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Try All The Things!

InkedLionGreen

It’s a new year! Time to cast off the dreadful shackles of 2020 and try out new things. No one saw how big the events of last year were going to hit us. We’ve all had to make some pretty big changes and sacrifices. I know the turning of a calendar page won’t change the world, but it does bring hope, and sometimes that’s all you need to get through to the next calendar page.

Rightly Spoiled this holiday

I haven’t been able to work this school year, as we’re home keeping my son safe. This holiday was set up to become smaller and quieter. I was thinking of just postponing it completely as my little one is still young enough to not know when Christmas was. My cousin Sally nominated our family to the wonderful people at Vibrant Yogi, who teamed up with Living Water’s Church in Langley to gift us this generous pile of treasures. Kelsey made our Christmas, and I’m ever thankful for all the work and kindness people showed our family.

My little guy was gifted many transforming robots and superheroes! I was blessed with new art supplies and I just had to start trying all the new things. Obviously, someone must have been an artist looking for supplies because include were things I always wanted, but never got for myself! Brushes, tons of paper, tape, and new metallic paint!

My first piece using metallic gold to highlight the black ink



I delved into the land of ink! I became incredibly fixated with these 2 lions. The 1st in forest green, the 2nd in navy blue.

For 4 days straight, all I wanted to do was work on these pieces. It was very freeing to try something new and outside of my regular style of expression through watercolour. I’ve highly enjoyed it, and I see why Aaron Schallie enjoys the details that you can create. It was easy to get into a quiet zone during these dark chilly days and let the hours slip by into the ink and paper. I fairly excited to try many more new things and try out all the supplies! It almost feels like starting all over again.

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Lichens

Those who lichen.. lichen a lot.

So lichens are cool. I mean, what’s NOT to lichen? Composite organisms consisting of both a fungus and a simple photosynthesizing organism like algae or cyanobacteria. Up close, lichens reveal an amazing array of colour and tiny networks.. daunting if your plan is to try and draw the darn thing.

But I’m a sucker for patterns.. especially naturally occurring ones. Lichens are just that! Big ol mess of repeatin patterns. And I’ll admit, this is probably the one organism that I just couldn’t (still haven’t) fully wrapped my head around. Soooo much fine detail!

As a subject of study and appreciation lichens, no matter the type, really try and draw you in to their labyrinth of detail. I start to feel this obligation to share EXACTLY what I’m seeing in person. This is when I remind myself, that this is why the photograph was invented.

But as abstract inspiration, the possibilities seem endless. So I guess, here is a first look at a few of my attempts at capturing the lichen world.. and I might as well toss some learnin out there too.

As in all my posts, I take all my own photos with my trusty Samsung Galaxy S9 (cutting edge technology folks).. no editing, just some cropping. All of these lichens were observed within a 15 minute radius of my house in Burnaby, British Columbia, with the exception of the two photographs below. The yellow crustose lichen was found on a south-facing rock at the peak of Whistler Mountain, and the grey crustose lichen was found growing at Lighthouse Park in West Vancouver.

Lichens are grouped into three main types:

  • Foliose – which have a leaf-like appearance.
  • Fruticose – are highly branched, either hanging or standing up.
  • Crustose – are the ones that look like a crust that has formed on a surface like a rock or tree trunk.

The algal (or bacterial) component is the autotroph in this relationship. It supplies the nutrients to the organism through photosynthesis. The fungus protects the algae from desiccation and also provides it with a means to grow and attach to whatever substrate.

..and if you enjoy being bombarded by Latin and scientific terminology, do yourself a huge favor and look up lichen taxonomic classification or Lichen Growth forms and internal structures. Good times my geeky friends!

They are slooooooow growing and everywhere. It is estimated that 6% of Earth’s land surface is covered by lichens. And they are not a picky lot either. Some lichens were exposed to Martian atmospheric conditions in the lab for a period of over 3 weeks in 2012.  Despite the weak atmospheric pressure, lack of protection from cosmic radiation, bitter cold and alien atmospheric composition, some species not only survived, but continued to grow and function with relative normality! Lichens can even grow on plastic.

Hummingbirds and other nest building species use lichen for nest building and camouflage. Lichens can even be used in making dyes and perfumes, as well as traditional medicines.

Lichens are eaten by many different cultures as well, though its generally when times are lean. Lichens are not very easy to digest and contains minimal nutritional content. And of course, a few lichen species are eaten by insects and larger animals such as reindeer. Remember kids, no reindeer, no Christmas!

So love a lichen! A delicate, yet resilient organism that’s been practicing unchecked socialist behavior in our forests, across our tundra, and on the sides of volcanoes since the beginning of time (or at least since the devonian). Living in mutually beneficial, symbiotic, cross-species, relationships. Buncha single-celled hippies.. chillin, sharin.

– Aaron

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Tabula villa mea

A map of my home town

Here’s a fun piece I did back in 2018 of an artistic map of Vancouver’s False Creek seawall. I really enjoyed playing around with ink for the first time. I was hoping to create a spilled-coffee look and I think I found it. Watered down, slowly building up layer upon layer, Winsor and Newton’s Peat Brown Ink did the trick.

