Tag: Candice Smith Corby

  • Artsy Abroad. The Bottega Tours Venice.

    Artsy Abroad. The Bottega Tours Venice.

    Hiya, Artsies!  Artist Candice Smith Corby recently took a group of students on a little artsy tour of Venice and is here to share her experience with you!  I’ll be checking in and letting you know what’s been happening in my world soon, I promise.  Without further adieu, here’s Candice!

    I was delighted when asked to do a guest post for the Artsy Abroad column!

    Recently, my colleague, Bill Pettit, and I led a cultural and artistic tour in Venice, Italy. We’ve been partnering up over the last couple of years through our arts collective, The Bottega, to offer fresco painting in Italy for students, as well as collaborate on projects that revolve around our shared interest in pigment and material origins. With the sea being so influential, we decided that watercolor painting and the cuisine of the Veneto region would be ideal themes for our workshop in Venice. It was also a great opportunity for us to share what we love- art, travel and good food!

    Artsy Abroad. The Bottega in Venice. | artsy forager #art #travel #venice

    Venice or La Serenissima as it is lovingly known, is magical and undoubtedly one of the most serene cities in the world. There are no cars on the island and you quickly become accustomed to a more humane speed of life than we are normally used to. The pulse of the city, which actually feels much more like a large close-knit town, is dictated by your own heartbeat. Everyone walks, especially Venetians, and even though the Grande Canal is a highway of motorized boat traffic, the hundreds of small interlacing canals are quiet and much less travelled. The combination of silent footsteps, a slower pace, and an ancient city plan with its small-scale architecture, makes it easy to suspend time.

    In addition to sampling the local flavor of Venetian dishes and expressing a particular moment through paint, we also wanted to offer an experience beyond a typical tourist’s visit to Venice. Piazza San Marco was certainly on our list but the surprises found around an empty corner or the restaurant where all the gondoliers seemed to be having lunch were our favorite finds.

    Artsy Abroad. The Bottega in Venice. | artsy forager #art #travel #venice

    We avoided the crowds and chose canals with their small bridges to sit and paint the light as it changed across the water’s surface.

    Artsy Abroad. The Bottega in Venice. | artsy forager #art #travel #venice

    The act of observing with all of your senses while you are painting alfresco can whet your appetite and we enjoyed finding a nearby bàcari for cicchetti and a Spritz to rejuvenate ourselves. [A bàcari is a small wine bar to have cicchetti, which are little plates of yummy food.  A typical drink is the Venetian Spritz- made with prosecco and a splash of Aperol.]

    Artsy Abroad. The Bottega in Venice. | artsy forager #art #travel #venice

    Our workshop also allowed us to share our personal research and experiments on historical pigments, which often have direct links to ingredients in the kitchen; such as the way chicken bones can be fire roasted and ground to make a bone white pigment. With the sea nearby, we chose to show how the ink sac from a cuttlefish (or seppia in Italian) has been used for Sepia ink for hundreds of years and is also commonly used as a food colorant. We spent the morning visiting and painting at the famous Rialto markets where we also gathered ingredients for a communal dinner. Later that night, Bill and I made our guests various dishes such as fried anchovies and sardines, octopus salad, and of course Risotto al Nero di Seppia.

    Artsy Abroad. The Bottega in Venice. | artsy forager #art #travel #venice

    In addition, artist Luca de Gaetano who teaches at Boston University’s Venice studio arts program graciously invited us to spend an afternoon talking about natural pigments including cochineal, verdigris, and saffron, while doing an egg tempera demonstration.

    Artsy Abroad. The Bottega in Venice. | artsy forager #art #travel #venice

    Our last day was spent visiting a couple of the other islands in the lagoon. Although we ended with Murano, famous for its glass-blowing factories, we began on quiet Torcello. The original inhabitants of Venice settled here and you will find their marvelous Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta preserved there. It dates from the 6th century with glorious 9th century mosaics that feel oddly medieval and contemporary at the same time. As we all painted in the courtyard, each of us immersed in the pleasure of looking, we were acutely aware of the layered centuries that surrounded us.

    Artsy Abroad. The Bottega in Venice. | artsy forager #art #travel #venice

    Perhaps because it was our final day together, or because the sunlight was perfectly warm, and perhaps because we all realized how lucky we were, this was the highlight of our tour.  To quote one of our participants–

    “I see it as a movie, with disparate characters, a lot of philosophy, wit and humor,…culminating in Torcello, where the meaning of life, destiny, faith, and human interaction at its best was evident in our conversation, silent and vocal communication. What a gift!”

