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01 - Walking Woman
4" X 4" , mix media on wood panel, 2021
SOLD
SOLD

In situ

03 - Fields of Asia
4" X 4" , mix media on canvas, 2022
SOLD
SOLD

In situ

02 - Seaside Wind
4" X 4" , mix media on wood panel , 2021
SOLD
SOLD

In situ

04 - Roof Over Top
4" X 5" , mix media on wood panel , 2021
SOLD
SOLD

In situ

05 - Levitating Couch
4" X 6" , mix media on wood panel , 2021
$400 CAD
$400 CAD

In situ

06 - Expanding Beyond Measure
5" X 7" , mix media on canvas , 2021
$450 CAD
$450 CAD

In situ

07 - Protectors of the House
5" X 7" , mix media on canvas , 2021
SOLD
SOLD

In situ

08 - Overtones and Undertones
5" X 7" , mix media on canvas , 2021
$450 CAD
$450 CAD

In situ

09 - Waves of Time
5" X 7" , mix media on wood panel , 2021
SOLD
SOLD

In situ

11 - Pipes and Clouds
8" X 10" , mix media on wood, 2021
$750 CAD
$750 CAD

In situ

10 - Pink Lady
5" X 7" , mix media on wood panel , 2022
$450 CAD
$450 CAD

Pink Lady

12 - What to Remember When Waking Up
8" X 10" , mix media on canvas , 2021
$750 CAD
The poem, What to Remember When Waking Up, by David Whyte, has had a huge influence on quite a number of the paintings from the Little Walls and Windows series. I tripped across it just before the pandemic began and it led me into a world of poetry and meditation, which has been a saving grace these past couple years. Recently, my dreams have began to crystallize with more clarity during my waking hours. For awhile before this, on opening my eyes they would dissipate like smoke in wind. Perhaps I was not paying attention, or making enough of an effort to grab the tail-end of my dreams and reel them in, but the result was that the messages of the night had very little to do with my moments lived by day.
Now that I am beginning to remember the impressions of my dreams again and link the lucid re-imaginings of the dreamworld with the concrete world, I notice that I am slowing down a little, and instead of chasing after my ‘to do list’, which is endless, I am finding I am savouring my moments a bit more and a bit deeper.
How I start my morning and what I remember in those first instances of waking, I am reminded has a huge impact on the rest of my day… and beyond.
$750 CAD
The poem, What to Remember When Waking Up, by David Whyte, has had a huge influence on quite a number of the paintings from the Little Walls and Windows series. I tripped across it just before the pandemic began and it led me into a world of poetry and meditation, which has been a saving grace these past couple years. Recently, my dreams have began to crystallize with more clarity during my waking hours. For awhile before this, on opening my eyes they would dissipate like smoke in wind. Perhaps I was not paying attention, or making enough of an effort to grab the tail-end of my dreams and reel them in, but the result was that the messages of the night had very little to do with my moments lived by day.
Now that I am beginning to remember the impressions of my dreams again and link the lucid re-imaginings of the dreamworld with the concrete world, I notice that I am slowing down a little, and instead of chasing after my ‘to do list’, which is endless, I am finding I am savouring my moments a bit more and a bit deeper.
How I start my morning and what I remember in those first instances of waking, I am reminded has a huge impact on the rest of my day… and beyond.

In situ
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