio is well worth a visit just for the discussion, let alone his sculpture.

    If you prefer paintings to the three-dimensional arts, Karin Bolstad’s studio in Clinton might take your expectations of painting and throw them to the wind. Formally trained as an illustrator and graphic designer, Bolstad described herself as “more of an illustrative painter than a painterly painter.”

    “The Fortune Teller, Mixed Media Acrylic, 24” X 36” by Karin Bolstad, 2015 (photo by Karin Bolstad)
    “The Fortune Teller, Mixed Media Acrylic, 24” X 36” by Karin Bolstad, 2015 (photo by Karin Bolstad)

    In the true nature of an illustrator, she uses her medium to tell a story: her story as a woman. Bolstad said she has always painted the female figure, and uses her art to add to the feminist conversation. “Though I do art because I love it and it’s what I do, I feel like it also has a purpose. I’m telling the female story through my own stories as a woman.”

    A perfect example is her Gothic Romance series, inspired by the covers of novels she read as a teen. On the cover, the female character was always portrayed running fearfully away from a haunting scene. “In mine, they’re not scared. They’re part of the scene,” she said.

    Bolstad’s style is drawn in part from the Byzantine era and her studies in Greek iconography, and her subjects are a surefire conversation starter. Located at Blueschool Arts in Clinton, Bolstad’s studio is a must-see.

    But what about the very material we paint on? A visit to Mary Ashton’s workspace in Freeland might reveal more than you imagined about the art of papermaking. As she wrote in her artist statement, “It is one of our great communication tools for visual and literary art, education, business, important news, as well as our inner thoughts and emotions.”

    A selection of papers created by Mary Ashton (photo by Mary Ashton)
    A selection of papers created by Mary Ashton (photo by Mary Ashton)

    For Ashton, paper is about both the product and the process. Trained in both Western and Japanese methods, she’ll have a “Hollander beater” set up so she can demonstrate the Western papermaking process. Recently, Ashton has focused her energies on teaching papermaking methods. “Hand papermaking is kind of dying out, and there are so many fewer papermakers,” she said, “so it’s important to pass along that tradition.”

    The Hollander beater Ashton will use for demonstrations during the tour (photo by Mary Ashton)
    The Hollander beater Ashton will use for demonstrations during the tour (photo by Mary Ashton)

    People often ask her what you can do with paper. Her response is always “Well, what do you do with paper?” Ashton hopes that visitors will come away with “a new understanding of things in our every day that are special.”

    The studio tour is more than just a visit to artists’ workspaces. It’s an opportunity to start a discussion, to ask new questions and to see the art-making process for yourself. “I want people to come away with the understanding that this is a working art—a practicing art—not a given art,” said Tompkins. “You get better by doing it, and anybody can do it. ”

    Experience the Whidbey Working Artists open studio tour for yourself from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. this Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 29 and 30. WWA is a proud umbrella organization of the Whidbey Island Arts Council. For more information, visit www.whidbeyworkingartists.com.

    Read more about other Tour artists in this feature WLM Contributor Deb Crager here.

    Image at top: The Fortune Teller” by Karin Bolstad (photo by Karin Bolstad)

    Arryn Davis is a voracious art historian and an educator at the Burke museum. Her interests include Tolstoy, Athenian Caryatids and international methods of brewing coffee.

    __________________

    CLICK HERE to read more WLM stories and blogs. Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

  • WWA Studio Tour Showcase: Week Four

    WWA Studio Tour Showcase: Week Four

    [vc_row full_width=”” parallax=”” parallax_image=””][vc_column width=”1/1″][vc_column_text]August 20, 2015

    COUNTDOWN: Just one and a half weeks remain until the Whidbey Working Artists annual Open Studio Tour, Saturday and Sunday Aug. 29 and 30. This year’s tour includes 50 artists at 33 studios across Whidbey Island. Spend time with these working artists in their studios while experiencing the beauty that attracts them to magnificent Whidbey Island. Learn firsthand the inspiration and process that go into each artist’s work while enjoying scenic island vistas en route.

    These weekly posts feature ten tour artists each week, in the order they appear in the tour brochure (north to south). Get your copy of the colorful brochure/map/guide at selected locations on Whidbey Island and Western Washington, or download the pdf from WhidbeyWorkingArtists.com. Then come on out and see what these artists have been working on!


