Behind the scenes, Drum December, Drum Works, How Po Makes Hand Drums, Kingston Artist, Po's Drum Making Process, Portia Chapman, Portia Po Chapman Frames and Stretchers, Portia's Adventures, Studio Process, Uncategorized

Drum December Day 10 | How to Glue Before Clamping Drum Frame

On day 10 of Drum December, Po spreads glue on the white oak before clamping the drum frame to dry. Her assistant holds the frame firmly still at the Love Art By Po Kingston Art Studio
Drum December Day 10 – Po Glues the White Drum Frame Before Clamping the Dry-Bend

Choosing the Right Glue for Handcrafted Drum Frames | Drum December Day 10

At the Love Art by Po studio in Kingston, I believe that building a professional-grade drum frame is as much about the type of glue as it is the technique used to apply it.

Different moisture levels in wood require different chemical bonds. Whether you are working with freshly steamed “green” wood or seasoned dry wood, choosing the wrong adhesive can compromise the sound of your instrument. In todayโ€™s update, Iโ€™ll explain how to pick the right glue at your local hardware store to ensure a lifetime of pure sound.


The Challenge: Gluing Damp vs. Dry Wood

The first hurdle every drum maker faces is moisture. If you are bending steamed red oak, the wood is naturally damp.

Early in my practice as an installation artist, I treated drum frames like standard carpentryโ€”LePage Pro Carpenterโ€™s Glue. However, standard wood glue and damp, steamed wood do not mix. I would return to my shop table the next morning to find the joint “slimy” and uncured on the inside.

The Polyurethane Solution

To glue damp wood effectively, you need a moisture-activated adhesive like Original Gorilla Glue. This polyurethane glue uses the moisture in the wood to “activate” the bond. It bonds damp frames like a dream, but it comes with a significant trade-off: The Foam.


The Science of Sound: Why “Foaming” Glue Causes Rattle

If you want a pure, resonance-free tone, you must understand how glue affects vibration. Polyurethane glue expands into a foam, creating tiny air pockets within the joint.

Are Drum Frames Meant to Rattle?

  • The Rattle: If you enjoy a “smooth rattle” or mechanical reverberation, foaming glue is your best friend.
  • The Pure Tone: If you want a clean strike, never use foaming glue. The drum frame produces sound just as much as the rawhide. If your glue joint contains air pockets, the vibration of the drum strike can cause a “seam rattle” deep within the wood.

How to avoid the rattle:

  1. Glue the frame only when the wood is fully dry.
  2. Use a non-foaming moisture-resistant glue like Gorilla Glue Clear. (Note: “Non-foaming” glues can be slippery, making clamping a damp frame more difficult.)

Three Steps to a Rattle-Free Steamed Frame

If you are new to drum making, remember that hitting a drum with “enthusiastic force” will eventually shake loose any weak or brittle bonds. To ensure your steamed frame remains silent and solid, follow these three steps:

  1. Cooling Time: Let the wood cool until it is no longer steaming, but is still slightly damp before applying glue.
  2. Even Spread: Use a non-foaming polyurethane glue spread evenly across the entire joint.
  3. Pressure: Use 6+ C-clamps, applied two at a time on opposite sides to ensure even compression.

Innovating with Dry Wood Bending

For my premium drums, I prefer to glue the wood when it is fully dry. This produces a beautiful, rattle-free instrument. However, dry hardwood doesn’t like to bendโ€”it behaves like a floor plank!

To solve this, I developed a proprietary dry-bending technique. The wood is pre-bent and shaped before the glue is ever applied. You can see the foundation of this technique in my previous posts: Day 5, Day 7, and Day 8.

My Go-To Choice: Titebond III

For dry, single-layer frames, I recommend Titebond III Ultimate.

  • Why? It offers a longer working time, becomes “tacky” quickly for better clamping, and is rated for both interior and exterior use.
  • The Secret: Let the wood and glue “perform their magic” for at least 24 hours before sanding or knocking the frame.

The “Drum Making Golden Rule”

Frame drums are built for lifeโ€”they go from drizzling rain at a community circle to the dry heat of a bonfire. Because they are exposed to moisture, heat, and travel, your glue must be waterproof.

