| Alan
Boileau was born in 1958 in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada. He grew
up in a large family of 8 children, heavily involved with sports but having
been dealt a blow with the tragic passing of his mother, due to cancer,
when he was just 10 years old. In search of adventure and recreation,
Alan moved to western Canada in his late 20's. It was here that he met
his wife Deborah, began a family and went to work full time on his artwork.
Alan lives and works in the spectacular Okanagan Valley of British Columbia,
Canada. His wooden wall sculptures and sculptural relief panels are sold
at the finest galleries in the major North American art markets. |
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| About
the method... Alan Boileau considers his creations sculptural relief in wood. He generally makes wall sculpture, but is not limited to it and has done ceiling and floor mounted installations. The artwork is made from solid; kiln dried eastern white pine. To come up with a subject to sculpt, Alan Boileau begins with an idea, then draws it and expands the drawing to the scale he has determined that the piece will be. He is then ready to create the image in wood. A foundation or starting piece is cut, and the artwork builds from that point. Alan is always aware of the amount of relief that he is creating in any one art piece, as he believes that there is a fine line between too much relief, which would appear chunky, and the uneventfullness of too little projection. Alan Boileau's work has developed into brightly colored wall sculptures, but certain settings call for monotone works or perhaps something subliminally earth tone. Regardless of color, once all the wood preparation is done, the color is applied with oil based wood stains, and finally a sealing coat of lacquer is applied. The art is sanded, lacquered again and then this process is repeated 2 or 3 more times. Many of Alan's sculptures are one of a kind; he has an idea, creates the art and never does another like it. However, if he feels that the idea could be expanded on, he will continue to develop the image or the theme, changing expressions, clothing and color. |