Seldom am I found not holding a coffee when I’m out trekking around the city or sitting and drawing on a trail somewhere, so coffee was definitely my inspiration. I’ve even tried painting with coffee.. with some success. The problem with coffee is when it dries, the layers of coffee wipe away unless you spray fixatif or something to seal it. This unfortunately makes things messy and start to run, so I’m glad I found an ink solution.

I was already well into this piece when I happened to come across a Facebook post from Spacing.ca Magazine. Based in Toronto, Spacing is a magazine and website that covers urbanist topics including art, culture, transit, city planning and governance, to name a few. The post was an announcement of their annual Creative Mapping contest and they were looking for artists to submit original creative maps inspired by a Canadian city. The deadline was fast approaching, but I figured I could finish in time.

The painting consists of a map of the False Creek seawall and all three bridges that cross it into downtown. From left to right they are; the Burrard Street Bridge; the Granville Street Bridge; and the Cambie Street Bridge.

Around the painting I included a few of my favourite pieces of public art and iconic buildings in the area. Starting at the top, a latte from any number of the overpriced Yaletown beaneries. To its left, the Inukshuk that stands at Sunset Beach and was the inspiration for Vancouver’s 2010 Winter Olympics logo.

To the right of the latte, stand the majestic North Shore mountains and the Lions peaks. Below that, BC Place Stadium, home of the Vancouver Whitecaps FC and the BC Lions Football team, with its new retractable roof. To the right of the mountains, container cranes at the Port of Vancouver, visible from this part of town, as they tower over Chinatown and Vancouver’s Strathcona neighbourhood.

Below the cranes is the Telus World of Science, a geodesic dome built in time for Expo 86 and home to Vancouver’s own Science World ever since. Below that, more coffee porn in a to-go cup.

The next image is of an Aquabus, one of the many tiny passenger ferries that ply the sheltered waters of False Creek. Standing tall next to the bridge on Granville Island, GIANTS at the Ocean Concrete worksite. Brazilian street artists Os Gemeos were commissioned to paint these monoliths for Vancouver’s 2014 Biennale exhibition.

On the left side of the painting, in the Kits Point neighbourhood, I included the H.R. MacMillan Planetarium. A beautiful building housing the Museum of Vancouver and the space centre. It opened it’s doors to the public in 1968 and was made to resemble a traditional Haida cedar-woven hat.

Finally, the totem pole that stood at the foot of Cypress Street in front of the Vancouver Maritime Museum at Hayden Park. The pole was carved by Mungo Martin with his son David and nephew Henry Hunt to mark the province’s colonial history. Oh yeah, and I framed it all with some coffee beans.

It took me a little over a week to complete.. and yes, my painting was published in the Summer 2018 issue ????

– Aaron

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Ad Primum Tempus

My Very First Post.. Better Make it a Good One!

Welcome to the Hammer and Pen Artist Collective, a group of artists that create things and share them, here. My name is Aaron Schallie and I’m an illustrator living in Burnaby, a suburb of Vancouver, Canada.

Roughly two years ago, I made a commitment to revisit and improve upon the drawing skills I’ve had since childhood. I had just moved to a new neighbourhood and was presented with a beautiful, brand-new environment to explore, on the edge of a sizable urban forest. What better excuse could I have to be creative and learn.

There were plenty of great subjects to work on and fascinating places to explore. An incredible contrast to living so close to downtown Vancouver, with it’s quick access to beaches and the marine life I was already so familiar with. This ‘neck-of-the-woods’ presented an interesting mountain topography, lots of new critters, and over three dozen trails covering 30+ kilometers. These trails crisscross several distinct watersheds that drain in every direction of the compass. The top of the mountain is crowned with one of Western Canada’s most beautiful architectural jewels, the main campus of Simon Fraser University, designed by Arthur Erickson.

I was surrounded by inspiration.. it was game on.

Since then, I’ve filled more than a dozen moleskine cahiers and sketchbooks and have come to know the ‘mountain’ like the back of my hand. At home, I’ve created a small workspace dedicated to my art projects and supplies, and now have a small functional shop space in the garage, brimming with the potential for much larger projects. I started small, but I’m aiming to create much larger works and possibly explore print making. For now, I try never to leave the house without out something to draw on and I’m keeping it simple.

I mainly use pencil, pen and ink and have started to incorporate some watercolour. I try to draw everyday and give myself regular challenges to improve my skills. Sometimes these challenges lead to more detailed studies of subjects I find in my local environment.

Of course, life’s busy pace and, uh.. a certain global pandemic.. can make allocating time for art difficult. But I try to foster creativity as often as I can and manage to fit it in whenever possible. Most recently I’ve been focused on botanical and biological detail, but I also explore more abstract approaches and sometimes gravitate to subjects in the urban landscape as well.

Over the past couple years, I also remembered to take photos of a lot of my work’s incremental progress, in the hopes I might one day get the chance to share them. This blog is finally that chance. I’m looking forward to sharing some of the steps and challenges in my journey, show off some of my available work, and hopefully inspire others to pickup a pencil and draw. I’ll keep my past works in my Throwback Posts is you’re keen to follow along.

Once we get settled in a bit, I’m looking forward to offering classes, guided walks and plein air sessions. Until then, I hope you enjoy my posts. Let’s get started.

– Aaron.