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Claudette Losier's Main Portfolio Page
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Artist Information:
Claudette Losier
Hamilton,
Canada
Member Since: Dec 2007
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Artist Media:
Drawing Pen (5)
Mixed Media (1)
Other (16)
Painting Oil (26)
Photography Color (3)
Photography Other (1)
Artist Exhibitions:
CURRICULUM VITAE
CLAUDETTE LOSIER
80 West 33rd St., Hamilton,
ON, L9C 5J1
Ph <905- 388-7794 Fax
<905-388-1561
Email losiersart@aim.com

BORN: December 4, 1963,
Oshawa, ON, Canada
EDUCATION: Brock
University, St. Catharines, ON

Bachelor of Arts, with
Honours in Visual Arts, 1989


SOLO EXHIBITIONS:
June 2010, ...

Further Information

Artist Galleries:
Coming Soon!
Artist Reviews:
Sunrise Gallery 1st Juried
Show, Hamilton, Ontario
Oct 24 – Nov 15, 2009
Opening Reception Saturday
October 24th, 2-5pm
Prizes: Best in Show, 2nd
prize, 3rd prize, The Gerald
Gunter Memorial Award, and
Honourable Mention
Jurors: Mary Ellen Heiman,
and Rhona Wenger

My transfer art piece
“Noodling My Doodling With
...

Further Information
Collections:
Coming Soon!
Commissions:
Coming Soon!

Artist Statement for Claudette Losier

Artistic Statement – Claudette Losier (LosiersArt)

“Where Beauty Lies…”

“The artist knows that even though he has created something beautiful, it can be destroyed. His real and innermost satisfaction is not in the object, but in the subject; that thing within him that penetrates the mystic splendor of Beauty itself.” (Ernest Holmes pg 39)

One of my bodies of work explores the concept of Paradise as something sought after by modern society. My search centres on gardens--as near as our own backyard and as far away as other continents or the imaginary garden in our consciousness. It has been stated that each garden reflects our longing for spiritual peace--a tie with our primeordal beginnings. It is in the beauty of nature where I find this spiritual peace from a homemade garden to a formal garden, from a tree to the vastness of Grand Canyon, from a rocky coast line to the calmness of a man made pond.

In Dr. Wayne Dyer’s book “Power of Intention” he quotes from Emily Dickson and John Keats(pg 51): “Beauty is not caused. It is…” As you awaken to your divine nature, you’ll begin to appreciate beauty in everything you see, touch, and experience. John Keats states in his poem Ode on a Grecian Urn: “Beauty is truth, truth beauty.” This means, of course, that the creative Spirit brings things into the world of boundaries to thrive and flourish and expand. Life, truth, beauty. These are all symbols for the same thing, an aspect of the God-force.” This wisdom is the reason why I need to create through both paintings and gardening to have a sense of connection to beauty and to truth, the God-force in me and to pass on that connection to others.

Like Monet’s “living canvas” in Giverny I am transforming my husband’s backyard into a site specific canvas of poppies, delphiniums, irises, lucifers, black eye suzies, stargazer lilies, roses, lavender, hostas, sedums and other perenials. This passion for gardening started with my friend Marg Caswell introduced me to gardening in St. Catherines. It has expanded to two living canvases thanks to my husband, Ron, providing me with property to develop my creativity using plants in Stoney Creek and now in Hamilton. The one in Stoney Creek may no longer exist except in my pictures, paintings and consciousness. The garden in Hamilton is still under construction.

In “Monet’s Passion” the author Elizabeth Murray describes Monet’s gardening ability as: “With such a trained eye for color relationships and the effects of light and atmosphere on color, he automatically employed the same principles he used to create his canvases. He carefully arranged pure colors in the abstract form of flowering plants to create richly patterned textures and mood by contrasting or harmonizing color relationships.” Like Monet, our garden provides me with an endless show of beautiful models to create art with colors and patterns completely different to Monet’s reflecting my own spiritual connection to what I am seeing. My paintings lean towards capturing strong contrast between lights and darks and complimentary colours with an abandonement to patterns in nature.

I am also following in the footsteps of Georgia O’Keeffe. In Afred Knopf’s book “Georgia O’Keeffe – One Hundred Flowers”, he quotes from O’Keeffe her reasons for painting flowers to be: “When you take a flower in your hand and really look at it, it’s your world for the moment. I want to give that world to someone else. Most people in the city rush around so, they have no time to look at a flower. I want them to see it whether they want to or not.” In the summer of 2006 my mother-in-law observed me doing my walk about in our garden and commented that “I was being hypnotized by the plants” and was not aware that she was there. When I do this walk about I am in that “world for the moment” and no place else and so like O’Keeffe I want to give that feeling to others. This “living canvas” is very important today living in a society with information overload, one needs to escape to beauty and journey into nature to return to our centre the primordial garden/being. As Keats puts it “A thing of beauty is a joy forever.”




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