    STUDIO #20
    DAN & JOI LACHAUSSEE
    LaChaussee Glass
    hand blown art glass
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     20lacha1  20lacha2
    STUDIO #21
    BERIT BARDARSON
    jewelry
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     21bardarson1  21bardarson2
    STUDIO #22
    GARY SCHALLOCK
    watercolor
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     22schallock1  22schallock2
    STUDIO #23
    JUDI NYERGES
    watercolor, pen & ink
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     23nyerges1  23nyerges2
    STUDIO #24
    A. MARIA
    impressionistic painting
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     24maria1  24maria2
    STUDIO #25
    LAURYN TAYLOR
    The Old Bayview School
    acrylic, encaustic & mixed media painting
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     25taylor1  25taylor2
    STUDIO #26
    BUFFY CRIBBS
    Flicker Feather Print Studio
    painting, print, furniture, sculpture
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     26cribbs1  26cribbs2
    STUDIO #26
    BRUCE MORROW
    Flicker Feather Print Studio
    painting, printmaking

    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     26morrow1  26morrow2
    STUDIO #27
    ZIA GIPSON
    mixed media including garments, paintings & sculpture
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     27gipson1  27gipson2
    STUDIO #27
    RICHARD DAVIS
    mosaics
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     27davis1  27davis2

    __________________

    CLICK HERE to read more WLM stories and blogs. Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

  • WWA Studio Tour Showcase: Week Three

    WWA Studio Tour Showcase: Week Three

    [vc_row full_width=”” parallax=”” parallax_image=””][vc_column width=”1/1″][vc_column_text]August 13, 2015

    COUNTDOWN: Just three weeks remain until the Whidbey Working Artists annual Open Studio Tour, Saturday and Sunday Aug. 29 and 30. This year’s tour includes 50 artists at 33 studios across Whidbey Island. Spend time with these working artists in their studios while experiencing the beauty that attracts these artists to magnificent Whidbey Island. Learn firsthand the inspiration and process that go into each artist’s work while enjoying scenic island vistas en route.

    These weekly posts feature ten tour artists each week, in the order they appear in the tour brochure (north to south). Get your copy of the colorful brochure/map/guide at selected locations on Whidbey Island and Western Washington, or download the pdf from WhidbeyWorkingArtists.com. Then come on out and see what these artists have been working on!


    STUDIO #14
    MARCY JOHNSON
    fiber and metal jewelry
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     14johnson1  14johnson2
    STUDIO #14
    MARY ASHTON
    handmade paper, books & painted/dyed textiles
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     14ashton1  14ashton2
    STUDIO #15
    EARL OLSEN
    photography
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     15olsene1  15olsene2
    STUDIO #15
    NATALIE OLSEN
    fiber arts
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     15olsenn3  15olsenn2
    STUDIO #16
    ANNE NILES DAVENPORT
    Rainshadow Textiles
    fiber arts
    (click artist name for more details,
    or image for larger view)
     16davenport1  16davenport2
    STUDIO #17
    SUE TAVES
    Freeland Art Studios, studio c
    sculpture
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     17taves1  17taves2
    STUDIO #17
    LLOYD WHANNELL
    Freeland Art Studios
    sculpture
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     17whannell1  17whannell2
    STUDIO #17
    LANE TOMPKINS
    Freeland Art Studios
    stone & bronze sculpture
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     17tompkins1  17tompkins2
    STUDIO #18
    TERESA SAIA
    pastel & oil painting
    (click artist name for more details,
    or image for larger view)
     18saia1  18saia2
    STUDIO #19
    ROBERT ADAMSON & JANIS SWALWELL
    Island Art Glass
    hand blown art glass
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     19iag1  19iag2

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  • Whidbey Working Artists Hold ‘Summer Open Studio Tour’ Aug. 29 & 30

    Whidbey Working Artists Hold ‘Summer Open Studio Tour’ Aug. 29 & 30

    BY DEB CRAGER
    Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor
    August 5, 2015

    Were you thinking you may have missed your opportunity last weekend to get artwork that speaks to your heart? It’s not too late!

    Many different pieces will be available across Whidbey Island during the annual Whidbey Working Artists Tour at the end of this month. Spend a weekend driving scenic vistas while you check out actual studios where artists work. You’ll see everything from sculptures to oil paintings, photography, jewelry, ceramics, mixed media and more. This year, the tour has expanded to include more artists from one end of the island to the other and the peaceful island surroundings can’t help but inspire the artists and those who visit.

