Margriet Hogue
Red Deer, Canada
Artist Margriet Hogue creates layered mixed media paintings inspired by the contours of the land, the distressed surfaces and the colors of the different seasons, as she explains. Born in the Netherlands, Margriet's family moved to Venezuela when she was 6 months old, and then immigrated to Canada when she was in middle school. As a child, her mother taught her various fiber crafts. Buying her first loom allowed Margriet to pay her way through college, and after graduating, she spent years producing textiles and clothing. Unfortunately, the dust from weaving aggravated her child's asthma, so she started a needlework business called The Essamplaire (old French for sampler). Whenever we would be on holidays I'd make appointments with museums to see their sampler collections and would request licensing agreements to reproduce them in the form of needlework kits, explains Margriet. Samplers were part of a girl’s education from the 1500s to the early 1900s and consisted of them stitching alphabets, pictorial images and quaint verses. In 2014, Margriet attended an acrylic painting workshop, which she describes as very freeing after the fine and detailed work involved in needlework. Today, when she's not painting, she enjoys road trips through the mountains to the west coast, visiting family who live far and wide, and continuing to oversee her needlework business.
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Artist Statement
I am always fascinated by being out in nature, whether in the mountains, the country, or the ocean. The contours of the land, the distressed surfaces, and the colors of the different seasons are beautiful, and I try to bring these into my art. When I start a piece, I generally don't have a preconceived idea as to the end result but work intuitively - the only thing I have made a decision on is the colors to be used, and those could change. I build up layers of paper and paint, which get sanded, gouged, and scraped into. I'm responding to what shows up from below. I make small assemblage pieces that incorporate mixed media on panels, adding rusted bits of metal that I come across. This led to larger works where I joined panels, added other panels, and found objects. I often make my own collage papers to use in my work. Parts of them may peek through, although sometimes they are completely obliterated. It's always a surprise to see what stays and disappears. This happens through layers of paint and sanding and scraping back through. I love painting. Learning new things and experimenting will always be a part of what I do.
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