5 minute read
Gallery: Cathy Marks
Cathy Mark
PORTRAYING NATURE IN ALL ITS BEAUTY
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gallery by Aaron Nava
Cathy’s artistic pursuits brought her to a vocational arts high school followed by David Thompson University in British Columbia for Fine Arts. After finishing a design course in London, Ontario, Cathy began work as a design consultant. Then she went on a studio tour that would change her career. “I have always worked in the art field. I was in a studio tour and I was placed with a blacksmith, so I just started using his equipment and it just went from there.
“I really like working with the metal. I like the physicality of it. I like hammering,” she chuckles. “It’s just something I enjoy doing.” Cathy Mark is a Scarborough-born artist who works with metals. But unlike some other artists, she says that this year has been good for her art. “In the initial lockdown I wasn’t that busy because all the galleries were closed, and so it was great because I had time to explore other things,” says Mark. “I was doing some stone carving, I got two solid months of carving stone and I really enjoy that. But once the galleries reopened it’s been a really busy season. With spending more time at home, I think people are buying things that they want to look beautiful in their homes, so art sales have been really good…Some of the galleries have been crazy busy this year, so it’s been a good year.”
Cathy works from her home studio on the north shore of Lake Scugog. The stones, and driftwood are mostly collected from their 200-acre farm. “My husband does all the wood pieces, he carves the wood out for me,” Mark
says. “He helps collect rocks and he splits the rocks for me. He bought me a jackhammer for my birthday but I can’t even lift it so he has to use it for me,” she laughs.
Her works often capture the way evergreen tree branches bend in the wind, in a way that clay or acrylic sculptures never do. “I’m known for the trees,” Mark says. “That’s what I make the most of and that’s what I sell the most of.”
The stainless steel “branches” of the tree catch the light where they bend, giving the viewer a dynamic sense of where the branches turn, no matter where they stand. “I think it’s an iconic image representing Ontario mainly,” Mark says, referring to the ubiquitous white pines that dot this province and which inspire her trees. “If you go out to BC you don’t see that type of tree, they’re more straight up and down with the spruce, whereas we just have that really rugged look in Georgian bay and in Muskoka.”
The whitish sheen that sits on metals where their sides have been ground down evokes a gentle snow, and loops and openings in the metal representing the water give a sense of a placid lake with gentle waves, with the metal darkening towards the centre where the trees would be providing shade from the sun. The effect resembles a stylish black-and-white photograph, but with the detail of three dimensions.
Creating her pieces, sometimes by request, has given Mark the opportunity to move others. “I recently did a wall piece for a couple and they were giving it to their friends as a housewarming gift,” says Mark. “It was a couple and they had two children, so they wanted 4 trees in the picture, and it was a lake scene with rocks and beautiful water. The mother had just gone through cancer treatment and she was cancerfree, so they wanted a bird flying above the trees. I created that for them and shipped it off to them and when they gave it to the couple, they said that everyone was crying, and it was really beautiful. It was nice to make something that meant so much for those people.”
Cathy has been creating in the art and design world for 30 years, and her work is featured at plenty of art galleries, stores and shows all around Ontario’s cottage country. (Her website has a list here; Made in Canada Gifts is the place in Ottawa to find her work.) It seems like an arrangement that works for everyone—tourists and visitors want to see unique works from local artists, and to immerse themselves in nature, and galleries and stores want to sell them that experience. Her work is collected worldwide.
It’s easy to see the appeal—her buyers can feel that they’re taking a bit of Ontario with them, often literally. “This is my husband’s family farm, we’re seventh generation on this land,” Mark says. “It was all his ancestors who collected all the rocks out of the fields and put them in the fencerows, and now we’re taking them out of the fencerows and using them for art. And the wood as well is mainly from the property, all the wood we use is old pieces that we found. We have about 60 acres of bush here.”
The natural cycles on a farm are a chance for inspiration. “When we go to plant fields, you have to collect the rocks because rocks come up every year out of the soil from the frost,” Mark says. “Every year there’s wagonloads of new rocks that come out of the field. It’s kind of exciting, it’s like a present!”
The Mark family have a mixed farm, with a variety of livestock such as goats, sheep and cattle, alongside cash crops like soybeans. Amusingly, their animals can hamper the artistic process. “The goats are outside the door all the time. I had a list of all the pieces I had to make this week and when I went out, the goat had eaten my list!”
Between the rock harvests and the interactive farm animals, Cathy Mark’s work represents an Ontario experience as much in reality as they do at first sight n