    “I think those coming will be glad they came; there are some fabulous artists,” said Kay Parsons, Tour Coordinator. “Driving the back roads and seeing the artists in the process of doing their art is one of the best parts of the tour.”

    “What I love about the tour is that we’re all working artists. We make our living doing this,” said Teresa Saia, who paints in oils and pastels. She described herself as a contemporary impressionist who uses lots of color. “I didn’t know I could draw until I was 30,” she said, adding that she started with calligraphy, moved into watercolors and then into pastels and oil painting.

     A vibrant oil painting,“Emerald Eve,” by Teresa Saia   (photo by the artist)
    A vibrant oil painting,“Emerald Eve,” by Teresa Saia (photo by the artist)

    “Painting is truly my passion in life,” she said, describing her vision as she expresses the light and color around her. “I love what I do, and I’m always looking for the next thing that inspires me.”

    Sculptor Lloyd Whannell shares a studio with 11 other artists and believes the tour allows visitors to see the large-scale process in his medium—stone. “You can see ongoing works and look over our studios and tools, and see the inside story of sculpting,” he said. When he first started taking art classes, he found himself trying to make items out of clay or other materials so that they looked like stone, finally realizing that he wanted to work in stone itself.

    Now he sells combination pieces of stone, bronze and glass all over the Northwest and is part of an art loan program. His works are both abstract and figurative—a combination of stone, bronze, and glass. After 25 years, Whannell is quick to point out that he’s still balancing things out, that all of it is a work in progress.

    “Newer Speed” by Dan Freeman (photo by the artist)
    “Newer Speed” by Dan Freeman (photo by the artist)

    “Ever since I was a little kid, I enjoyed making stuff,” said another sculptor, Dan Freeman, who describes himself as a problem solver. “Each piece brings its own questions. If I’m working from a specific concept, I can see the end before I go after it,” he added.

    Other times materials suggest something different to him, sometimes it’s just play. Freeman also tried several types of art: mixed media, printmaking, pottery, but sculpting made the most of his desire to problem solve. “I like show and tell,” said Freeman, “and curious people are my kind of people.” His favorite piece in his gallery is called “History of Modern Art, abridged.” It’s the study of all modern art in a single piece, and something he’s happy to share.

    A colorful weaving, in progress, by Anne Niles Davenport   (photo by the artist)
    A colorful weaving, in progress, by Anne Niles Davenport (photo by the artist)

    Curiosity may have also led weaver Anne Niles Davenport down her chosen artistic path. Once challenged by a friend to learn weaving, she accepted the challenge and never looked back. When asked why she does it, she responded: “Of course I love it, but that doesn’t tell the whole story. It’s so much wider and deeper than that,” she paused. “Making cloth is so compelling. To make functional, beautiful cloth strikes me as being profoundly human and is a part of a truly ancient way of life.” She said that she has never duplicated a single piece she’s done, nor does she want to—“I want to plumb all the possibilities,” she said. Recently, she produced a run of luxury throws and more practical items like a series of designer towels—one-of-a-kind pieces that will last forever and bring art into the kitchen.

    According to Parsons, tour coordinator, the Artists Tour has expanded to accommodate the needs of artists within the entire geographic area of Whidbey Island, also becoming an umbrella organization of the Whidbey Island Arts Council. “We’re especially grateful for the support of the Council,” she said.

    No matter what interests you in art, with more than 50 artists, you’ll find something you can’t live without. Come to the Whidbey Working Artists Summer Open Studio Tour the weekend of August 29 & 30 to see what unique piece will be yours alone.

    Image at top (and below): The artist, Lloyd Whannell, in his studio   (photo courtesy of Lloyd Whannell)

    Deb Crager is originally from the Midwest but has lived on the island for 24 years. She wrote the book “101 Things to do on Whidbey Island: for a Day, a Weekend, or a Lifetime,” available on iPad and Kindle Fire.

