Lögberg-Heimskringla - 16.12.1994, Side 13

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 16.12.1994, Side 13
Lögberg-Heimskringla • Föstudagur 16. desember 1994 • 13 Dunn’s painting picked for Alberta poster A! /l( Svala (Val) Dunn's painting, The Natural Forest, will be fea- tured on the 1994 Environment Week poster highlighting Alberta's boreal forest. The painting was chosen from 17 submissions. painting depicting a portion of the English Bay roadside .done by local artist Svala (Val) Dunn was on view throughout Alberta at the end of Environment Week, June 5 to 12. Dunn’s painting, The Natural Forest, will be featured on the 1994 Environment Week poster highlight- ing Alberta’s boreal forest. The paint- ing captured the attention of the selection committee for- the annual poster when it was chosen from 17 submissions across the province. Dunn, a self-taught artist, has been a resident of the Tri-town area for 30 years. Through her painting, she tries to 'depict the beauty of natural sur- roundings we often miss in our busy lives. “I like best to paint the common- place scenes we so often fail to see in our rush to get from one place to another — along roadsides, an old tree, even a stump or patch of swamp grass. This is the fírst time Dunn has sub- mitted work to a panel of judges and says it’s really exciting to have a piece of work displayed throughout the province. Her work was also featured at an exclusive exhibition sponsored by FEESA, an Environmental Education Society, at the Muttart Conservatory in Edmonton from June 7 to 20. Dunn, who has worked profes- sionally as an artist for 25 year, says the win is “icing on the cake at this point in my career. It may never hap- pen again, it may be a fluke or luck, but it’s a wonderful feeling.” She is the “grande dame” of the local arts community. She still teach- es art classes in the Grand Centre Town Hall basement and over the past 24 years has taught 600 students to paint. Although Dunn is now concen- trating on her painting full-time, she still wants to remain active in the community. She applauds the forma- tion of the Allied Arts Council and believes it will be instrumental in pro- moting art in the Tri-town. Dunn, who has been drawing all her life, how works primarily in oil (although she still dabbles in acrylic, water-colour and pen and ink). She put her artistic career in low gear to raise six children, but when they left home she put more and more energy into making a living from her art. She says she has slowly built up contacts in the art community over the years and is now represented by the Collections Gallery in Edmonton and by Frames’ n Things locally. She also sells her work at all the local arts and crafts shows, which she say are invaluable for all the contacts she has made with the public. The hardest part of being an artist, Dunn says, is selling yourself. “I have to push myself to enter submissions and enter shows.” She says it’s hard to be an artist in a small community because the leam- ing opportunities are limited, but the isolation has allowed her to develop her own style and do “her own thing.” “Over the year’s I’ve also leamed a lot from my students.” At one time it'was stressful to paint, she said, “but now I find it’s a healing process and it helps me get away from the world.” Dunn showed her work on Thursday, April 14 from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. at Frames n’ Things during the Arts Alive Festival. She also had signed posters available. The 1994 Environment Week poster, the second in a six-year series focusing on the Natural Regions of Alberta, has been an annual tradition since 1989. This year’s poster is spon- sored by Edmonton Power. The poster is distributed by FEESA, An Environmental Edu- cation Society, which is funded by both the provincial and federal gov- ernments. It is based in Edmonton and has local co-ordinating groups throughout the province. Courtesy ofThe Grand Centre-Cold Lake Sun. Svala was bom in Riverton, Manitoba. Her parents are Anna (Thorvaldson) And the late Hlaöver Amason. Her father came from Oddstödum in the Lund- arreykjadalur valley in lceland. The ICELANDIC NATIONAL LEAGUE, its chapters and affiliates, send their best wishes for a Glebileg Jól og Farsœlt Komandi Ar. Join (or form) an lcelandic organization in your area and stay in touch with your heritage. ICELANDIC NATIONAL LEAGUE President Helgi Austman, Box 1999, Gimli Manitoba, ROC 1B0, Tel. (204) 642-8705 Exec. Sec. Raelene Johnson, INL Headquarters Office, 699 Carter Ave., Winnipeg, Manitoba, R3M 2C3 Tel. (204) 284-3402 - Fax. (204) 284-3870 Executive Board consists of 14 Directors CHAPTERS ESJAN Pesident Svava Simundsson, Box 396, Arborg, Manitoba, R0C 0A0 Tel. (204) 376-5662 FÁLKINN President Paul Sigurdson, 843-12th St., Brandon, Manitoba R7A 4N2 Tel. (204) 728-3977 LEIF EIRÍKSSON ICELANDIC CLUB OF CALGARY President Bob Solvason, 563 Woodpark Cr. SW, Calgary, Alberta, T2W 2S1 Tel. (403) 261-6005 NORÐURUÓS ICELANDIC CLUB President Joanne Olafson, 17328-86 Ave., Edmonton, Alberta T5T 2B5 Tel. (403) 444-4798 VATNABYGGÐ ICELANDIC CLUB OF SASKATCHEWAN President Eric B. Stephanson Box 5, Elfros, Saskatchewan S0A 0V0 Tel. (306) 328-2077 ’VÓtnabyqqS rc.l.,Ac tioi GIMLI CHAPTER INL President Dilla Narfason Box 1643, 91-3rd Ave., Gimli, Manitoba R0C 1B0 Tel. (204) 642-5812 STEPHAN G. STEPHANSSON SOCIETY President Evelyn Johannson, Box 13, Spruce View, Alberta, T0M 1V0 Tel. (403) 728-3400 LUNDAR CHAPTER INL Pesident Helga Sigurdson Box 88, Lundar, Manitoba, R0C 1Y0 Tel. (204) 762-5312 THE ICELANDIC CLUB OF GREATER SEATTLE President Elias Langholt, c/o PACCAR Inc., 777 106th NE, Bellevue, WA 98004 USA Tel (206) 334-3763 BRÚIN President Jack Bjornson 311 NetleyAve., Selkirk, Manitoba, RIA 1H2 Tel. (204) 482-3574 ICELANDIC CANADIAN CLUB OF TORONTO (ICC of Toronto) President Pat Stephens, 59 Dunkirk Rd., Toronto, Ontario, M4C 2M4 Tel. (416) 421-2660 STRÖNDIN • THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN CLUBOFB.C. (ICCofB.C.) President Geraldine McDonald, Apt. 204 - 8220 Jones Rd., Richmond, B.C. V6Y1L6 Tel. (604) 279-0420 ICELANDIC CANADIAN FRÓN President Hallthor Bjornson, 216 Maplegien Dr., Winnipeg, Manitoba R2P 0H5 Tel. (204) 955-9806 HEKLA CLUB President Leola Josefson, #217-10501 Cedar Lake Rd„ Hopkins, MN 55121 USA Tel. (612) 541-9576 AFFILIATES HECLA ISLAND HERITAGE SOCIETY President Warren Helgason, 26 Kennington Bay, Winnipeg, Manitoba, R2N 2L4 Tel. (204) 254-2186 SÓLSKIN SOCIETY President Kristiana Magnusson, 14253 Vine Ave., White Rock, B.C. V4B 2S9 Tel. (604) 531-7955 ICELANDIC HERITAGE ASSOCIATION OF NORTH DAKOTA President Sue Jacobson, RR #2, Box 178A, Bottineau, ND 58318 USA Tel. (701) 228-3064 - ICELANDIC CULTURAL & LANGUAGE CAMP President Gunnvör Ásmundsson, 361 Nova Vista Dr„ Winnipeg, Manitoba R2N 1E9 Tel. (204) 256-2143 1

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