Ottawa Family Fun: Artissimo and MC Escher at the National Gallery

When I heard that there would be an MC Escher exhibit at the National Gallery during March Break, I knew I wanted to bring the boys. Two love art and one loves math – how could we go wrong with an exhibit about a “Mathemagician”? We added an extra kid for good measure – in for a penny, in for a pound, right? And then when I thought about all those wonderful corridors and leading lines everywhere inside the National Gallery, I knew it would be an excellent place to have some fun with my new fisheye lens.

Ottawa Family Fun: Artissimo at the National Gallery

We didn’t even make it all the way to the Gallery and I was finding new ways to look at familiar things (which is really the most fun part of a new lens, IMHO.)

Ottawa Family Fun: Artissimo at the National Gallery

I have always loved the work of Dutch artist MC Escher, and I knew the kids would be intrigued by some of his more surrealistic later work. They were actually really engaged with the whole exhibit, though. They were intrigued by the difference between the pencil sketches and the woodcuts, and loved some of the pattern progression pieces where negative space actually becomes the dominant subject.

Ottawa Family Fun: Artissimo at the National Gallery

Ottawa Family Fun: Artissimo at the National Gallery

Turned out that the most difficult part of the afternoon was not getting the kids engaged in the art, but in helping the littlest overcome his compulsion to trace over all the lines with his fingertips. “No touching, sweetheart, remember? (pause) No touching, please. (pause) Seriously Luke, no touching!”

Ottawa Family Fun: Artissimo at the National Gallery

(And yes, in case you were wondering, you ARE allowed to take photos in some of the exhibitions. Not all of them – you need to watch for the signs where some pieces are forbidden, and of course no flash. But I was delighted by the fact that we were allowed to take pictures pretty much everywhere we went. And so I did! And once I had the fisheye lens on the camera, I just decided to roll with it for the whole afternoon, odd distortion and weird framing be damned. Because art!)

Visiting the gallery while wrangling four kids is a little distracting, but I did manage to see my longtime favourite MC Escher sketch called Relativity. I tore this out of a communications textbook when I was in university and it was pinned to my work cubicle wall for years.

So the Escher exhibit took us a while longer than I would have expected since the kids were so engaged, and we were just talking about which other galleries might be interesting when we came upon the Artissimo program in progress in the main foyer. I’d read about the Artissimo programs on the National Gallery’s website, but frankly, they didn’t do the program justice. It is AMAZING!

Three of the kids decided to go on a scavenger hunt where they selected a costume, dressed in it, and then had to find the piece of art containing their character. The fourth child chose a mystery feely box scavenger hunt: you are given a box with holes on the sides for your hands, but you can’t look in. You guess by feeling the objects what they are, and then try to guess which work of art they relate to.

Here they are with their costumes and their paintings – and no, Tristan is not wearing that expression because I made him wear the dress. HE chose the dress, and the serious face is supposed to be miming the painting.

Ottawa Family Fun: Artissimo at the National Gallery

One of the kids was a slightly more sophisticated art connoisseur while the others were a little more goal oriented, so I had three scrambling through the galleries looking to solve the puzzle and one laggard saying, “But, wait, can we look at this painting? Hang on, look at this. Okay, after this can we go back and look at that painting?” It wasn’t the most leisurely browse of the Gallery, but the kids sure were engaged with the art.

Ottawa Family Fun: Artissimo at the National Gallery

And then I had a bit more fun with the fisheye lens.

Ottawa Family Fun: Artissimo at the National Gallery

There may or may not have been a visit to another downtown Ottawa icon, just to round out a perfect day out.

Ottawa Family Fun: Artissimo at the National Gallery

So if you’re looking for a wonderful day out with the kids, don’t overlook the National Gallery. Admission is an unexpectedly affordable $24 for a family, or $12 for adults, $6 for youth, and kids under 12 free! MC Escher: the Mathemagician runs through May 3.

Photo(s) of the day: A lesson on Manotick School of Music’s grand piano

Simon had the opportunity to take his weekly music lesson on the grand piano at the Manotick School of Music yesterday, and I thought it would be fun to get a photo or two. I’d just picked up a second-hand fish-eye lens and thought it would be a fun place to take it for a test drive. A fish-eye lens has an extremely short focal length, which gives it a very distinctive distortion, making things at the centre seem to bow inwards, especially if you are particularly close to them.

Like this:

Lessons on a grand piano

The effect is more pronounced the closer you are to your subject, so Simon doesn’t look particularly distorted but the piano seems to warp around him:

Lessons on a grand piano

Lessons on a grand piano

I pulled the fish-eye off to capture this quick portrait of Manotick School of Music director Lisa. She was showing us that you have to water high end pianos in a manner not dissimilar to how you water your natural Christmas trees. All the years I’ve had music in my life and I had no idea – then again, I haven’t spent a lot of time around grand pianos, either. And by the way, she is an incredibly nice lady!