The Golden Rule:

No matter the purpose of the drum, ALWAYS use a high-strength, waterproof glue that produces zero (or nearly zero) bubbles.


Coming Tomorrow: Join me for Drum December Day 11, where Iโ€™ll share a deep-dive tutorial on Professional Clamping. I’ll show you the “tricks of the trade” to ensure your frame is perfectly circular and structurally sound.


See you tomorrow!

More information about Love Art by Po Drums

๐Ÿ“ง Portia@loveartbypo.ca

One response to “Drum December Day 10 | How to Glue Before Clamping Drum Frame”

  1. Drum December Day 11 – How to Clamp a Drum Frame – Love Art by Po Avatar

    […] Welcome back to Drum December! Today, we are diving into one of the most transformative stages of the process: using my innovative dry-bending technique to compress and clamp the drum frame. This method is born from my preference for non-polyurethane glues, which we explored in our Day 10 tutorial. […]

Let Me Know What You Think! Start or Join the Convesation

๐Ÿ“ Visit the Studio:Find Love Art by Po on Google Maps




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Portia Po Chapman – Mural Installation Artist – Kingston, Ontario – 2024

Day in the Life of Portia Po Chapman by the Toronto Guardian, November 13, 2024 was Published in Response to Kingston’s Portia “Po” Chapman Mural Competition Win for Strong Enterprises in Belleville.

The Toronto Guardian headline states that Po is a Toronto artist. Although she is a Muralist trying to break into the GTA art market, Po is based in Kingston, Ontario. Other than that edit, the following “Day in the Life” article was an accurate telling of Po’s story in 2024.

Article link

I want to thank Emilea Semancik for doing a smashing job on this article.

As an emerging contemporary artist in Ontario, Canada, it has been an exciting month, November 2024 and we are only 13 days in. I received two public features and one day-in-the-life article. I presented my drums and educated the public about drumming and the beauty of the drum making process. Plus my “Sharing Wisdom: Tending to Nature’s Little Ones,” drum was featured in the entrance of the Kingston City Hall gallery in the inaugural show: Kingston Artists’ Showcase. Many more exciting things too. You’ll just have to wait to find out.

Links to all 3 articles are on my ABOUT page. Here is the link.

Portia Chapman, Portia's Adventures, Uncategorized

Visual Artist Portia Po Chapman Artworks and Biography: Additional Information

Visual Artist Portia Po Chapman Artworks and Biography: Additional Information

This post is under construction and will be edited/added onto . For listed information, view Po’s CV . For Po’s About info/page.


At A Glance Bio

Portia Keely Chapman (โ€œPoโ€), is a Canadian (born 1997, Belleville, Ontario) emerging, contemporary visual artist illustrator and drum maker reclaiming her Indigenous Ancestry.  She created the Queenโ€™s University Indigenous Illustration โ€œTruthโ€ which the University features each year on the annual National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.  The โ€œTruthโ€ image is one of eleven groundbreaking Indigenous illustrations that were first commissioned in 2020 as digital web icons by the Queenโ€™s University Office of Indigenous Studies.  In 2022, a second set of icons was commissioned by the Faculty of Education for their Indigenous Initiatives.  Since 2020, Queenโ€™s has incorporated the icons through the University documents, including the โ€œTruthโ€ image which has been featured on Orange Shirt Day by multiple organizations across Canada.

Chapmanโ€™s first published cover artwork was โ€œMy Creationโ€ in 2017 by the ASUS Journal of Indigenous Studies that also, in the body of the journal, featured 3 additional artworks created by Chapman.  Her most recent cover artwork and chapter illustrations were commissioned by Broadview Press for the textbook: Ways of Being in the World, edited by Dr. Andrea Sullivan-Clarke.  The contemporary, custom designed, Indigenous themed images depict the subject matter and key words from the book.  They played a seamlessly integral role in the storytelling of the textbook as a whole.