    While next year the world famous Biennale will be part of our itinerary, we’ll continue to take you off the beaten track, letting the magic of Venice slow you down to paint a sunrise over the lagoon, listen to un-ending church bells, and discover your own newfound delicacy from the sea.

    Artsy Abroad. The Bottega in Venice. | artsy forager #art #travel #venice

    Thank you so much, Candice for sharing your Venetian experience!  I don’t know about you, Artsies, but I’m ready to book my 2015 trip this minute!  For more information on The Bottega and next year’s trip, check out The Bottega website and look for updates on their Facebook page.

    Images courtesy of The Bottega and Emily Cure.

  • August Facebook Featured Artist: Candice Smith Corby

    August Facebook Featured Artist: Candice Smith Corby

    So while I was traversing through the mountains of Montana and Wyoming, the torch was passed on to a new Facebook Featured Artist!  This month we celebrate the work of Boston area artist Candice Smith Corby.

    Dinner Table Antics

    Smith Corby’s quiet, delicate drawings on paper and found materials navigate us through the worlds of childhood and traditional feminine roles.  Who doesn’t remember making forts of chairs and blankets?

    Hideaway

    As little girls, were we making forts inside perhaps because we weren’t allowed to play rough & tumble outside with the boys?  Were we given traditional feminine tools yet still found a way to convert them to serve a traditionally male purpose?

    Pup Tent

    Perhaps we found a way to use those traditional roles to our advantage? These are some of the questions I see being asked in Smith Corby’s work.  Her answers are sensitive and subtle, while still posing more questions.

    Pleading ( open )

    To see more of Candice Smith Corby’s work, please visit her website and Facebook page.  Candice’s work will be up as the cover image of Artsy Forager’s Facebook page throughout the month of August.  If you happen to be in MA this Fall, be sure to check out her co-curating/co-exhibiting show, Self/Fabricated at The Art Complex Museum in Duxbury, MA!

    All images are via the artist.

  • New Month = New Facebook Featured Artist!

    I can hardly believe August is already here!  While you read this, I am soaking in all the delights that Yellowstone has to offer.  I hope you’re delighted by our new Facebook Featured Artist.  Make sure you head over to the Artsy Forager Facebook page to check out our new Featured Artist, Candice Smith Corby!

    Bird Nest, gouache and watercolor on paper, 24×28

    Watch for more to come from Candice all through the month of August!

    Image via the artist.

  • Balancing Act: Candice Smith Corby

    Balancing Act: Candice Smith Corby

    Many of you know that my hubby & I are living a bit of a vagabond life.  My other half is working as a medical traveler, so since May 2011, we’ve moved across the good ol’ USofA from Florida to the Northwest, living in a new town every 13 weeks.  So these days, we’re traveling light.  Everything live with fits into the back of our mid-size SUV and a 4’x8′ UHaul trailer.  All our other belonging are stored in a 10’x10′ storage unit in Jacksonville.  The rest is gone.  In preparation for this move and change in lifestyle, we sold or gave away all of our furniture except for a few sentimental pieces of mine.  When I first saw these works on paper by Massachusetts artist Candice Smith Corby, they resonated with this slightly displaced soul.

    Madge's Fox Den, gouache & watercolor on paper ( via Lost at E Minor )

    I am no stranger to the competing feelings of freedom and loss that come from purging your life of unnecessary stuff.  In our society, our possessions define us in so many ways.  They demonstrate to the world, our tastes, our values, our experiences.  The things that we live with become a part of our memories, so to be separated from them may result in a disconnect with our past.  Of course, that could be viewed as positive or negative..

    You'll Be A…, I'll Be a Bear, gouache on wallpaper

    While I do often dearly miss some of my lovely things ( especially when living in some furnished rentals! ), there is also an incredible sense of liberty that comes with knowing that we can live ( almost ) anywhere.  We no longer have the mortgage and maintenance of owning a home filled with rooms and stuff we rarely use.

    My Worries Are Behind Me, acrylic, watercolor & gouache on paper, 36×80

    Smith Corby’s works speak to that overwhelming sense of being possessed by our possessions.  How many of us have gone into large amounts of debt just to have the homes of our dreams?  Oh, how difficult it can be when we insist on holding on, when what we really need is to just let go.

    Brooding Mood, screenprint, 22×30
    Repossessed, gouache & watercolor on paper ( via Lost at E Minor )

    So have I made you want to give away all your worldly goods? 😉  Maybe just a spring cleaning is in the cards.. To see more of Candice Smith Corby’s work, please visit her website.

    This artist found via Lost at E Minor.

    Featured image is Bunny Love by Candice Smith Corby.  All images are via the artist’s website unless otherwise noted.