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This is an archived event from Culture Days 2025.

On Nature's Stage: Astrid Notte

In-person

Painting Self-guided Visual arts
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Date and time

Location

Rainforest Arts Gallery

9781 Willow Street

Chemainus, BC

Directions: Located inside the Chemainus Coast Capital.

Access

Free.

Offered in English.

Wheelchair accessible.

About

Astrid Notte’s art often expresses her spiritual connection to nature. She is well known for her impressionistic representations of coniferous trees. That connection was forged in her earliest years.

Born in Berlin during the Second World War, she remembers fleeing into an underground bunker to escape the quaking and thunder of Allied bombing raids. She also remembers a magical arboreal encounter. “There was a time when Mother was able to take me to an area where there were trees, and I can still remember. I must have been four years old, and that really had a profound effect.”

Her art recalls and records experiences of communing with the forests. “It just happens. I paint a tree and the tree tells me what to do. It’s intuitive,” Notte said. “It’s a connection. It’s very difficult to say and explain, but to paint, it’s easier.”

More recently she has been inspired by a method called neurographica. Developed by Russian philosopher and psychologist Pavel Piskarev in 2014, neurographica connects the artist’s strokes to neural pathways. Criss-crossing lines are drawn meditatively on her canvases. Notte then rounds and ‘smooths’ the intersecting corners and paints what she sees outlined in the bounding shapes. The result is reminiscent of stained glass.

Notte took up the technique after a serious car accident in 2022 made it difficult for her to paint in her accustomed styles. The process helps reduce chronic pain, but for Notte it also became an art form in and for itself.

“This helped me continue painting,” she said. “It can be very abstract but with me, I need to have it represent something.” Brilliant immersive works like Beneath the Waves have emerged from these neurographical patterns.

Notte’s On Nature’s Stage show will be on display at Rainforest Arts from Aug. 5 to Sept. 27. She will hold neurographica demonstrations Aug. 9, 12 to 2 p.m. and Sept. 6, 1 to 3 p.m.

The gallery, located at 9781 Willow Street in Chemainus, is open Tuesday to Saturday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Organizer

Chemainus Valley Cultural Arts Society

For more than 20 years, the Chemainus Valley Cultural Arts Society has been bringing live music, visual arts, and—more recently—literary voices to the community.

A dedicated team of volunteers and sponsors supports the society in fulfilling its mission: To foster, celebrate, and promote the music, visual, literary, and performing arts of all cultures in Chemainus, Crofton, and the surrounding region. To seek funding to promote, enhance, and maintain the purposes of the society.

The Chemainus Valley Cultural Arts Society believes the arts are an integral part of a healthy, happy community. Cutural events and activities are brought to audiences in the region, and the arts are supported through workshops, displays, and other activities.

CVCAS is inclusive. The arts in many forms, styles, and from differing cultural perspectives are supported.

This event is part of a hub:

Cowichan Celebrates Culture Days!

CVRD Arts & Culture Division Duncan, BC

The Cowichan Region is home to five arts councils and countless cultural organizations and artists. Did you know that 2% of the province's visual artists live in the Cowichan Valley Regional District? We are surrounded by art, heritage, cul...

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