Pat Reynolds Quilt Awarded Grand Champion Status

Pat Reynolds has just been informed that her first prize quilt from the Haliburton County Fair has been declared the  ”Grand Champion for Machine Quilting” at the Ontario Association of Agricultural Societies Annual Conference in Toronto (Feb. 2012). The quilt is called “New York Beauties” and was inspired by a pattern by Karen Stone an internationally known quilter. The blocks on the inside that makes up the rectangle are called New York Beauty Blocks. The exterior border was designed and created by Pat Reynolds herself.

The three ribbons depicted in the picture were awarded at the Haliburton Highlands Quilt Guild Quilt Show in July 2010. One was for Best Quilt; the second for Best Machine Quilting and the third was a Judges Award. Congratulations to Pat.

Fabric Sculpture Mask

Spring is a time of renewal.  For Dani Stahle spring renewal manifests into art projects and potential workshops.  This picture is of a fabric sculpture mask using free flow form.  It is made from recycled burlap, T shirt material, wire, wood, wool and acorns.  The hint of colour is a powder pigment that will stress over time to give the piece an “aged” look.  This mask is made from an acrylic water based medium that is UV, and weather resistant.  I will be hanging this outside for all visitors to my studio to see! Take a look at Dani’s other creations. 

John Proctor’s newest creation “the Thunder Drum” will be coming soon

Catch the wind and create the sound of thunder

With spring just around the corner, John Proctor at Earth Tones Studio, has been working on a new musical instrument: The “Thunder Drum”. It is made from a hard shelled gourd, goat skin and a spring.   If you like the sound of thunder storms, you will like  this instrument.

The sound it produces sounds like real thunder from Mother Nature herself.  It can be hung outside in a tree to catch the wind or you can hold it in your hand and shake it to move the spring and hear the “rumble”.   Hard shelled gourds come in all shapes and sizes, but the one in the picture is a good shape to resonate that “thunder rumble”.  Take a look at some of John’s other drums.

Rooted — Artists in the Haliburton Highlands

by Douglas Pugh,

One of the Haliburton Highlands’ biggest and brightest crops is its cultural and artistic community. Here you can find a dazzling array of artists, poets, potters, dancers, musicians … the list is seemingly endless. The area has a number of ‘Tours’ where recognised artists are linked together for open studio days while masses of art afficionados and collectors peruse them one after the other. Not only are there many artists but the outstanding level and quality draws plaudits, awards and recognition from all around the world. Some of these talented people move here, others are raised here.

Charles O'Neil

Susan MacDonald

Two excellent examples of this are the artists ‘Chuck’ O’Neil famed amongst other things for his wire sculpture artistry; and Susan MacDonald, a multi-talented artist that is setting new boundaries in style with her felted fabric products. Both have signed up for the new online artists marketplace , www.MadeInHaliburton.ca, a venture providing juried artists from the area with a global storefront.

Charles moved to Haliburton with his parents when they took over the local IGA grocery store. He was 15 years old at the time. When his parents sold the business and retired elsewhere, Chuck stayed on.

Following health issues he delighted in expressing himself with sketching and painting. His paintings and drawings of life studies won awards at juried shows. Many of his works found their way into galleries and his reputation grew.

Ever curious, Chuck was intrigued with portraying the same life studies in 3D, and enrolled in the Haliburton School of The Arts where he learned the skills of blacksmithing and wire sculpting.

Charles’ enjoyment of his new media took him artistically further than he had been before, from the commission to create a screen inside a house to run up alongside a stairwell (from the basement to the roof itself inside a gutted house) to being approached, at a specialist show in Philadelphia for gallery buyers, to making a series of display shoes for an elite shoe chain across the USA. The screen featured in the Canadian National press, home improvement magazines and even a TV show.

His talents with wire and sculpture were really gaining recognition and he started teaching at the very same college where he had learned his rudimentary first steps.

Commissions to build for the Haliburton Sculpture Forest were huge projects where scale was not a problem. He started with a large figurine of Eos lifting his arms to the rising sun, and followed this up with a spectacular reprise of one of his shoes.

Chuck could theoretically work on his art anywhere. But he has chosen to live and work in the Haliburton Highlands for some very good reasons.

‘It’s the balance. Nature. People. If you need time out, to think, to get inspiration … it’s just a short walk away. The lakes and trees, the birds, the animals. It’s a community and a place like no other.’

And the www.MadeInHaliburton.ca website, what does Chuck think about that?

‘Exciting, innovative. It will let me concentrate on sculpting, now that is a wonderful idea.’

But if transplants take so well in this crucible of creativity that is Haliburton, what then for the folks that are born and raised here?

Susan MacDonald is the daughter of Barbara Joy Peel, herself an artist and potter of wide renown.

Susan was raised here, then moved to Australia for love, raising a family. A visit back here for a family event was enough to convince the whole family that Haliburton was where they needed to be.

Sue brought a few things back with her from Australia, besides the family. One was the name, SueMac, which not only was the name that she was called in Australia, but one of her favourite Canadian trees, the sumac. She kept this name when creating her website suemacdesigns.com.

Another was a ‘got to have it’ scarf that she saw in a shop there. Silk with felted alpaca wool. Sue has an allergy problem with regular wool, but not with alpaca or merinho. From owning this, Sue was driven to understand how it was made, the felting process. She recognised potential.