Chapman is also known for her murals: โ€œMy Creationโ€ in the Kingston Hall Reflection Room, and the Base31 public art โ€œWarbler Watchingโ€ in the Aviatorโ€™s Garden, โ€œBuilding a Bright Futureโ€ in the Lecture Hall, and โ€œExploring the Sensesโ€ in the Sensory Garden.  The two Base31 circular murals utilize a circular composition with a delicate fish-eye lens distortion.  Chapman developed the flow of the circular imagery, while creating the Queenโ€™s icons.  The images draw the viewerโ€™s eyes around the composition while simultaneously creating depth with the use of colour.  Because the murals use colour blocking rather than blending, Chapman creates shadow and highlights by clever placements of progressive tones rather than shades.  Although the viewer may at first interpret the colour becoming darker, as if simply adding different amounts of black to the hues, Chapman mixes different hues.  This sort of building dimension through hue variance closely replicates the organic aspect of nature.  By pulling the colours apart, Chapman has innovated a fractured tinting method that is perceived by the viewer as wholeness.  The 2 circular murals, commissioned by Base31, magnificently illustrate the effect because โ€œExploring the Sensesโ€ is 66โ€ in diameter and is mounted about 12โ€ above the ground.  The viewer can interact with the painting because it can seem that the viewer is standing within the image.  โ€œBuilding a Bright Futureโ€ is 72โ€ in diameter and has been constructed to appear as a very large drum with a 6โ€ deep cedar frame. 

Chapmanโ€™s drum exhibition premiered October 7, 2023 at the Parrott Art Gallery in Belleville, Ontario.  It features hand painted hand drums that Chapman constructed.  The images embody a circular compositional movement more similar to the Queenโ€™s icons.  Chapman wanted the images to move with the drum in any way that the drum is held.  The translucent acrylic paint upon the translucent elk raw hide creates a flat illusion of depth because the exceptionally thin paint casts shadows through the rawhide resulting in an illusion of the image floating above the skin.  Chapman prefers to paint upon stretched elk rawhide rather than canvas.  Chapmanโ€™s drums, painted and ready to paint drums, will be featured in June 2024 at the Picton Gather in the County arts and crafts show, at which she will demonstrate her painting method so that other artisans can paint their own drums in their studios.  Chapman views drum making as a meditative, spiritual art whereby the artist nurtures the drum into existence.    

Background

Portia Keely Chapman, lived in Stockdale, Ontario up until she was 4 years old. She then moved to her newly built cottage in the woods along the south shore of Moira Lake, just west of Tweed, Ontario.  Chapmanโ€™s family spent many years (2002-2017) invested in restoring the Land, upon which the Great Indigenous Battle of Chuncal Lake occurred in 17__. It was during this time, Po developed a very close relationship with the lake, the forest and the drumming pulse of Creation. Her characteristic art style and painted hand drum exhibition, โ€œDrumming Sounds of Colour,โ€ are inspired by her life experiences communing with woods and forest creatures. The bending images of her circular compositions are inspired by times when looking up at the sky amongst tall trees seeing them bend toward a focal point 80+ feet above her.   

Having attended St. Michael School and Nicholson Catholic College from 2010-2015 in Belleville, Ontario, in 2019 she moved to Belleville and established an art creation studio in her high rise apartment overlooking the Bay of Quinte.  During the Covid19 pandemic, Chapman taught art based programming at the ALCDSB Remote Learning School, while after school hours she filled multiple art commissions, negotiated contracts, conducted art planning meetings by Zoom, and made hand drums.  In the fall of 2022, Chapman expanded to a 3 room art studio in Kingston, Ontario.  Upon moving to Kingston, Chapman began teaching, Secondary School Visual Art classes for the ALCDSB, and community art workshops for youth and families at the Agnes Etherington Art Centre.  Between January 2022 and November 2023, Po completed 47 art pieces, 29 of which were commissioned works ranging from digital art and hand-painted murals to hand drums.  In September 2023, Chapman began teaching Adult Education in Kingston and Picton, Ontario and in November, she joined Kingstonโ€™s TETT Centre as a volunteer in order to help out fellow artists and artisans.

