Saturna Dreamscapes - March 10 - April 15, 2021
Interview with
Donna-Fay Digance
by Monica
Morten
Tell me about
yourself and your art.
I have a B.Ed.
in Art Education from the University of Alberta and a M.Ed. in Art Education
from the University of British Columbia. I have also taken summer courses at
Emily Carr in viscosity etching and paper-making. Maiwa courses were a great
resource for learning to dye fabric, silk painting and batik. I taught for
three years and then moved to London, England to do an extra year’s study at
Goldsmith’s College, University of London where I met my husband, Leonard We
opened a pottery studio in an historic coach house across from Greenwich Park.
Our son, Avrom was born two years later. When he was 11 months old, my mother
had moved to Vancouver and persuaded us to return to Canada, because of all the
‘opportunities for artists.’ Hah! So I
began teaching again and had absolutely no time or energy for my art. Twelve
years later I enrolled in an art class at UBC with a wonderful artist, Dick Bond, and those early skills
came back, better than ever.

Now I exhibit
with professional fibre art organizations: Studio Art Quilts Association, Fibre
Art Network, Surface Design Association and Vancouver Island Surface Design
Association.
How did you
come to Saturna?
When I took
early retirement, we wanted to open a B&B on the Gulf Islands as Len had
completed his chef’s training and hospitality courses. That way we could also
have our art studios to use in the off-season. Saturna was the island that
resonated most. We planned to find a fixer-upper but nothing was available, so
instead of following sage advice to downsize, we built our six bedroom, five
bathroom B&B home. Now really being retired, we wondered what on earth we
were thinking.
What's the
best thing about living here?
The best
things about living here are of course the people, the incredible scenery, the
peace and quiet, and now in the midst of a pandemic, the safety.
Where do you
get your inspiration? What inspires you?
My early work
always featured the human figure as I had attended my first life drawing class
when I was in high school. I did a series of etchings, “Masked Dancers”, which
used a theme of transformation juxtaposing combinations of animal and human
forms which I called “Dreamscapes.”
Since we moved
to Saturna full time in 1996, the pristine environment has me now creating
landscapes from my imagination, but the iconic Arbutus trees now move and sway
like my early dancers.
How did you
become an artist?
I was raised
by a single mother, at least between two marriages, who always bought me
quality art materials because she knew I’d keep myself busy for hours. We
returned from San Francisco, after many moves, to Vegreville, Alberta so my
step-father could manage my grandfather’s hotel. I enrolled in an adult art
class, at age 11, where, Laura Reid, a well-known Alberta artist, encouraged my
foray into art creating watercolour landscapes.
Why did you
choose fabric for your art?
My early
training was in drawing and painting. I then explored etching, and intaglio
printing using different grounds, zinc plates, solvent and nitric acid. I used
to work towards a summer show each year, of my etchings, at Dundarave Print
Co-op on Granville Island. I certainly didn’t want to use those toxic materials
on Saturna, so when an opportunity to learn quilting with Lynne Piper arose, it
seemed a perfect opportunity to explore fabric. I was terrible at trying to do
precise piecing so it was more rewarding to transition to my own images. There
are so many processes to use with fabric: appliqué, dyeing, piecing, batik,
painting, hand embroidery and endless variations of machine stitching. I
especially like the freedom from rules so one can keep experimenting and
exploring possibilities. I still have my etching press though, so maybe someday
I’ll use it with fabric.
What projects
are you working on/looking forward to?
I look forward
to working on larger original art quilts based on themes set by juried shows.
Tell me about
a piece that you are really happy with and why.
I’m pleased
with my latest painted silk art quilt, 20” x 34,” that has three layers: a
painted top, batting and a silk design backing. I used free motion machine
stitching through the three layers which adds to the depth and texture of this
Saturna inspired landscape.
Tell me about
your show and one piece in particular.
For my March
Saturna Cafe Show, “Saturna Dreamscapes”,
textile pieces are mounted on
black stretched canvas. I’m really pleased with the small version of the Parks
Canada Saturna Field Office Triptych. The original is three art quilts, each 27’’x
60”, but this new piece has all three images reduced in size to 20”x 16.” I’ve been experimenting with having my
original designs professionally printed on different types of fabric, and in
different sizes, modifying with paint and stitch to create new pieces.
Anything else
you’d like to add?
I miss the
opportunities to sell my work directly at the summer and Christmas markets and
directly in my studio but my Facebook page, Saturna Dreamscapes Studio and my
new website: www.donnafaydigance.com, designed by web242.com , Avrom Digance, have provided some new
opportunities.
“When you take a
classically and extensively trained artist with a sense of adventure and a zest
for experimentation and put her on a small island where there are few
distractions but copious natural beauty and serenity maybe this is what you
get: riveting fabric multi-media collages that look remarkably like traditional
canvases but are three dimensional and tactile.
To bring her canvases to life, the artist uses a variety of fabrics combined with drawing, painting,
batik and textile dyeing, … enhanced with machine and hand
embroidery”