Sunday, May 23, 2010

Tom Forrestall Retrospective opens at The Owens Art Gallery at Mount Allison University

Our dear dad's exhibition has just opened at his alma mater, The Owen's Art Gallery at Mount Allison University in Sackville, New Brunswick. This photo below of dad with curator Tom Smart, was from his lecture at this show at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, 2 years ago.

Tom Forrestall: Paintings, Drawings, Writings


14 May to 29 August
A major retrospective exhibition of approximately 70 paintings, drawings, and journal sketchbooks by Nova Scotia artist and Mount Allison University Fine Arts graduate Tom Forrestall, spanning several decades of his artistic career. Curated by Tom Smart and organized by the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia.
Image (above): Tom Forrestall, Self Portrait, 14 December 1993

http://www.mta.ca/owens/exhibitions/index.php

above, from left: Tom Smart, Tom Forrestall show back of one of dad's paintings
 and the writings he does on each work. 

A companion exhibition, Tom Forrestall: BFA '58


A companion exhibition to Tom Forrestall: Paintings, Drawings, Writings, spotlighting Tom Forrestall as a Mount Allison BFA graduate. This show includes works by Forrestall from the Owens' collection, as well as works by his teachers at Mount Allison-- Alex Colville, Lawren P. Harris, and Ted Pulford-- tracing Forrestall's artistic development and some of his influences.
--Monica Forrestall

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Remembering the most wonderful mother of all time on Mother's Day

Tom Forrestall, Natalie Forrestall and Max Forrestall Schuss in 2002.

Mother's Day is always bitter sweet for me, overjoyed to be the mother of a wonderful son, who fills our days with sunshine. Still heavy of heart thinking of our extraordinary mother, so filled with generosity and love for everyone she met. Truly, one of the kindest people I've ever met. She'll never be forgotten by anyone who ever loved her, or had the good fortune of meeting her.
xxx to mom!
---Monica Forrestall

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Kim Gordon's triple header: show of new paintings, book launch party and a performance by Bad Adult

    Jutta Koether (left) and Kim Gordon make noise together as Bad Adult.
Kim works over her amp.
Last night, the artist and musician Kim Gordon combined three events into one big party; her book launch party for her Rizolli book "Performing/Guzzling, " her opening of a show of her new paintings and sculptures and a performance piece, "The Promise of Originality".
              Max watching Jutha and Kim--- Bad Adult perform.
Kim performing. The gallery is so crowded, people went outside to watch her through the window.
Kim (far right) with one of her sculptures or painted sticks with stockings.

Kim up close mid-performance.

Kim's painting "Secret Abuse".








Kim's WWD online interview in which she talks about her art and life.
http://www.wwd.com/lifestyle-news/kim-gordon-making-noise-3056975//?full=true

--Monica Forrestall

High Tea meets Art Tea : Monica's Globe and Mail piece on an artful tea in Dublin, Ireland

The scone & tea bread course of The Art Tea at Dublin's Merrion Hotel.

On my trip to Ireland last fall, in Dublin I enjoyed the treat of a newly designed high tea "The Art Tea" at The Merrion Hotel. The Merrion, a five-star hotel just up the block from Ireland's National Gallery, has updated the usual high tea fare (scones and clotted cream) found in every hotel on the Emerald Isle. Using their collection of 100 original artworks hanging about the hotel as their muse, Executive Chef Ed Cooney and Pastry Chef Paul Kelley fashioned the food using colors, shapes and patterns found in twelve of the paintings. In the tier of scones and cakes above, for example, the color block modern painter Sean Scully's abstract work was the boldly colored inspiration for the Battenberg sponge cakes (above). Dip into pots of lemon curd, raspberry preserves and Glenillen crème fraiche for drizzling over plain and Scully neon pink/blue/yellow Battenberg-style tea breads edged with marzipan. Mini Irish Porter cake and currant scones round out this course, served on an elegant silver tiered cake stand.
The Art Tea pastries showcases the most direct design and color references to the hotel's collection.

Executive Chef Ed Cooney and Pastry Chef Paul Kelley creatively cut loose, choosing twelve paintings for their inspiring color and design elements. The colorful “Lime Sponge, Orange Chiboust & Lemon Curd Jelly” was inspired by “Self-Portrait 1912” by Saurin Elizabeth Leech, and references the brilliant orange scarf, the lime sponge for the blouse and red dots as the beads. The “Hazelnut Gateau with a Coffee Bavarois” (above, far left) is very sculptural and inspired by “Farm Buildings” by Stephen McKenna. Clever bent silver forks mini-tabletop easels hold reproductions of the artwork 
that inspired the food.
Pastry chef poses with a sampling of The Art Tea's tray of pastries.

Longing to update the traditional tea served at The Merrion for 11 years, Chef Cooney had pondered a theme idea. “It had to be a world class original dining experience and relate to The Merrion. “His aha moment happened one morning when he was walking past some of the modern paintings, that make up the hotels' collection of 100 original works. ART! Making the food and art connection in a sophisticated and tasty way proved to be a year–long process of testing and research for both he and his “technical genius” Pastry Chef Paul Kelley. “It would have been too obvious to simply reproduce images of the paintings on pastries, states Chef Cooney. Each item had to reflect the influence of the painting that inspired it and allow our guests to make their own connections between the food and the art. “Our goal was to make the tea be a talking point for the art collection,” added General Manager, Peter McCann. 

Take a peek at my Globe and Mail story on this delicious treat.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/travel/high-art-meets-high-tea-in-dublin/article1560145/


The hotel sourced clever mini-easels fashioned out of silver plated forks with curled up tines to hold mini-reproductions of the artwork which inspired the pastries I devoured.
The beautiful restored Georgian drawing rooms that the Art tea is served in, is a oasis of peace in this bustling city. Sinking down into some well stuffed 18th century Manor Hose-style chairs in rooms overlooking gardens, you really feel transported to a country estate. Cue in the barking hounds. 

Click on the link below to see some of the extraordinary collection hung in this luxe hotel.

--Monica Forrestall

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Two Canadian Families in Art: Forrestall & Ross exhibition opens in Saint John, New Brunswick

An wonderful exhibition honoring two well known Maritime families of artists opened on May 1st at the Buckland Gallery in Saint John, New Brunswick and included the work of my dad, Tom Forrestall, my brother Will and my sister Renee as well as New Brunswick artists Fred Ross and his daughter Cathy.
My father's painting is the center, horizontal portrait, my sister's work is on the lower left and my brother's is on the lower right of this announcement card.
Here is a link to the gallery website:  http://www.peterbucklandgallery.ca/exhibitions.html

A lovely write up by art writer Mike Landry on the show ran in the local newspaper, the Telegraph Journal.

http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/salon/article/1035240

Some photos kindly provided from Buckland Gallery below:
from left: Tom, Peter Buckland (back), Cathy Ross, William and Fred Ross (seated).


Peter Buckland gallery opening night. 


Tom Forrestall talking with gallery visitors at the opening.


---Monica Forrestall