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NEWS ARCHIVE - 2024
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All text, photography and artwork is COPYRIGHT by GARY SIM unless noted otherwise.
DECEMBER 17: LARGE COMMISSIONED CANVAS PRINT ON DISPLAY
A new client asked if they could order a large version of my linocut print 
South Shore, so I looked into how that could be done. I made a high 
resolution scan of the print, then had OPUS art supplies print it on what they 
called "solvent satin canvas" at five feet wide. The finished product was just installed 
in the client's home, they were kind enough to send me a photograph of the print 
on their living room wall. Thank you!

DECEMBER 10: LOST LAGOON FRAMES NOW REPRESENTING SIM ARTWORK
I reached out to Miko Abuyen this week, the owner of Lost Lagoon Frames in the Denman Mall, 
to see if she would like to show my work in her store. The answer was "YES" so I took down 
a number of framed original drawings and limited edition prints, as well as a collection of 
unframed prints and a number of artist cards. Please click on link below for more information:
DECEMBER 8: VANCITY CREDIT UNION EXHIBITION NOW OVER
The exhibition was taken down on December 4 after almost four months on display. Thank you 
to everyone who saw the show, who commented on the artwork, and especially to all of the people 
who purchased prints from the show. Sales from the exhibition included 3 impressions 
of Big Bamboo, 2 of The Spinner, 2 of the Mallards, and 1 each of 
Otters on Savary Dock and Higher Rises. A large format digital print of South Shore on 
canvas was also ordered by a client. Special thanks to Curator Mia Weinberg for her 
work selecting the artwork, hanging it, adjusting it during the show, and taking it down.
 
   
 
   
 
   
 
   
 
   

Prints purchased from the exhibition, click images for edition information
NOVEMBER 23: CHARLES HENRY RAWSON COLLECTION OF EARLY B.C. ARTWORK
A collection of 70 early B.C. artworks was given to me recently, based on research about 
the artist C.H. Rawson in my 
BC Artists project. The artworks are dated from 1897 to 
1946, and include a wide variety of landscape paintings done all over the province.

"Gorse, Victoria 1919".

Grouse Mountain Chalet in Winter, 1927, 2-colour print

Church, 49th and Fraser, Vancouver
OCTOBER 30: VANCITY CREDIT UNION EXHIBITION EXTENDED TO DECEMBER 4
The exhibition of my limited edition prints in the window of the 
VanCity Credit Union on Robson at Denman has been well received, and led to a 
number of comments and sales. This week the Curator asked to extend the exhibition until 
December 4, so of course I said yes. See link for more information:
ORIGINAL RELIEF PRINTS BY GARY SIM
AUGUST 19: WEST END SENIORS NETWORK MUSIC & MAKERS FESTIVAL ON AUGUST 21
CANCELLED DUE TO WEATHER PREDICTION
AUGUST 12: VANCITY CREDIT UNION EXHIBITION NOW ON DISPLAY
A curated selection of 12 limited edition prints is now on display in the window of the 
VanCity Credit Union on Robson at Denman through to mid-November - a 
full 3-month long exhibition. See link for more information:
ORIGINAL RELIEF PRINTS BY GARY SIM
 
   
 
   

Photo on left is courtesy Curator Mia Weinberg; center photo is a night view by Gary Sim
JULY 23: UNFINISHED DRAWING "COASTAL DEFENSE" ALMOST DONE AFTER 10 YEARS

Coastal Defense
I started this drawing either in 2014 or 2015, after I finished drawing 
Waiting For More Ships From China. However, somewhere along the line I bogged 
down in the amount of drawing required to finish it. After leaning it up against a 
wall for a few months, I put it in a drawer to keep the dust off. Every couple 
of years or so I would look at it again, and sometimes do a little more drawing on it. 
In Spring 2024 I did more drawing in hopes of finishing it in time for Art in the City, 
or the WECC display case, but didn't have the time. Now in late July I am trying again.
The actual image is 16" high x 22" wide, drawn on BFK Rives Infinity paper, using 
Copic Multi-liner pigment ink pens, graphite pencil, and Prismacolor pencils. 
The drawing is done from an enlargment of a digital photograph that I took one day 
during a hike in Lighthouse Park, West Vancouver, from a small rock offshore that was exposed 
at low tide. The drawing shown is a work in progress, there are a few things left to do.
The Point Atkinson lighthouse has been protecting the entry to Vancouver harbour for many years, and 
I grew up listening to its foghorn blasting away on many dark foggy nights. Now its radio beacon, radar 
reflectors, and other modern gadgets have supplanted the horn and the light. In the foreground 
of the drawing an abandoned World War II searchlight emplacement sits intact, ready to be 
manned again at a moment's notice. Behind the searchlight and out of sight in this view was 
the "examination" gun, a cannon manned at all times during the war, ready to repel invaders 
and to fire warning shots at vessels that didn't stop at the examination line prior to 
entering harbour. The hard rocks along the shore have also done their share of 
coastal defense, they show the linear scars of glaciation and glacial rounding from an 
outflowing glacier during the last ice age.
JULY 20: VANCITY CREDIT UNION EXHIBITION STARTS IN AUGUST
An exciting opportunity came up recently to have a solo exhibition of my artwork in 
the window of the VanCity Credit Union on Robson at Denman. A curated selection of 
12 limited edition prints will be on display from August 12 through to November - a 
full 3-month long exhibition. See link for more information:
ORIGINAL RELIEF PRINTS BY GARY SIM
JULY 15: SEVEN NEW SUMMER ARTWORKS
 
 

BIG BAMBOO linocut: final impression and block prior to trimming for printing.
This is an enlarged (11"h x 8.2"w) and more detailed version of my edition titled Five 
Bamboo (6" x 4") that I cut in 2023.
 