Lessons on a grand piano

And then I took a few more fun shots, just to explore the artsy possibilities of the fish-eye.

Lessons on a grand piano

Lessons on a grand piano

I think it’s going to be a fun new toy to play with. Can’t wait to see what it does to a PEI beach landscape! And Simon loved the chance to play such a beautiful instrument.

Disclosure: Manotick School of Music is one of my wonderful bloggy sponsors, but I’d have shared these and effused at Lisa’s sweet nature regardless. If you’re interested in lessons on the grand piano in Lisa’s studio, see her Musical Thought site or the Manotick School of Music site for additional information.

Photo of the day: Snowman – finally!

It’s been such an odd winter in Ottawa, hasn’t it? Not a lot of snow before Christmas, and then temperatures so ridiculously cold that nobody wanted to go outside to play, and the snow was too powdery to make a snowman even if you were to brave the cold.

Until today!

snowman - finally!

Lucas was so excited he didn’t even want to come inside after school – he went straight into the yard to make his own snowman. This is the first one he ever built entirely on his own. And I can’t tell you how happy I was to be out taking his photo without even a coat on – just my boots, and only a little bit cold, not “oh no my skin has frozen solid” cold.

Looks like spring may come this year after all!

Photos of the day: Winter walk on the Jack Pine Trail and a Spring Thaw portrait deal

Did you see?? The sun came out AND it was above minus 20 today. It was practically summer!! We celebrated with a walk on one of our favourite Ottawa trails, and were delighted by the number of animals who came out to say hello: pileated woodpeckers, nuthatches and chickadees, a merlin, a few playful red squirrels and then, to our delight, a big fat porcupine came sauntering up the trail beside us.

Winter walk on the Jack Pine Trail

Winter walk on the Jack Pine Trail

Winter walk on the Jack Pine Trail

Winter walk on the Jack Pine Trail

Winter walk on the Jack Pine Trail

Winter walk on the Jack Pine Trail

Winter walk on the Jack Pine Trail

Winter walk on the Jack Pine Trail

(I did not zoom in for this – in fact, I had to back up to get him in the frame as the porcupine sauntered past us!)

Winter walk on the Jack Pine Trail

Winter walk on the Jack Pine Trail

It was a gorgeous afternoon out, made even more delicious by the recent spate of miserable cold.

If you’re interested, I’d love to do a few sessions of winter portraits out there before the snow melts and the trails get muddy. For any weekend in March, I’ll offer a spring thaw discount if you’d like to do a “feed the chickadees” family portrait hike at the Jack Pine Trail – $150 for the session fee, and you only buy whatever prints or files you want. Prices are listed on my photo site.

I’ll even bring the bird seed!

Photo(s) of the day: Hockey Day in Manotick

I am pretty sure I am the LAST person you expected to be celebrating Hockey Day in Canada. The boys wanted to go out and play for a while on our local rink though, and while an hour outside in the -15C plus windchill was not high on my list of favourite ways to spend a Saturday afternoon – we had a blast. Well, they had a blast and I took pictures, and everybody was happy. And when it started to snow but the sun was still shining through a bit? Well that was downright magical.

See? (Yes, we have a spare. Always good to have an extra kid around, especially one as sweet natured as this one.)

Hockey day in Canada

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Hockey day in Canada-3

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Hockey day in Canada-8

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Hope your Valentine’s Day was also filled with sunshine, smiles and love!

Photo of the day: Late afternoon

I was making dinner when I looked over and saw Lucas caught in the late afternoon light streaming in the window. I loved how the shadows made a geometric frame around him, but the contrast between the light and dark was so stark that the light areas were blowing out – it was so bright all detail in the light areas like his cheek were being lost. The black and white version was much more forgiving, and I think it shows off the framing shapes more, too.

BW evening light

I love the way the late afternoon light comes into the house this time of year, not least because it means that spring is coming – eventually!

Photo of the day: Pups in a pile

Our darling old dog Katie arrived in our lives long before any babies did, and I think that’s why she always acted in a very maternal way toward them.

Bella, on the other hand, arrived into a pack of noisy, playful boys, and it’s clear she thinks the boys are her littermates; never moreso than when given the choice, she will choose to lie on top of one of them rather than just about anywhere else.

Like this:

Pups in a pile

I can’t figure out what I like more, the fact that Tristan is tolerating this or the expression on Bella’s face as she looks directly into the camera that says, “What?!”