OFRA SVORAI
Woven Water
January 24 to March 15, 2009
Ofra’s art began during her childhood on Kibbutz Barkai, Israel.
Her mother and father came from Montreal and New York City respectively,
to found the cooperative agricultural collective which gave Ofra her
unique experience of growing up.
By her teenage years she was known in her community as a natural artist.
Eventually, her residence transformed into a workshop for cutting, sewing
and dyeing cloth, and hanging indigo products could be seen draped over
her porch rails, drying in the sun. At eighteen Ofra served her two years
in the army, as all youth are required, and when she returned, she asked
to be sent to an art school in Jerusalem. Her request was declined. Determined
to live the life of an artist, she took her first opportunity to leave
for Canada and enrolled in Sheridan College School of Design in 1974.
Ofra’s student work formed the basis of her early efforts in the
world of textiles, covering pattern design, colour theory, silk screen
printing, dyeing with various fibres and, possibly most importantly,
the tradition of painting silk. Upon graduation she began to take her
wares to the small art and craft
shows which were popping up in the seventies. She also began to exhibit
in public and private galleries, with her compositions in abstract designs,
stylized floral images, and such products as hand-sewn and printed kid’s
knapsacks and lines of silk-screened shirts. She worked with painted
silk to make scarves, combined it with various materials to make jewellery,
and other fashion accessories.
Along with this work, a bond with the Canadian landscape began to form.
Ofra travelled to the east and west coasts to photograph and seek inspiration
from Newfoundland villages and the Queen Charlotte Islands, curious to
see how she could put her own mark on the art of silk painting. Preferring
to treat the silk as ground for a landscape, she soon moved from her
earlier floral compositions to using the resists and dye in a concerted
way to create her unmistakable paintings for which she has become best
known.
In 2001 Ofra made a decisive move away from her Toronto home to live
in the Beaver Valley near Kimberley. This was for her a transition back
to the more familiar natural surroundings which she had missed since
leaving her kibbutz. The move spurred a further transformation for Ofra,
away from most of her textile work, except for the silk landscapes. In
addition, she has taken on canvas and acrylic paint, in a move towards
greater freedom to further explore the subjects which she loves: the
Niagara Escarpment, from Grey County and up the Bruce Peninsula to the
northern end of Georgian Bay in Killarney, and down to the south in favourite
places such as the Kolapore Uplands where many winter scenes have been
generated. Here she celebrates the beauty of nature as each season presents
its best colours.
Ofra, nowadays, is solely engaged in her paintings, creating acrylics
during the winter and working in her silk studio in the fair weather.
It is the distinction of the two disciplines which helps to fuel progress
within each, as Ofra seeks ever new ways of depicting details and pushing
her techniques to greater length.
- Dave Robinson, curator
Ofra Svorai’s work can be viewed at:
www.ofrasvorai.com

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