Art Awards

Chapman received her first art award in 2011.  At her grade 8 graduation, she was awarded the โ€œAchievement Award in the Arts.โ€  In 2013, Chapman won the ALCDSB logo design contest.  The โ€œFaith in Action,โ€ logo was used by the school board for about 7 years.  It was displayed at the entrance of every school as well as on their website and printed documents.  At that time, Chapman had not yet taken a visual art course, privately or publicly.  The award recognition prompted her to commence art education in grade 11.  In the spring of 2015, Chapman was further recognized for her excellence as a young budding artist.  At her grade 12 graduation, Chapman received the โ€œTop Marks Award for โ€œExploring and Creating the Arts,โ€ โ€œSisters of Providence Award for the Arts,โ€ and the Quinte Arts Council Bursary. Post graduation, Chapman received the Queenโ€™s University Excellence Scholarship to study Visual Art in the BFAH Studio Art program.  At the BDIA Spring 2015 Student Art Contest, Chapman was awarded โ€œBest in Showโ€ for her 36โ€X48โ€ Oil on Canvas, โ€œLove Expressed.โ€ Then at Chapmanโ€™s Queenโ€™s BFAH Graduation she received the Queenโ€™s Medal in Visual Art for having the highest overall GPA of all the BFAH graduates.

The following is a list of her local art awards:
2011 Achievement Award in the Arts
2013 Faith in Action Logo Contest Winner
2015 Top Marks Award for Exploring and Creating the Arts
2015 Sisters of Providence Award for the Arts
2015 Quinte Arts Council Bursary
2015 Queenโ€™s University Excellence Award to study BFA Visual Arts
2015 BDIA Annual Student Art Competition Best in Show
2016 Tweed Agricultural Fair 1st in Open Class Special
2016 Tweed Agricultural Fair 1st in Wall Craft Home Decor
2019 Queenโ€™s University Medal in Visual Art

Art Print, Artist Portia Po Chapman Mural, Artist Portia Po Chapman My Creation, Portia Chapman, Portia's Adventures, Uncategorized

A Process of Art Planning Creation by Portia Po Chapman Kingston Artist

A Process of Art Planning Creation by Portia Po Chapman Kingston Artist

We all have our own method and strategy to create our art pieces. For me, I start with 2 things:
1/ An idea notebook that I enter flashes of visions, ideas, concepts, and sketches of possible cool things to do in the future. I also include inspiration quotes and sometimes reflections about my experiences. I keep sheets of paper on my bedside table to record dreams too. When one idea doesn’t float at one point, it may in the future.
The following image was eventually painted in 2022 as a mural for Queen’s University’s Kingston Hall Reflection Room but I first created it in 2018 for my 3rd year BFAH class and it was rejected by the professor because the prof said that, “It looks like something you’d paint in your garage.” The thing is, it was the beginnings of my current art style and landed me several commissions when I finally finished it outside the course.
“My Creation” mural took 4 years before it was commissioned and mounted. It began with a simple sketch and grew for years. The mural was created because the ASUS executive adored the original digital image and had been awaiting the chance to have it painted. This is often how commissions work. The organic growth and development of art concepts can take many turns until it reaches its destination. I still find the journey amazing.

“My Creation” Mural in Kingston
2022

“My Creation” Mural Complete in My Studio
2022

“My Creation” Mural Size Planning
(we chose square)
2021

“My Creation” Published as Cover Image
(the cover is more intense the photo is faded)
2019

“My Creation” Digital Journal Cover Proposal
2018

“My Creation” Began as a Sketch and Then I Painted
a Trial Image Which was Rejected by My Prof
2018

2/ The second thing I do for art creation is take photos or have photos of me in the environment. I like to catch a moment – the nuances of life that happen in a moment in time. The following digital image is a current idea that I am working on as I consider the painting medium and final expression. The piece is entitled, “My Drum and Me.”

“My Drum and Me” Digital Draft for Painting Planning
2023

“My Drum and Me” Stone Lithograph Art Print
2018

“My Drum and Me” Hand Drawing Lithographic Stone
2018

“My Drum and Me” Original Photo
A Family Member Took this Photo When I Was Drumming Outside
2017

Again as one can see, a beautiful moment in time captured by a photo and/or inspiration notes and drawings can lead to some really beautiful art pieces in the future. If anything, their journey materializes as life takes its own twists and turns. An art concept never gets old, it simply waits for its time to shine, but as it waits, the inspiration weaves itself through one’s career and the creation of other pieces. Art is not created in a vacuum – it lives and breathes through us as artists and art enthusiasts. Art is alive, even as it awaits its birth.

