Sharon Johnston and Mandy Johnston
A Mother and Daughter Exhibition
A Mother and Daughter Exhibition
SHARON JOHNSTON and MANDY JOHNSTON
A Mother and Daughter Exhibition
Exhibition opens
Saturday, May 11th, 2024
Meet the artists
2:00 – 5:00pm
Exhibition continues through June 9th, 2024
THE ART OF SHARON JOHNSTON
There is a persistently humble quality about hooked rugs. Historically, they are associated with cast-off burlap feed bags, rags, and the thrums, or leftover fibers from the productions of weaving mills. These materials at the dead end of utility signified purposes served, tasks completed, and processes finished. Women of little means were the gleaners of such remnants from factory floors and feedlots. The normal lifespan of a bolt of cloth, from the fancy petticoat to the bottom of the kitchen wash bucket, was prolonged and given a new purpose by the quick hands that collected fabric remains for the handwork needed at home. Often referred to as the “craft of poverty” rug hooking was a necessity rather than a pastime.
In Canada, the establishment of the Grenfell Mission (later Grenfell Industrial) in Newfoundland at the end of the 19c gave rise to a handicraft industry based on rug hooking. There, it was but one of a group of endeavours planned to improve the lives of precariously employed deep sea fishermen. Born again through necessity, hooked rugs made there were an industrialized transformation of what was originally a local aboriginal craft. Under supervision, brilliant colors and innovative designs were abolished, and quality controls instituted. Soon, however, these Grenfell mats began to reflect the creative inspirations and visual intelligence of the artists themselves. Grenfell mats are characterized by unique combinations of mundane objects, local flora and fauna, and designs taken from old book plates. (footnote). Today, such rugs command large prices, and draw the admiring attention of art writers and gallery owners.
In many ways, the career of Calgary fiber artist Sharon Johnston is a microcosm of the history of rug-hooking. As a result of the formative influence of necessity – Johnston’s early life offered few opportunities for an intelligent and creative child – she was raised to ask for little and to “make do”. As she recalls: “We were always hemming bolts of unbleached, unfinished cotton, and we got fabric ends by the pound. We made things out of other things.”
Her maternal grandfather had been a Bernardo child – one of 35,000 young emigres from British orphanages and workhouses that were brought to Canada via a charitable institution founded by the preacher Thomas John Bernardo (1845-1905). One of seven children, her mother grew up in Nelson, British Columbia, and raised her own children there. After high school Sharon (nee Fox), found a job at the Royal Bank in Richmond, B.C. and at age 18 defiantly eloped with Dennis Johnston. For 33 years Dennis and Sharon Johnston managed a farm at Cache Creek with their two daughters Leah and Manda, while Sharon worked at a small jewelry store that was a tourist stop for visitors to the Canadian outback from Europe. Like all intellectually curious people, she sought interesting conversation at every opportunity. The store owners’ son was a student of languages, and Johnston was informally exposed to a wide variety of people from different cultures. She made jewelry, small crafts, painted, and even enrolled in a rug-hooking class, where she was promptly put off by the instructor’s rigid, unimaginative instructional style and narrow view of the craft: “It did not appeal to me. There were way too many rules!”. Like the early hooked rug makers, Johnston had always chosen her own materials from her immediate environment, and created objects from personal inspiration, rather than from pedagogical direction. Naturally, she determined to learn more about the craft of rug hooking by herself: “some photos in a book caught my eye…and reading more about the subject I decided to give it another try.”
Johnston’s most ambitious work to date is the group of 27 heads, collectively titled Of a Common Thread. They were exhibited in a travelling group show titled Womens’ Hands Building a Nation, celebrating the contributions of women to Canada on its 150th anniversary in 1917. Today, they will be part of a solo exhibition at The Collectors’ Gallery of Art opening Saturday, July 24, 2021. Johnston describes them as: “representing different waves of immigration to Canada…we have all come from somewhere to settle this land…(they) are in cloth and yarns using new and old techniques, hence another common thread”. Johnston’s working method encapsulated prior approaches and incorporated some new ones:
“I researched all the countries I included on the internet, in books on national costumes and head dress, as I would only be using heads and a bit of shoulders. I tried to choose a national look for each and sometimes I just played with the look because I liked a certain hat. Then I made quick sketches and saved photos and scans to work from for colours. I saved eyes for shape and colour, and other features for the different nationalities. I then drew out each in the size I wanted and traced those onto the backing fabric. I proceeded to hook and add embellishments to give a more ethnic look to each. Showing the heads spurred me on as an artist and the feedback I received gave me confidence to push the tradition further.”
