Taohuatan Artist Residency

Anhui Province, China

Reflections on a residency

We forget sometimes, in the haze and flurry of our repetitive, crushingly busy lives, how intoxicating it can be to be immersed in something we are doing solely for ourselves. Taking time and space for our own enrichment. (honestly, I think that people on the outside of the artists world imagine that that’s what we have all the time, but our realities are more often than not much more pedestrian and mundane in their busy normalcy).

The cloak of support from peers, the relief and potency of being listened to, and heard. Bouncing ideas, impressions and frustrations off of each other, the succour that comes from commiserating, being understood in our passion for expression. 

There is such luxury in the creative environment that develops within the structure of a residency like this. Unstructured swaths of painting time, bookended by satisfying and generous meals, augmented by inspirational field trips. Learning about our fellow residents through art presentations and discussion, studio visits and idea sharing. Awkward beginnings moving towards the click of the fit into a transitional, makeshift tribe. 

At a time of transition in my life where its structure has been redefined by the empty nest and the shift in familial responsibilities, this residency was a gift, a reintroduction to the idea of me. Granted, a hard half of the residency was taken up with business dealings and focusing on my role as materials sponsor, but once the bulk of my work was done, and the clients gone, I had enough time left over to enjoy the more selfish part of my Chinese experience. The threads of which, I feel, will resonate in my artwork and in my spirit for a long time to come. 

November 2018

About the residency

Residency: Tao Hua Tan International Artist Retreat and Residency

Where: Tao Hua Tan, Anhui province, China

Facilitators: Gordan Novak, Liu Jian, Jeffrey Spalding

Host: Guoping Wei, Tao Hua Tan Resort & Cultural Center

Participating artists:

Anna Kovler (Canada), Anna Pelc (Poland), Antoinette von Saurma Mettenheimer (South Africa/Switzerland), Audrey Triani (Canada), Billy McCarroll (Canada), Charles Yuen (USA), Dr. Roald Nasgaard (Canada), Echo Wang Xin (China), Gordan Novak (Canada), Harumi Miyatsuka Saegusa (Japan), Iain Andrews (UK), Jeffrey Spalding (Canada), Jennifer Chin (Canada), Kang Hai Tao (China/Canada), Landon Mackenzie (Canada), Liu Jian (China/Canada), Marianne Gerlinger (Canada), Mary Shannon Will (Canada), Ping Zheng (USA), Richard Kenton Webb (UK), Roger Gaitan (USA), Sherry Bittle Rader (USA), Wong Lip Chin (China), Yi Kay (China), Rheni Tauchid (Canada).

And the members of French/Swiss collective, Grand Trouble: Alain Jean Frentzel, Alexandra Roussopoulos, Anna Sommer, Frédéric Pajak, Gabrielle Stehelin, Isabelle Sobelman, Joël Person, Marc Prudent, Matthieu Gounelle, Mélanie Delattre-Vogt, Micaël Queiroz, Pavel Schmidt, Philippe Garnier, Sylvie Fajfrowska, Noyau (Yves Roger Nussbaum).

Tri-Art Mfg. sponsorship Comment

Putting our paints in the hands of artists is the simplest, and best  way to begin the conversation between manufacturer and user. With unrestricted use of materials, painters have the freedom to explore the possibility of a new-to-them product without being infringed by the often imposed limitations of cost and quantity. 

Being on-hand, as a representative of our company, was both essential and rewarding. Questions were answered, products discussed and suggested, a real-time paint hotline.

photo credit: Jennifer Chin

I was mesmerized by the monochromatic environment. So many muted shades of slate and stone, so many ancient and otherworldly textures. The artwork was a brief burst of trying to tie what I was seeing and feeling to how I was accustomed to working. Not the most successful results, but the effects of the elements I took in have lingered, and become a new part of how I see the world, and seek to express how it moves me.