Never Ever Toss an Idea or Beautiful Life Moment

Portia Chapman, Portia's Adventures, Uncategorized

Kingston Artist, Portia “Po” Chapman Completes Over 45 Art Pieces in 18 Months

Kingston Artist, Portia “Po” Chapman Completes Over 45 Art Pieces in 18 Months
Kingston Freelance Commission Artist Portia Po Chapman Posing with Stone Lithograph Donation to the South Shore Joint Initiative in Prince Edward County

It is difficult to believe, but it is true. I had lost track. How funny is that!? As they say: “It never feels like work when you love what you do.” I guess, when not sleeping, I am creating. With that said, I often wake up suddenly with an art project idea and quickly sketch it down on a pad of paper that I keep on my bedside table. So, maybe I am working, even in my dreams.

Also, since my 25th birthday in April 2022, I have had a lot of life altering things happen. My family and I moved our home from Belleville to Kingston, and I received a couple new teaching positions. As both a treat and necessity, I even bought my first vehicle. Although the move had its challenging moments, it provided me with space for a small gallery, a bright meeting space and mural painting room, plus a rough space for wood working and drum building. I like to make most of my own hardwood stretchers and like to stretch my own canvas. This winter, I will be able to use a wood steamer that I built in the summer. I can’t wait to bend my drum frames and circular painting stretchers. As you can imagine, life as an artist is never boring.

As an emerging artist it is really exciting as my art is growing in popularity. While preparing competition documents for a current mural commission, I put together a snapshot of my most recent art and art-related projects. As strange as it may sound, I surprised myself. I knew that I had been busy, but when I compiled it in a list, I was like: “Wow, I guess I have done a lot.” The following is the rough list that I compiled. You can read more about these projects in my CV.

 29 Freelance Commissioned Pieces:

– 7 digital web icons – Queen’s University
– 1 painted drum – Queen’s
– 2 painted drums – Private Commission
– 2 exterior murals – Base31
– 1 interior mural – Base31
– 5 Sensory Garden signs – Base31
– 2 digital border templates – Base31
– 1 interior mural – Queen’s
– 1 book cover digital to print image – Broadview Press
– 5 title page digital to print images – Broadview Press
– 1 logo digital to web and print – Kingston School of Art
– 1 logo digital to web and print – WEYTK Communities Inc. (B.C.)

3 Philanthropic Art Donations:

– 1 painting – QAC/Parrott Art Gallery
– 1 art print stone lithograph – PEC South Shore Joint Initiative (created 2018)
– 1 painting – PEC SSJI

3 Gallery Showings:

– “Must We Wear Heals” sculpture / cast (created 2017) – Parrott Art Gallery
– “Emergence: Future Unknown” painting – QAC / Parrott Art Gallery
– “Drumming Sounds of Colour” 15 piece solo painted drum exhibit – Parrott Art Gallery

Additional Fall 2023 Art and Art-Related Projects:

– 5 Sensory Garden signs – Base31
– 3 large painted drums – WEYTK
– Mural reveal presentation – Base31
– Drum exhibit art talk – Parrott Art Gallery
– Concurrent Education seminar leader – Queen’s
– Artist in Community presentation and workshop leader – Queen’s
– Nursing medical textbook cover
– Drum creation for spring show & sale
– Ongoing paintings

Art Teaching:

– Elementary online Itinerant Art Teacher – ALCDSB
– Grades 9 & 10 Visual Art PECI
– Grades 9 – 12 Visual Art – Regi & HC, ALCDSB
– 5 monthly Creation Stations – Agnes Etherington Art Centre
– 1 March Break Art & Sports Camp – Agnes
– 1 Summer Art & Sports Camp – Agnes
– 1 digital online video children’s story book – Youtube

Additional Art Training:

– Teaching Gr 12 Media Art – University of Windsor
– Teaching International Baccalaureate Visual Art – University of Windsor