In this work of multiple elements a thematic and aesthetic unity is achieved. The painterly qualities of each complexion are created through a complex interweaving of color areas and textures. The vibrant lemon yellow of the Sudanese woman’s clothing reflects light by way of strategically placed sections of sepia, cream and buff. On the face, matte sections are indicated with pure black, and highlights with irregular patches of mixed grey, purple and brown to convey both the true undertones of the skin, and the impression of light reflecting from it. Her head is a combination of a profile and three quarters view; while we see the silhouette of her features, we see also both of her eyes. The lifted brows and liquidity of the gaze create an impression of vulnerability and sensitivity. A subtle black outline around the headdress suggests recession into depth, and thus mass and volume. From a small, flat woven mat a personality emerges, and claims her space. The Englishwoman is a feisty, aging rose. The neat blue hat, augmented by a “real” ribbon contrasts with a fair face gently marked by a multitude of age spots, and a small dark mole above her left eyebrow. The area of the chin, and within the boundaries of the naso-labial folds is lightened to suggest emergence from the plane of her cheeks, and she looks out at us with a discerning (if not judgemental) blue eye. In true Johnstonian style, the Inuit woman is nestled within a fluffy white aureole of real fur. The delicate monolid eyes are expressively cast sideways, and her heart shaped lips appear to have parted slightly in response to something she sees. Each of these women is an immigrant, and on the threshold of a strange, new world. These are individuals, but are characterized by their culture of origin. They have converged through force of chance and history, and then again through the creative imagination of their maker
The relationship between rug-hooking and the handwork of women has been well established. For some contemporary artists, the medium’s strong historical associations are subverted to expressive effect. (EMILY URQUHART SPECIAL TO THE GLOBE AND MAIL PUBLISHED JANUARY 27, 2016…a review of an exhibition held at the Canadian Textile Museum in Toronto.) However, Johnston’s work expresses an affiliative and personal feminism which is shaped by her own history, and a ferociously independent turn of mind. She does not readily receive the wisdoms issuing from either end of the political spectrum, and continues to nurture ideas through wisdom of her own hands.
THE ART OF MANDY JOHNSTON
Biography
Mandy Johnston has lived and resided in Calgary since leaving her childhood home near Cache Creek BC. She completed her art education at Caribou College (Thomson Rivers University), Alberta College of Art (Alberta University of the Arts) and University of Calgary, where she acquired her BFA in 1991.
She has since had solo shows at the Muttart Art Gallery (Art Gallery of Calgary), Stride Gallery Arts Commons Window Show, Little Gallery at University of Calgary and group shows at The Triangle Gallery and the Art Gallery of Calgary. Her solo show, 93 Mile House was reviewed by Paula Gustafson in Artichoke Magazine Fall/Winter 1991.
Mandy continues to live and work in Calgary and is the daughter of artist Sharon Johnston.
Artist Statement
My work uses found printed paper sources such as; magazines, newspapers, books and marketing materials. I create paintings with layers of tiny paper fragments. Using only the printed text, I tear it away from its original meaning, and use each fragment as a mark or pixel, to describe an image.
By destroying, as much as possible, the original meaning of the words and letters, it feels like my tiny protest against the unsettling onslaught of visual and mental static that I experience in the drift of my everyday life. It is also symbolic of the pattern of nature and civilizations to fall to ruin and evolve again into order. My tiny triumph, is to sort my chaos of meaningless characters, into new patterns and meanings that are reverent and useful to me.
My current series celebrates a selection of individual and often monumental trees, which are revered by me, in Calgary, and by others, around the world. Trees are interchangeably in a process of living and dying and have much longer than lifespans than humans. They embody a resilience and triumph, over randomness and circumstance, despite being rooted insitu – unless humans cut them down first.
Landscape dimensional pieces 16 X12
Cheewhat Red Cedar – 16 X 12 – Paper Mosaic on Panel – 2023
Stampede Elm – 16 X 12 – Paper Mosaic on Panel – 2024
Comfort Maple – 16 X 12- Paper Mosaic on Panel – 2023
Adam Ginkgo – 16 X12 – Paper Mosaic on Panel – 2023
Landscape dimensional pieces 18 X12
Tree of Life Baobab – 18 X 12 – Paper Mosaic on Panel – 2024
Whirlpool Limber Pine – 18 X12 – Paper Mosaic on Panel- 2023
Tembling/Quaking Aspen theme pieces 16 X 12
Pando Quaking Aspen – 16 X 12 -Paper Mosaic on Panel – 2023
100 Paintings Trembling Aspen – 16 X 12 – Paper Mosaic on Panel – 2024. ***
Note – they are the same type of tree. One highly valued and researched (Pando) and the other located in Calgary and I have painted- plein air – in it many times.
