Mythos & Marginalia

2015 – 2025: a decade of days


j.g.lewis

  • summer summary

    As summer fades, as they always do, I took a moment yesterday to browse through photographs I’ve made over the past few months to remind myself where I have been living.

    This will be my last summer in Toronto, a city that has been home for a decade.

    When I first arrived here, I began to spend many hours and days wandering the city with my camera, both as a means of familiarizing myself with this huge metropolis and also refamiliarizing myself with camera skills I had not been using as much as I should have. I was inspired by new landscapes and the sheer magnitude of the city’s size, and over the years have indulged in the street photography that was available for me.

    This past summer, as I’ve been focusing more on other aspects of visual art, I did not venture out with my equipment as often as I should have. Still, I found some time to capture images of the places and people in a city that now feels like home.

    ©2024 j.g.lewis

  • Mondays are just young Fridays

    The sun is just coming up, the weather is especially pleasant for this time of the year and the 10-day forecast indicates it will stay that way for quite some time.

       Not a drop of rain is expected for the foreseeable future and these summer-like temperatures, even through the nights, will continue.

       There are better days ahead.

       My morning coffee is bold and sweet — sort of like me — and, for the most part, my schedule is clear enough to allow me to take advantage of where I am. It’s a good place to be.

       I have a few things I need to do but, more so, I have a lot of things I want to do. I hope this mindful mood will allow me to get them done.

       Optimism is a wonderful thing, and it is easily obtained if you permit yourself to believe it is possible.

    09/16/2024                                                                                                      j.g.l.

  • concepts of a plan

    My sketchbooks get messy. Even the one I began days ago is now showing the inconsistent and immeasurable thoughts of a cluttered mind. But, mainly, it’s all good (considering the many connotations of that word).

       Mostly, I am a writer and photographer (many days one more than the other). Like the tattered notebook I use to carelessly jot down random scrabble, immediate ideas and nonsensical everyday drama that may someday make it into a poem, essay, or manuscript, the sketchbook is only a stop in my creative process.

       What is contained within the book may or may not make it to another level or format, but I know it is there for me to use whenever, or however, I decide to use it. 

       Earlier this year, after all my oil paints, solvents, brushes and canvases were packed away in preparation for a relocation, I purchased a modest set of watercolour paints, oil pastels, ink, and a big sketchbook to keep content my creativity. I filled that book up over the summer; more of a means of coping than creating.

       My sketchbook, in so many ways, after what I endured or experimented with these past months, become a form of art therapy that was available to me.

       In its essence, my sketchbook is full of plans, or concepts of a plan. At times it is experimental — I’m currently concerned over underpainting, the colour wheel, and the uncalculated risks of layering watercolours — a lot of what I do in this sketchbook is conceptual practice exercises with media or texture and perspectives not quite clear to me at the moment of creation. Nonetheless they serve a purpose in this, at times, cruel and compilated world.

       Art needs a place in your life or mind and a sketchbook, if nothing else, allows you that time. Like life itself, indeed it does get messy.

    09/15/2024                                                                                                                j.g.l.

  • we can’t remember

    We won’t admit
    we share the pain.
    We tell ourselves
    again and again
    we are different.
    We don’t know
    what anyone feels,
    or how anyone
    deals with this now.
    We can’t remember.
    We don’t know
    how to behave
    like we used to.

    © 2021 j.g. lewis