Features:

– Kingston in Focus
– QAC Umbrella (this winter 2024)
– QAC Member Spotlight
– County Arts Member Spotlight

Volunteer:

Tett Centre for Creativity and Learning, Kingston – Training November 2023

Art News, Portia Chapman, Portia's Adventures, Uncategorized

Portia “Po” Chapman’s Kingston Art Studio is a Place to Create

Portia “Po” Chapman’s Kingston Art Studio is a Place to Create

My new studio is a place for me to create, have zoom meetings with clients and present my artworks. I do not have a walk-in store location at this time. Thank you for you understanding.

Love Art By Po Portia Chapman Kingston Art Studio and Creation Space Exterior Road Sign and Flowers on Front Wall of White Brick House

It dawned on me that I have not posted any photos of my new Kingston Art Studio. Although I do miss being down on Bagot Street (I adore downtown Kingston), the suburbs in the north end provide me with more creation space, easy access to building supply stores, Michaels, and the my much needed inspiration trips into the countryside north of HWY 401. The following photos are of my space where I create:

Love Art By Po Portia Chapman Kingston Art Gallery Welcome Wall with  Name Sign, Hand Drum with Painted Pink Logo and Self Portrait Oil Painting
Love Art By Po Portia Chapman Kingston Art Studio Gallery Art Prints
Love Art By Po Portia Chapman Kingston Art Studio Indigenous Hand Drum Antique Cabinet and Prints
Love Art By Po Portia Chapman Kingston Art Studio Entrance Gallery Wall with 2 Art Prints and 1 Pink Tulip Painting
Love Art By Po Portia Chapman's Kingston Art Studio Entrance with Sculpture of Feet and Reflections of Artwork
Love Art By Po Portia Chapman Standing in the Painting Room Entrance of Her Kingston Art Studio Gallery
Love Art By Po Portia Chapman Standing in Her Kingston Art Studio with Finished Mural Building a Bright Future Greet Freelance Commission Clients
Love Art By Po Portia Chapman's Kingston Art Studio Has a Quiet Meditation Space Outside with a Statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Love Art By Po Portia Chapman Kingston Art Studio View of Sunset is a Pink Sky
Art News, Portia Chapman, Portia's Adventures

Portia Po Chapman’s “Drumming Sounds of Colour” Exhibition is More Than Inspired by Nature

Portia Po Chapman’s “Drumming Sounds of Colour” Exhibition is More Than Inspired by Nature

“Drumming Sounds of Colour” exhibition is being displayed by the Parrott Art Gallery in Belleville Ontario. The collection features 15 hand drums that Po made and hand painted. It is the first drum exhibit of its kind.
In a recent press release ( Intelligencer local paper ) it is written: “…an exhibition by local artist and drum maker Portia โ€œPoโ€ Chapman, called โ€œDrumming Sounds of Colourโ€ located in our corridor cabinets. This painted hand drum exhibit and sale, displays fifteen drums. Most of the drums feature elk raw hide stretched over white cedar forms and are painted in colourful acrylics with designs inspired by nature…” 
Although it is true that the imagery is “inspired by nature,” it is truly inspired by Po’s experiences growing up with Nature. The 15 piece collection is inspired by Po’s personal relationship with Creation as she grew up in the woods west of Tweed, Ontario. Accompanying the drums are 6 poetic verses that Po and her family wrote together. They tell Po’s story – the story depicted in both the painted images and the size progression of the drums. As such, the exhibit delves into the life and mind of a girl, reclaiming her Indigenous heritage, growing into womanhood as she is guided by Creation. It is a story of the preservation of innocence as revealed in Nature.
The simplistic images, in Po’s characteristic style, are of creatures in relationship with each other and the human experience of that relationship. In this case, creatures seen and unseen. The exhibition also includes 3 drums focusing on virtues: “Love” features a mother and child beneath the watchful , loving protection of a Bald Eagle; “Knowledge” features two people sharing stories around a sacred fire beneath the wing of a Ravine knowledge keeper; “Truth” features two people standing on Turtle Island as Creator lifts the turtle above the turbulent sea.
The poetry features a telling of the drumming pulse of Creation and how it awakens us when we notice it throbbing through our individual and collective pulse. Here is an example:



The drum exhibit is an amazing feat, as it is the first of its kind, at least locally. As a mixed media visual story teller, Po created the exhibit with two things in mind, to share the beauty of her Creation experience and to inspire viewers to tell their stories and share what they see. The exhibit is an amazing experience to take time and to take in.
The exhibition runs until December 1, 2023. If you would like one of the drums for your personal collection, some of them are available for purchase. You can contact gallery staff and they will assist you.

