My “fire work” emerged from a trip to Ireland in 2016 during a breakup and a period of burnout. I stayed at an artist residency in a stone cabin, collecting kindling each morning to light a fire in the wood stove. I saw pieces of wood, newspaper, and ash as triangular compositions for paintings. This encounter with the wood stove became an allegory for a climate in crisis and my life and grief cycles as I struggled with health, matters of the heart, and the articulation of this work that would then become the source of my painting for the next 8 years.
Soot covered paintings from self directed residency in Berlin in reference to those first fire sketches in ireland, exhibited solo show Fire Works For Pleasure, 2018
My mother left Northern Ireland in the 1970s, a period of violence due to British occupation, known as “The Troubles”. I grew up visiting Belfast, witnessing a bombed-out, barb-wired, and occupied space. Green in the Irish flag means Catholic and the Orange Protestant, the white middle is peace. Image: Belfast Northern Ireland, 1985
The work is titled “Birch Bark is like Snakeskin”, because while I was painting the snake like figure moving from top left corner to bottom right, I noticed similarities between that of birch bark and snakeskin in the way there are layers of regeneration in the skin. In this painting, all the unscorched lush materials in the world gather on top of this last stump to drink water from its center. Although, there needs to be gentleness in the gathering because the desire to drink from the limited supplies of this oasis, could cause friction between objects and it too will endure fire, like the stumps in the background. The snake and the birch represent a symbol of regeneration, fertility, and balance and is a hopeful symbol for healing of ourselves and the planet. Firework developed into a series of paintings for my MFA at York University. Snake Skin is Like Birch Bark Acrylic on Birch Panel 36” x 48”, 2021
Stone like Fruit, Fruit like Fire, MFA Solo Exhibition, Gales Gallery, York University, 2022, photo by Lisa East, source materials for paintings displayed on shelves.
Stone like Fruit, Fruit like Fire, MFA Solo Exhibition, Gales Gallery, York University, 2022, photo by Lisa East.
The Strawberry Moon Rose Over the Lake Just like The One in This Painting Acrylic on Birch Panel, 36 x 48”, 2022
Call Me, It’s a Climate Emergency, Acrylic on Birch Panel, 36” x 48”, 2020
Witches gather wip 2021, influenced by picture of me and my sisters, 1988
Fire is the Spirit of Matter. Acrylic on Birch Panel, 36” x 48”,2021
When The Earth Started to Show its Flowers, Acrylic on Birch Panel, 36” x 48”, 2022
The ash archive, it’s a piece that includes the ashes of all my fires, of grief, ceremonial and celebrations, accumulatively, 2021 – present
Another body of work emerged from a grief cycle when I received a cancer diagnosis while completing my MFA. It prompted me to work outside of the institution, that be academic and medical, and go into the field and paint. I spent time in the woods that year at residencies, questioning what landscape painting looks like with the loss of 85% of the world’s forests and uncontrollable wildfires affecting Indigenous populations that have stewarded this land the longest. By seemingly escaping one institution by painting outdoors, I was confronted with a whole other institution, Canadian Landscape painting. In the face of a climate crisis due to natural resource extraction, I want to move beyond the idyllic notion of Canadian landscape painting and disrupt these concepts by deepening my understanding of what it means to make work about land on stolen land
A large plein air painting completed during a residency in Halliburtonon Halls Island, including details of the painting, 2022
Practice is described through an ability to transform through repetition. Every morning, I do a little matchbook painting, and now have well over 300 of these matchbooks, a great source reference for larger paintings.
Artist Residency I created/facilitated, “i made it through the wilderness”, exploring climate grief, plein air painting during smoke filled skies, 2023
Plein Air with Doris McCarthy’s Apple Trees, at Doris McCarthy Artist-in-Residence Program, 2023
I started to make connections between growing food and plein air painting, using my canvas stretcher as a trellis for plants like squash, while also creating biodegradable paintings from bioplastics from Doris McCarthy’s apple tree while at the residency program at “Fools Paradise” . As I turned my practice from fire to plants, it became imperative for my paintings to align with sustainable ecological cycles and my body's cycle. Photo by Lisa East, 2023
Like using fire as a means of building a painting compositionally, I began mirroring the structural supports and networks needed to grow plants and make paintings in co-authorship. For example, butternut squash seeds require 105 days to bear fruit; correspondingly, my painting also takes 105 days to complete, utilizing the canvas stretcher as a trellis for the squash to grow while I paint. Image of squash by Lisa East
Bio-degradable painting, as plants grow, they leave marks on circular bio plastics. The support is made from apple bioplastic, made with gelatin, glycerin, water, blue spirulina, and is wrapped around a metal circular trellis. The sap from butternut squash was used as an adhesive to adhere the bioplastic around the metal frame, along with gelatin based tape. The apple trees are located on a cliff at the Scarborough Bluffs, at a shoreline dating back to the end of the ice age, used as trade routes by Wendat (Huron), Seneca and later the Mississauga First Nations. Two seeds from same apples, growing out of bioplastic, 2024, showcased at 3 days of design in Copenhagen.
In my practice, I am looking for ways painting can work cyclically and in co-authorship with an environment. I want to work alongside a growing garden with a "plein air" practice that participates in not only making paintings about plants and the landscape, but painting "with plants" and "by plants“ ‘a joy, a sanctuary, a root’ bio plastic project from Doris McCarthy Apple Trees, plants as they grow they leave marks, biodegradable paintings, 2024
Bio paintings exhibited at the "3 Days of Design" Festival in Copenhagen, Denmark from June 10-15, 2024. For six months, I had been participating in an online international program hosted by “The Material Way,” where I have been learning about methodologies and the technical aspects of material creation, specifically in the creation of bio-based plastics.
I was invited to a three-person show, "Red, Yellow, Blue," at Xpace Cultural Centre, curated by the Gas Collective 2024. I created a new painting referencing the subject of fire (Red) for the show to accompany one of my large-scale landscape paintings, and I saw potential for a new series. This project will now take my fire work, reimagined, in conversation with personal and collective narratives found in my land-based paintings. Photographed by Polina Teif
Fireworks in Garden, Acrylic on Linen, Guitar case frame in garden with Cocozelle squash, 12” x 40”, 2024
New body of work emerges: My work explores myth, materialism, and earth-based spiritual practices, resulting in subversive paintings and spaces. Inspired by the myth of Romulus and Remus and the concept of “mothering-elsewhere" or “mothered by other," I investigate diversified care systems as a supportive response to our current climate epoch. I ask how the Earth gets nursed when it can no longer be our wet nurse and how non-biological, non-gendered mothering might offer solutions for healing ourselves, the planet, and each other.
Studio shots. I renovated my garage in the back yard after major surgery as a present. Photo by Lisa East. I will be working on She-Wolf Painting, which is a painting of me breast feeding my dogs - Work in Progress, includes irregular panel board that I will paint fire works on, as show on the right in charcoal, along side narrative paintings.
Preliminary watercolours for the new painting series, 2024/25
New work, “The Heart is a Good Composition, 36” x 48”, acrylic on panel, painting started at Doris McCarthy artist in residence program and is based on the cliffs of the Scarborough bluffs, finished in home study, 2025