Portrait Dimensional pieces – 12X16 and 12 X 14
Not Methuselah Bristlecone – 12 X 16 Paper Mosaic on Panel – 2023
The President Sequoia – 12 X 24 – Paper Mosaic on Panel- 2024
Note – ( All pieces below are not part of monumental tree series)
Square Dimensional pieces – 18 X 18 – related theme
Paper Birch – 18 X 18 – Paper Mosaic on Panel – 2024
Poster Board – 18 X 18 – Paper Mosaic on Chipboard/Wood – 2021
Square Dimensional pieces – 24 X 24 and 28 X 28
Cache Creek Tumbleweed – 24 X 24 – Paper Mosaic on Chipboard/Wood Panel – 2021
Richmond Cottonwood – 24 X 24 – Paper Mosaic on Panel- 2024 ***
Vickers Larch – 28 X 28 – Paper Mosaic on Chipboard/Wood Panel
Long Landscape Dimensional pieces 40 X 20
Mess-Order-Mess Hedgerow – 40 X 20 – Paper Mosaic on Panel – 2022
Order-Mess-Order Hedgerow – 40 X 20 – Paper Mosaic on Panel – 2022
Long Landscape Dimensional pieces 11X46
Tati’s Hedgerow – 11 X 46 – Paper Mosaic on Panel – 2020
(Note- Named after French Comedian Jacques Tati and film Mon Oncle)
Title – Size inches – length then height – Date made – Total 18 pieces
Details – Monumental Tree Series
Cheewhat Red Cedar – Is located within Pacific Rim National Park Reserve, on Vancouver Island. It is one of the largest living Western Red Cedar trees in the world. The national park continues to protect several old giant trees up to 1000 years old, however a tree dated to be 1835 years old, outside of the parks protection was cut down.
Stampede Elm – Among the first trees planted in the original community of Victoria Park in Calgary. Up until recently, it had endured for over 125 years as the Stampede Grounds which surround it expanded. It was digitally captured via a three-dimensional scan by University of Calgary in an effort to preserve its heritage, before it is cut down.
Comfort Maple – This 540 year old Maple tree had been preserved by the Comfort family, since 1816, where they homesteaded and farmed in an area near Pelham Ontario. Today, the tree is protected by Niagara Peninsula Conservancy Authority and continues to endure as a symbol of Canada’s heritage.
Adam Ginkgo – Is one of the oldest living tree species in the world and is rarely found in the wild, however some trees persist in Dalou Mountains of southwestern China. The tree named Adam, located Daruvar County in Croatia, is among the many Gingko trees which have been cultivated by man in temples and prestigious gardens over the last few centuries.
Tree of Life Baobab – This wild baobab tree is located in Madagascar. They are known to live up to1200 years. Due to limited water, they form a wide barrel-like trunk that can store up to 75% of its volume in water. Their tight crown of branches are due their constant harvest by animals and humans. It is revered locally as a tree that is sacred and life giving.
Whirlpool Limber Pine – The Limber Pine is an endangered tree species. They are slow growing and don’t produce pine cones until after 40 years of age. This tree has multiple trunks and may have originally germinated over 2500 years ago. It is located near Nordegg, Alberta, and continues to thrive despite its vulnerability.
Pando Quaking Aspen – Within Quaking (Trembling) Aspen forests, each tree or stem is a clone, making the entire forest an interconnected living organism. Pando is located in central Utah near Fish Lake and its 106 acres has continued to thrive for approx. 14,000 years. Each stem (tree) typically lives up to 130 years and is continually replaced with new cloned stems.
100 Paintings Trembling Aspen – A tiny Trembling (Quaking) Aspen forest located near the Glenmore Water Treatment Plant in southwest Calgary. Its age is unnoticed and unknown, but it continues to remain untouched by urban development. I have observed and painted this tiny forest at least a hundred times.
Not Methuselah Bristlecone – Featured on the front cover of the New Phytologist, this is a poster worthy – yet anonymous – bristlecone pine tree. However, Methuselah, with the status of the oldest living tree in the world (over 4800 years) has a regular pilgrimage of visitors from around the world. The biggest threat to these tremendous trees are humans: such as Prometheus an even older bristlecone pine, which was cut down in 1964.
The President Sequoia – Is located in the Sequoia National Park in California and has resisted fires, climate and pests for over 3200 years. It’s full height is difficult to see, however The President’s height has been calculated to be approximately 247 feet tall. To capture an image of the entire tree, a team from the National Geographic Society composited together 126 photographs.