Patricia Canelake lives and works in Knife River, Minnesota. She has received two McKnight Foundation Fellowships, Jerome Foundation Travel and Study Grants, Minnesota State Arts Board Artist Fellowships, and Arrowhead Regional Arts Council awards.

She was included in the 2015 Minnesota Biennial Exhibition at the Museum of Minnesota Art and her work is in permanent collections at the Tweed Museum of Art,Lake Superior College, Hibbing Technical College, Arrowhead Regional Arts, Tech Village,  St. Scholastica, and The Department of the Interior, United States. 

 “Patricia Canelake pursues her interest in animals and humans, each rendered in the metaphorical context of personal space and freedom.  Her bold, painterly style shifts between the representational and abstract, capturing nuances of body language, eye contact, and moments of perception, layered with beautiful color and poignant, gestural brushstrokes.”  John Steffl

Patricia has exhibited at The Minneapolis Institute of Art (Minneapolis, Minnesota), Provincetown Arts Association, (Provincetown, Massachusetts), Fine Arts Work Center (Provincetown Massachusetts), Lanesboro Art Center (Lanesboro, Minnesota), Drawing Center (New York, NY), Gayle Elston Gallery (New York, NY), Bond Street Gallery, New York, NY), Headlands Center for the Arts (Fort Barry, California) Lizzards Gallery (Duluth, Minnesota), Rochester Art Center, (Rochester, Minnesota), Yellowbird Fine Art, (Grand Marais, Minnesota), The Grand Hand (St. Paul, Minnesota) The Duluth Art Institute (Duluth, Minnesota), Karalyn Yellowbird Gallery (Hudson, Wisconsin).

Here, Over Here

Artist Residencies include Yaddo Artist Colony (Saratoga Springs, New York), MacDowell Artist Colony (Peterboro, New Hampshire), Headlands Center for the Arts, (Fort Barry, California), and I-Park Artist’s Sanctuary (East Haddam, Connecticut). Canelake served as a panelist for the Minnesota Artists Exhibition Program at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts and as a juror for The Minnesota State Arts Board. She taught Media Arts in St. Paul Minnesota for 15 years and has worked as an adjunct instructor in Northern Minnesota.

Artist Statement

Simple figurative and animal subjects, leashed and unleashed, are the focus of my work. My style of painting is a fine balance between storytelling and the rough elegance of form and color. Motivation. Communicating ideas, sensibility, history, through images; using animals and humans connected by lines or leashes. The urge to make a mark on canvas or paper started very early in life when my parents gave us all art materials and expressed their love for art and personal history.

Knife River Studio Tour film by Frank Sander

Interview for “Unleashed”
Lizzards Gallery Duluth, MN 2012


How did you first become interested in making paintings?  I have painted since I was very young.  My parents were very encouraging about the arts, and my father would bring home artistic projects.  He also loved designing his candy store and making signs. I have a creative sister, creative friends, and I have had a very good arts education in primary, secondary, and college settings.  I had a pivotal year in the mid-eighties when two friends came to my house in the northern woods and set up studio spaces. Jane Fine was trained at The Boston Museum School and Harvard, and Heidi Marben was a talented friend from New York City.  She introduced me to the Provincetown, Massachusetts’s art scene, and as a result I painted there for many summers.  I have never questioned my identity as an artist.

What do you like most about being an artist? Being alone in a room, left with my thoughts. I like to see intellectual and visual ideas come into fruition and to watch a studio wall visually fill up.
How do you know when to call a painting “complete”?  I am very picky even though one might not guess this.  The work has to satisfy me completely.  I ask the following questions of myself, “Does it have merit?”  Is it unique and interesting? Is the execution of color, line, and subject matter executed in a way that pleases my eye.  Lately I take much more time to make these kinds of decisions and I cull out the “weak ones” much more than I have in the past.  I know when a work is finished through experiences of making and looking at paintings.  Sometimes I can fix a painting, but sometimes I ruin it. It always feels risky towards the end.  “Will I ruin it or put in the next perfect paint stroke?”

Where did the title of your current show come from?  
After teaching media arts  & film for 15 years in St. Paul I returned to my main focus of painting and monotype printing. The title “Unleashed” reflects a new start. This year I was awarded an Arrowhead Regional Arts Award, which made it possible to return to The Fine Arts Center in Provincetown, Massachusetts where I spent many summers painting. This summer I  studied new printmaking techniques with artist Vicky Tomayko.  The prints are part of the “Unleashed” show at Lizzards .
 