Art News, Portia Chapman, Portia's Adventures, Uncategorized

Portia Chapman Completes Bachelor of Education

Portia Chapman Completes Bachelor of Education

Yay!  I have finally completed my 5 year long Concurrent – Bachelor of Education (Artist in Community Education Concentration) program at Queen’s University! I have earned my two Intermediate – Senior teachable subjects in Visual Arts and First Nations, Mรฉtis, and Inuit Studies.  I have grown a lot since my start in the program in 2015.  I was so happy to spend the final year of the program with my sister Jasmine (BEd – Communications Technology).  Not many sisters get to do their BEd together.  Many call us the “Sisters in Education!”

Portia chapman duncan mcarthur hall queens university
Portia chapman Queens university duncan mcarthur

I am so grateful for my practical and theoretical knowledge gained over this degree journey.  I can’t wait to start teaching this fall!

Po

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Belleville, Ontario, Canada
portia@loveartbypo.ca
613-779-7975

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Portia Chapman’s Indigenous Image Scratchboard Arting was Fun for All

Portia Chapman’s Indigenous Image Scratchboard Arting was Fun for All

This winter, as part of the Artist in Community Education Concentration at the Queen’s University Faculty of Education, we had the opportunity to host “Artings” in Duncan McArthur Hall.  I chose to do a scratchboard event.

Basically, an arting is a brief art workshop, often only one night and for one art project.  Our scratchboard arting was 45 minutes.  Participants were able to start and finish their art pieces in this brief time together.  It was so nice to see so many happy faces as participants left with their own finished artworks in hand.

Scratchboard 5
Scratchboard 1
Scratchboard 18
Scratchboard 15
Scratchboard 7

Before participants left to mount their artworks at home, each participant received a certificate of completion.  I can’t wait to host more artings this fall.

Thanks:

I would like to thank my supportive sister Jasmine Chapman (BEd CommTech) for photographing this event for me.  Not many sisters get to do their BEd together – but we did!

I would like to thank my ACE professor Aynne Johnston for integrating this fun arting opportunity into our concentration.  Artings are so fun, productive, and only take a short time to do.  If we all took an hour to create each week/month, just imagine how we could beautify our world together.

Po

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613-779-7975

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Portia Chapman’s “Desk” Has Places to Go What is Your Learning Story?

Portia Chapman’s “Desk” Has Places to Go!

What is Your Learning Story?

desk learning is a journey
“Desk” was Digitally Inserted into My Photograph – Windsor, Ontario

As an Art Teacher and Teacher of First Nations, Mรฉtis, and Inuit Studies, I hope to take โ€œDeskโ€ on a learning tour. Covid-19 has taught us that learning happens everywhere in life โ€“ if we are willing to learn. The classroom suddenly became our living rooms, bedrooms, and even our cars.

We kept learning during a time that prevented us from going to the school building. I want to take โ€œDeskโ€ on a journey across the country.

A moving journey across our great land whereby each stop along the way invites people to sit at โ€œDeskโ€ and to tell their stories of learning. I really, really like school โ€“ sharing, learning, teaching, and so much more.

As the artist, I so aspire for โ€œDeskโ€ to remind all of us that we must not move backward โ€“ we must keep moving forward. Learning is everywhere and learning flourishes when we share our stories together.

desk learning everywhere
“Desk” was Digitally Inserted into My Photograph – Toronto, Ontario

This is “Desk” in the studio:

39
“Desk” by Portia “Po” Chapman, 2019 – In the Studio
 

“Desk” Artist Statement & Story with Additional Photos Including Construction

Po

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