Robert Achtemichuk

What I see becomes a sort of visual illumination, like a match struck unexpectedly in the dark, a gift, lighting my path into wonder -Virginia Woolf

“Outskirts” project

Robert’s remarks at the opening of Outskirts at the Gallery Stratford, October 18, 2015

2015
132 February 27 2015 713pmFebruary 27, 2015 7:13 pm sold

2014
121 January 3 2014 746pmJanuary 3, 2014 7:36 pm sold

122 Saturday February 22 2014 239 amSaturday February 22, 2014 2:39 am sold

123 Monday March 3 2014 825pmMonday March 3, 2014 8:25 pm sold

126 Saturday May 31 2014 857pmSaturday May 31, 2014 8:57 pm sold

127 Sunday June 1 2014 923pmSunday June 1, 2014 9:23 pm

129 Friday June 20 2014 355 amFriday June 20, 2014 3:55 am sold

130 Saturday July 5 2014 1010 pmSaturday July 5, 2014 10:10 pm
2013
104 March 6 2013 855 pmMarch 6, 2013 8:55 pm


105 March 6 2013 950 pmMarch 6, 2013 9:50 pm


106 March 18, 2013 1140pmMarch 18, 2013 11:40 pm


113 August 21 2013 926pmAugust 21, 2013 9:26 pm


114 August 22 2013 926 pmAugust 22, 2013 9:26 pm


118 September 19 2013 148 amSeptember 19, 2013 1:48 am sold


115 September 21 2013 1025pmSeptember 21, 2013 10:25 pm sold


116 September 29 2013 405amSeptember 29, 2013 4:05 am


117 October 14, 2013 626 pmOctober 14, 2013 6:26 pm sold


120 October 18 2013 722pmOctober 18, 2013 7:22 pm sold


119 October 29 2013 718amOctober 29, 2013 7:18 am


2012
082 February 5 2012 545pmFebruary 5 2012 5:45pm sold


091 May 5 2012 916pmMay 5, 2012 9:16 pm


092 May 5 2012 945 pmMay 5, 2012 9:45 pm


2011
066 March 19 2011 8pmMarch 19, 2011 8 pm sold


067 April 7 2011 drawingApril 7, 2011 10 pm drawing


076 December 17 2011 430amDecember 17, 2011 4:30 am


2010
056 February 19 2010 February 19, 2010 8 pm sold


058 June 26 2010June 26, 2010 3 am


2009
050 February 2009February 2009


051 May 2009 7amMay 2009 7 am


040 February 2, 2007 1 amFebruary 2, 2007 1 am


036 November 13 2005 10 pmNovember 13, 2005 10 pm


034 September 2004 715pmSeptember 2004 7:15 pm sold

Artist Statement for latitude 43.431, longitude -80.5005 – Homer Watson House & Gallery, Glenhyrst Art Gallery, Agnes Jamieson Art Gallery. This exhibition later became “Outskirts”.

LATITUDE 43.456193 LONGITUDE -80.500507 are the geographic coordinates of the house and studio from which Robert Achtemichuk observed the small, faithfully detailed landscapes that make up this exhibition.

This project started in 1999 with a few images developed at St Michael’s print shop in Newfoundland. Now there are many more works, most of them gouache on paper or silk, and they will be shown from September 3 to November 6 at the Homer Watson House & Gallery.

Achtemichuk is curious about visual phenomena as seen from his own back yard. The views from his studio have become occasions for contemplation. Robert is especially receptive to colour – it fascinates him. Like Giorgio Morandi, he reuses the same motifs, exploring the ever-changing possibilities in his limited subject matter. Initially, his interest was the full moon in the sky, the trees and the buildings. From these his focus has expanded to include the effects of the moonlight, the street lamps and the atmosphere. What is the colour of those sodium vapour lights?

Observation, then memory, guides the development of these images. Elements of the cityscapes are emphasized by the use of composition, colour and simplification. What is the magnitude or capacity of my memory? What remains? Achtemichuk says this work is a form of portraiture, a civic and urban version.

Liz Wylie, in the text for the exhibition catalogue, begins with a quote by Virginia Woolf from To the Lighthouse:

What is the meaning of life? That was all – a simple question; one that tended to close in on one with years. The great revelation had never come. The great revelation perhaps never did come. Instead there were little daily miracles, illuminations, matches struck unexpectedly in the dark …

Ms. Wylie concludes with:

Robert Achtemichuk’s works are small in scale and narrow in their purview in comparison. But a viewer should not be fooled by Achtemichuk’s casual and modest means, and at times the almost naïve quality to his pieces; as an artist who has traveled a long road, he knows exactly what he is doing, and to excellent and transporting effect

In the catalogue essay Gary Michael Dault concludes by saying:

And is this place to stand that Achtemichuk so delicately provides for us in these winning paintings—which are, as we are ourselves, the intoxicating coming together of the peace of acceptance and the sweet agitation of yearning. (Robert Achtemichuk and the Neighbourhood Pastoral)