How do you come up with ideas?  I have always been fascinated with the photographic image, both vintage and contemporary.  I worked in a darkroom, taught media arts and documentary film, so there is a strong connection for me.  I have many photographs that I take myself. I choose situation, and images that work with my ideas.  Simple figurative, and animal subjects, leashed and unleashed are the subjects of my work.  The push and pull, the holding and letting go, are iconic experiences of life.  I often look for props, ropes, lines, connecting gestures, or repetitive images.  I also look for a moment that will help the narrative. The paintings initiate in some extent with my photographs images. I also am a big fan of immediate and real observation and using drawing skills.
I use models at times or wait for the chance happenings  or influences in my everyday life.  For this series, I  started by visiting the farm of Andrea Sande and Don Harju and photographing their horses.  Later my cousins invited me to see and photograph their farm animals, which included over 70 baby sheep and goats. 
 Two of the most serendipitous moments occurred when I was getting a haircut at Adeline’s hair salon.  Adeline Wright, her daughter Gala, and coworker Kate Stephen all posed for me in a very natural and impromptu way.  The resulting images intrigued me and I started to connect the figures and the animals.  The premise for “Unleashed” is the idea of basic freedoms.  Kate Stephen twirled freely and in an inspired manner.  Adeline and Gala were wholeheartedly enjoying a long rope I had given them.  When the animals were free on the farms, I noticed that the metaphor of leashed or unleashed applied to both animals and humans. When I juxtaposed them together in the paintings it seemed to work.

Do you pre-conceive your paintings or watch them emerge?  The ideas come as I work.  I have developed some themes that reappear many times, such as the single or duplicitous figure.   

What is your primary approach to painting?  My intent is to use paint as a lush and beautiful medium. I make sure the surface is varied and that the viewer notices the nature of the paint, as well as the subject matter and the idea behind the painting.  

CV

EDUCATION

B.S. Degree Minnesota University
Ed. Master of Education. University of Wisconsin
Doctoral Studies. Hamline University, St. Thomas University

AWARDS

McKnight Fellowship (2) Minneapolis, Minnesota
Bush Foundation Finalist   St. Paul, Minnesota
Provincetown Fine Arts Summer Residency Provincetown, Massachusetts
Jerome Foundation Travel & Study Grant St. Paul, Minnesota
Arrowhead Regional Arts Grant Duluth, Minnesota
Minnesota State Arts Board Fellowship St. Paul, Minnesota
Tweed Museum of Art, Arrowhead Regional Arts Exhibition Award, Duluth, Minnesota
Headlands Center for the Arts Residency Award Fort Barry, California
Yaddo Residency Award Saratoga, New York
MacDowell Residency Award Peterborough, New Hampshire
I-Park Artist Sanctuary Residency Award East Haddam Connecticut
Hibbing Technical College Public Art Hibbing Minnesota
Tech Village Public Art Duluth, Minnesota
Lanesboro Center for the Arts, Solo Exhibition Award,
Tasmanian School of Art Residency, Hobart, Tasmania
Duluth Aquarium Opening Exhibit Award with Frank Sander, Duluth, Minnesota

EXHIBITIONS

Duluth Institute of Art Annual Exhibit Honorable Mention, Duluth, MN  2019
College of St. Scholastica Duluth, MN.  2019
Northshore Bank Solo, John Steffl , Curator, Duluth, MN 2019
Northshore Bank Solo, Annie Dugan, Curator, Duluth, MN 2019
Minnesota Museum of Art Biennale St. Paul, MN 2017
Prove Gallery Exhibition Duluth, MN 2016
Yellow Bird Fine Art Grand Marais, MN 2018,2019
I-Park Artist Residency Open Exhibit 2003, 2011,2015
Zeitgeist Solo Exhibit, Duluth, Minnesota 2015
Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown Open Exhibit 2017, 2918,2019
Minnesota Institute of Art Air, Water, Earth 2014
Tweed Museum Arrowhead Regional Artist Award, 1989
New York Drawing Center 1996
Gayle Elston Gallery, NY, NY 1993
Bond Street Gallery, NY, NY 1995, 1994
Lanesboro Art Center, Lanesboro, MN. 2017
Rochester Art Center solo Rochester, MN 1998
Lizzards Gallery solo, Duluth, MN 2018, 2016, 2012
The Grand Hand St. Paul, MN 2009, 2014
Provincetown Art Association, Members Show Provincetown, MA 1988

ADJUNCT INSTRUCTOR

St. Scholastica College, Duluth MN 2019
Fond-Du-Lac College Tribal College 2003
Lake Superior College 1993
Itasca College. 1995
Teacher/Highland Park Senior H.S.  Media Arts/ Department Chair/ 15 years
Great! Lakes Candy Kitchen / co-owner, designer, chocolatier

JUROR

The Edge Gallery Members Awards. 2017
Minnesota Artist Exhibition Program Minneapolis Institute of Art/ two year panelist juror 2001-2003
Arrowhead Regional Art Council reviewer 2020
Scholastic Art Awards State High School Awards 1998 2001
Tweed Museum Women in Art Exhibit. 1998
University of Wisconsin Senior Honors 1997
Duluth Art Institute Members Honors Awards. 1993
Minnesota State Arts Board Visual Arts Grants.  2015, 2017

Painter in the Woods

Painter in the Woods: Early Work on Pioneer Road film by Frank Sander