    Whannell1
    The artist, Lloyd Whannell, in his studio (photo courtesy of Lloyd Whannell)

    __________________

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    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

  • WWA Studio Tour Showcase: Week Two

    WWA Studio Tour Showcase: Week Two

    August 5, 2015

    COUNTDOWN: Just four weeks remain until the Whidbey Working Artists annual Open Studio Tour, Saturday and Sunday Aug. 29 and 30. This year’s tour includes 50 artists at 33 studios across Whidbey Island. Spend time with these working artists in their studios while experiencing the beauty that attracts them to magnificent Whidbey Island. Learn firsthand the inspiration and process that go into each artist’s work while enjoying scenic island vistas en route.

    These posts feature ten tour artists each week, in the order they appear in the tour brochure (north to south). Get your copy of the colorful brochure/map/guide at selected locations on Whidbey Island and Western Washington, or download the PDF from WhidbeyWorkingArtists.com. Then come on out and see what these artists have been working on!


    STUDIO #7
    MARIANNE BRABANSKI
    2d
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     7brabanski1  Lie to Me, Acrylic and Graphite, 48x36 Marianne Brabanski
    STUDIO #8
    DIANE TOMPKINSON
    printmaking
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     8tompkinson1  8tompkinson2
    STUDIO #9
    JANET LEWIS
    luthier
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     9lewis2  9lewis1
    STUDIO #9
    MARIAN QUARRIER
    woodwork
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     9quarrier1  9quarrier2
    STUDIO #9
    KIM TINUVIEL
    photography, mixed media
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     9tin3  9tin2
    STUDIO #10
    COOK ON CLAY
    Robbie Lobell & Maryon Attwood
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     10lobell1  10lobell2
    STUDIO #10
    DEB SCHWARTZKOPF
    ceramics
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     10schwartzkopf1  10schwartzkopf2
    STUDIO #11
    MARY ELLEN O’CONNOR 
    Willow Pond Studio
    jewelry & etched glass
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     11oconnor1  11oconnor2
    STUDIO #12
    FRANCY BLUMHAGEN
    mixed media/collage, printmaking
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     12blumhagen1  12blumhagen2
    STUDIO #13
    ROB SCHOUTEN
    painting
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     13schouten1  13schouten2

    __________________

    CLICK HERE to read more WLM stories and blogs. Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

  • WWA Studio Tour Showcase: Week One

    WWA Studio Tour Showcase: Week One

    [vc_row full_width=”” parallax=”” parallax_image=””][vc_column width=”1/1″][vc_column_text]July 29, 2015

    COUNTDOWN: Just five weeks remain until the Whidbey Working Artists annual Open Studio Tour, Saturday and Sunday August 29 and 30. This year’s tour includes 50 artists at 33 studios across Whidbey Island. Spend time with these working artists in their studios while experiencing the beauty that attracts them to magnificent Whidbey Island. Learn firsthand the inspiration and process that go into each artist’s work while enjoying scenic island vistas en route.

    These weekly posts feature ten tour artists each week, in the order they appear in the tour brochure (north to south). Get your copy of the colorful brochure/map/guide at selected locations on Whidbey Island and Western Washington, or download the pdf from WhidbeyWorkingArtists.com. Then come on out and see what these artists have been working on!


    STUDIO #1
    DAN ISHLER
    hand thrown pottery
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
    1ishler2 1ishler1
    STUDIO #2
    ELLEN VLASAK
    mixed media
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     2vlasak1  2vlasak2
    STUDIO #3
    KAY PARSONS
    Looking Glass Cottage Studio
    watercolor
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     3parsons1  3parsons2
    STUDIO #3
    GWEN SAM
    bas relief sculpture
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     3sam1  3sam2
    STUDIO #3
    CAROL ANN BAUER and HOWARD HAMSA
    Stillfire Pottery
    hand thrown pottery
    (click artist name for more details,
    or image for larger view)
     3stillfire1  3stillfire2
    STUDIO #3
    STEPHANIE SCHUEMANN
    oil painting
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     3scheumann1  3scheumann2
    STUDIO #4
    BEV McQUARY
    lampwork glass beads & fabricated wirework jewelry
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     4mcquary  4mcquary2
    STUDIO #5
    MARTHA McCARTNEY photographs, candles, mixed media collage
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     5mccartney1  5mccartney2
    STUDIO #6
    MARY BURKS
    textiles
    (click artist name for more details,
    or image for larger view)
     6burks  6burks2
    STUDIO #6
    PATTY PICCO
    encaustic mixed media
    (click artist name for more details, or image for larger view)
     6picco  6picco1

    __________________

    CLICK HERE to read more WLM stories and blogs. Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]