Showing posts with label Sherry Tompalski. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sherry Tompalski. Show all posts

Monday, March 6, 2017

Sherry Tompalski - March 2017 - Artist of the Month



Artist Statement
I have been blessed with two parallel careers over the past 25 years: psychiatry and
art. While they are intrinsically different fields, the work of each has informed the
other.

I assessed and treated adolescents, adults, couples, and families, and also worked for
the military treating soldiers. Throughout, I maintained my art practice working on
projects often with my husband, and invariably exploring visually, psychological
concepts, questions and understanding.

I experienced my art and my art career as vitalizing my work with patients, while my
psychiatric career underlined the importance of people feeling understood and
understandable. Consequently, in my art I often wanted to “put myself in another s'
shoes”, maintaining that the individual's world or point of view is worth looking at and
paying attention to.

The Boxers were inspired by the Female Afghan Boxing Club in Kabul who train in
the basement of the Kabul stadium where the Taliban used to publicly execute women
accused of adultery. Sadaf Rahimi, a female boxer from Afghanistan who made history
by being the first Afghan female boxer to be invited to the Olympics recounts, “In
Afghanistan, there is so much violence and prejudice towards women. Because of
that, when I come here and box, I feel freedom. Here we are all girls, and we talk with
each other and practice. Here is freedom for me and for every girl.”

This work began as large graphite drawings that were torn up and reassembled with
fragments of musical score, portraying the process of coming undone, reforming and
coming together. The Boxers incorporate a fragmented, difficult history which
hopefully with healing and strength becomes music.

The Talking Portrait Series (50 in total) were developed from live sittings of refugees
who were also artists themselves. Their comments made while sitting, as well as
time-lapse photography of the developing portraits are presented in video form with
the final portraits and have been exhibited nationally and internationally.

I do not believe we give people a voice, anymore than we can empower people.
However, when we listen in an authentic way people develop a voice and experience
themselves as more effective.

Ultimately, I hope my work helps to contribute to an environment that embodies trust
wherein people can feel their needs are legitimate and experience themselves and the
world as a safer place to live in.

I thank the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, the City of Ottawa for their
financial support of these projects.
Sherry Tompalski

http://gagegallery.weebly.com/sherry-tompalski-profile.html



Thursday, February 23, 2017

Sherry Tompalski and Arden Rose at Gage Gallery Arts Collective

Tompalski's Boxers were inspired by the Female Afghan Boxing Club in Kabul

Tompalski's new work is based on and inspired by pictures of the Afghan women who train in the basement of the Kabul stadium where the Taliban used to publicly execute women accused of adultery. Sadaf Rahimi, a female boxer from Afghanistan who made history by being the first Afghan female boxer to be invited to the Olympics recounts, “In Afghanistan, there is so much violence and prejudice towards women. Because of that, when I come here and box, I feel freedom. Here we are all girls, and we talk with each other and practice. Here is freedom for me and for every girl.”

Artist Sherry Tompalski's new work at the Gage Gallery opens on Feb 23, (5-8pm) featuring her Female Boxers."This work began as large graphite drawings that are torn up and reassembled with fragments of musical score, portraying the process of coming undone, reforming and coming together. The Boxers incorporate a fragmented, difficult history which hopefully with healing and strength becomes music." 

Arden Rose on Boxers and Beauties

I create art to express myself without words. Painting provides me with joy, with calm, and with a reflective state. I feel whole when I’m making art.

Generally, my inspiration is drawn from colour combinations in nature, and in life! In this series I have particularly drawn inspiration from nature and Modigliani’s long-necked beauties.

Colour, beauty, texture, and form motivate me. Together, they create a feast for the eye. I’m not trying to change the world or create any sort of philosophical or ideological statement - I’m just painting what I believe is beautiful.

You may ask what beauty is. Beauty is a label we attach to different sorts of experiences based on a combination of cultural and personal preferences. It’s different to everyone and takes many forms.  We all have vastly different perceptions. It can be sexual in nature or nurturing. Think lover or mother. It can be skin deep or a part of the soul.

In my current work of portraits and nudes I’m attempting to depict the fusion of the female form with the beauty inherent in nature. I’ve added “nature” in the form of flora and fauna as a symbol of feminine unification with nature.
This series is painted on both canvas and wooden cradle board using acrylics. I added collage, ink and mediums for colour and texture. I love using a palette knife to create big smooth swatches of richness or to scrape down to reveal layers of colour.

Beauty is not in the face; beauty is a light in the heart.”  ― Kahlil Gibran

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Welcome Back Ye Annunaki a group exhibit at Open Space

Welcome Back Ye Annunaki is a showcase of works answering the question How would you host an ancient alien? The artists in the exhibition responded to an international call for proposals inspired by Zecharia Sitchin’s Earth Chronicles, a book detailing how the human species originated from extra-terrestrial beings. These distant relatives are scheduled to return to the earth in December 2012
Participating artists have proposed a variety of convivial acts to welcome Annunaki families from the planet Nibiru upon their return visit to earth after a 3,600 year orbit. The projects take a variety of forms, from an intergalactic calling card, to a bed away from home, collegial gestures of kindness that reveal the customs that we embrace as human citizens of earth. 
Welcome Back Ye Annunaki provides a constructive take on Sitchin’s mythology, one of the many associated with the year 2012. 


Welcome Back Ye Annunaki Participating Artists:Cindy Baker & Megan Morman (Lethbridge, AB),
Katie Bethune-Leamen (Toronto, ON),  Marlaina Buch & Ross Macaulay (Kamloops, BC),
Roy Green (Victoria, BC),
Robert Gallup & Josh Kopel (Seattle, WA),
Karen Hibbard (Victoria, BC),
Kruno Jost (Cakovec, CZ),
Serena Kataoka (Peterborough, ON),
Robin Kirkpatrick (Victoria, BC),
Kegan McFadden (Winnipeg, MN),  Mary-Anne McTrowe (Lethbridge, AB),  Ella Morton (Vancouver, BC),  Ryan Park (Toronto, ON),
s* (offworld),  Shawn Shepherd (Victoria, BC),
Sherry Tompalski (Ottawa, ON),
Rhonda Usipiuk (Victoria, BC),
Christine Walde (Victoria, BC).
Organized by Ted Hiebert and Doug Jarvis, members of the artist collective Noxious Sector.

Opening: Friday, November 16, 6:00 p.m.
 Welcome Potluck hosted by Mary-Anne McTrowe
Sound performance by s*
Open Space 
510 Fort Street, 2nd floor

250.383.8833