‘Looking at that scarf now I can see how the quality is not that good, but I love it because that is what started it all. It doesn’t look much but it keeps you warm when it’s cold, it stays cool when it’s hot. It’s natural products, and the colours are just amazing.’

Sue has created a dazzling array of possibilities. Not only does she have fourteen basic styles of scarf, from a simple wrap to the snug warmth of a tubular snood, developed but she has also taken time to build relationships with her suppliers.

The scarves are based around a substrate of silk. Light, strong and colourful.

‘My supplier keeps me in touch with this season’s colours on the silks …’ she says, proudly showing her collection of lengths of material, ‘ … and then my wool supplier sends these …’

The skeins of wool are multi-coloured, light and brightly hued. And so, so soft. This leaves no doubt about the supreme quality of the materials that she has chosen. Placing a skein against one silk after another you realise what a spectacular range of combinations are possible. There are contrasts and supportive combinations almost beyond measure here. There can even be different colours on either side or variation in the thickness.

You would think that these alone would be enough to keep any artist fulfilled, but Sue’s energy and imagination are seemingly limitless. The felting skills take in new products such as felted soaps, pet toys made from natural fibres – she has her own test facilities close at hand with her Australian shepherd coolie dogs (Sue is one of only three recognised breeders in North America) – where she can combine fun with durability and practicality. Sue also makes jewellery – often to work alongside the scarves themselves as additional decorations, scarf rings or a combination of the two.

‘It has surprised me how fast it has all taken off. In the 2010 Tour de Forest I was a little shy as I had never done anything like that before. I had 200 people through the studio, I got loads of supportive comments and compliments but did not sell a thing. In 2011 things just went crazy.’

How crazy? Sue has several stores in Toronto and another in Bancroft that stock her scarves, the sales that she had from the 2011 Tours were enough to make her sit down and gulp. In 2012 Sue is taking part in four Tours, she has increased demand from the stockists and hopes to add a few more, and is now selling online via MadeInHaliburton.ca

‘A global marketplace for the wonderful art of Haliburton. That’s something long overdue. The whole area of the Highlands deserves far more recognition, both for itself – the beauty of the place – and the sheer richness of the culture and arts.’

February 2012

[End]

Why Art From The Haliburton Highlands

After many hours of hard work by a committee of dedicated individuals this website, MadeInHaliburton.ca,  has become a reality! Welcome to our new website and we hope you enjoy your visit. Any feedback about the website is greatly appreciated .. so, feel free to go to the contact us page and send us an email.

Why have we created an online gallery for the artists of the Haliburton Highlands? It is simple: this is a Canadian Artistic Community and the work of local artists deserves to be showcased and marketed as such. In 1968 a small group of local Haliburton Highlands citizens got together and charted a vision for the community to become an enclave for artists. It was envisioned that the Haliburton Highlands would become ”the Banff of the east”.  The rugged landscape of forests and lakes was thought to be an ideal location for artists to be creative in their home-based businesses scattered around the region.  Forty years later the arts have truly blossomed in this community. It is now the home of a full-time Fleming College campus that attracts over 200 full-time students, and 3,500 students for week long courses given by over 150 artist faculty members who are associated with a variety of media and methods. There are 190 artists and arts related organizations registered with the Arts Council of the Haliburton Highlands. It is known that this is only part of the total composition of the arts within the Haliburton Highlands as some individuals choose not to become members. There are several year round public galleries; five community museums; three studio tours; two dance studios; the Highlands Summer Festival (live theatre), the Highlands Opera Studio; a variety of live musical performances through the Forest Festival and Folk Society.  This list is certainly not all inclusive but, will give you an idea of the depth and breadth of cultural opportunities that abound in the Haliburton Highlands. All of this has been created by a small but, vibrant community with only 15,000 permanent residents. Art “production” is one of the main economic development enterprises of this region.

The work of many of these fine artists has been a well-kept secret, shared only with those who happened upon their work at local galleries or stumbled upon their out of the way studios. The Haliburton Highlands Studio Tour does bring many visitors to see these studios during the fall cavalcade of colours. Some artists have a presence on the web but, there are few “buy now” opportunities for the public to take advantage of. We are now taking their work to the world through our online gallery and marketplace and offering people around the world the opportunity to “buy now” 365 days of the year 24 hours a day.

All artists displaying their work on this website have been reviewed by a committee of the Arts Council of the Haliburton Highlands to ensure that there is a high quality of work while not limiting the scope of work too aggressively. Here at Made-In-Haliburton.ca we believe that art is, at least in part, in the eye of the beholder. In addition to our jurying process we enable the purchaser to evaluate the quality of the artist’s work by openly and honestly providing the artists’ credentials along with high quality photographic images that allow the purchaser to examine the work in detail before making a decision to purchase.  We also guarantee that if you are dissatisfied with the art when you receive it that it can be returned within the 7 day return period in accordance with the return policy.

This website is a joint project of MadeInHaliburton.ca, The Arts Council~Haliburton Highlands, Parker Pad, The Art Hive and The RightEyedDeer Press with funding from the Province of Ontario’s Ministry of Tourism and Culture’s Cultural Strategic Investment Fund (CSIF)