 
 
 

This is a series of drawings from life, started while sitting on various benches along the 
seawall in Coal Harbour, Vancouver. There is usually only a little time to do a sketch, 
since the wind may come up, it starts to rain, clouds cover the sun, the shadows move and 
the light changes ... you may also be getting roasted in the sun, shivering in the cold, 
bothered by mosquitoes or other insects. Thus, each of these drawings began as a pencil 
sketch from life, just sitting on a bench trying to decide how much of the view I should 
put into the drawing. Ideally it goes well, outlines of mountains, trees and 
buildings are added, along with colour notations. Usually one sitting is enough to get the 
drawing started, it is then finished at home with pigment pen & ink and Prismacolour and 
graphite pencils. Occasionally I go back to the same location to add or correct some details.
 
 
 
 

Lost Lagoon and Low Tide On Barclay Street are another two drawings from life. I was sitting on 
a park bench looking over Lost Lagoon, Stanley Park, Vancouver in the first drawing. The second 
drawing illustrates an unfortunate plumbing failure of our apartment building's outdoor pool, 
just when pool weather has arrived. This drawing required a number of visits to the pool deck to 
work out details. The old Ford pickup truck is drawn from photographs that I 
took in 2012 on an Okanagan backroad.
JULY 14: POP-UP SHOW OF SIM ARTWORK IN NARAMATA
 
 

Sim artwork on display at 4th Meridian, Naramata. Photographs courtesy 
4th Meridian.
My friends at 4th Meridian 
in Penticton acquired a nice collection 
of my artwork for sale in their stores. At the moment the work is being displayed 
in their summer store in Naramata. They put up a one-day solo display of the work 
on Sunday July 14, but alas a bicycle race closed the road to Naramata that day. 
They will be putting the show up again on Sunday July 21.
JUNE 11: IN THE DITCH

I heard about this book a few years ago, but was unable to find a copy of it to read. 
I tried again recently on bookfinder.com, and discovered that a number of copies were 
available for online purchase. I promptly ordered a copy, and it arrived in the mail 
today. YIPPERS! 184 pages, softcover, a second printing of the first and only edition. 
I have yet to do more than flip through the pages, but it looks fascinating. It is a 
collection of stories about derailments and salvage operations on the Pacific Great Eastern 
railway, later BC RAIL, from 1929 to 1965. I knew some of the people mentioned in the book, 
and worked with them when I was employed by BC RAIL, and am familiar with most of the 
locations that are described, so it is a precious memoir for me. As a bonus, Robert D. 
Turner, Curator Emeritus at the Royal BC Museum, wrote a nice review of the book, as he 
did for my book Railway Rock Gang, which essentially continues 
the story from 1978 to 1987.
JUNE 10: VANCOUVER HISTORICAL SOCIETY ARTICLE ON T.S.H. SHEARMAN

Image courtesy Vancouver Historical Society
My friend Michael Kluckner, President of the Vancouver Historical Society (VHS), recently posted 
this article in their June 2024 newsletter, Vol. 63 No. 9. The article is abstracted 
from a large number of newspaper clippings on Thomas S.H. Shearman (1859-1944), one of the uncles of early 
Vancouver artist Maud Rees Sherman, and the brother of 
Ruiter Stinson Sherman. An interesting connection between 
the Sherman family and the VHS is that the Society's founding President was Walter Noble 
Sage, Maud Sherman's first cousin on her mother's side of the family.
Unfotunately, Shearman's lifelong quest to build the world's largest telescope was never 
realized. It wasn't for lack of persistance! Shearman was Vancouver's first official 
weatherman, in addition to his telescope quest. For many years he was actually kept on 
retainer by Edward Mahon, an early developer of Vancouver and the North Shore, as Mahon's 
personal astronomer. Mahon was an ardent amateur astronomer, who even made his own small 
telescopes, probably with Shearman's help. Refer to THE GREEN NECKLACE, by Walter 
Volovsek, for Mahon's extensive biography.
JUNE 9: FLOATEL ARRIVING IN VANCOUVER HARBOUR

I was doing a sketch of Vancouver harbour on June 9, sitting on a bench on the seawall. 
It was a very nice day and a lot of people were out on the seawall and in the harbour. 
A cruise ship came into view from behind Brockton Point, slowly cruising along the north 
shore of the harbour. It didn't go to a cruise ship terminal. I found out later that it 
was going to visit the drydock on the north shore. It was Bridgeman's FLOATEL, a 
cruise ship that has been converted into a floating hotel, for use as housing adjacent 
to projects that are close to the ocean. In this case, the ship is intended to house 
construction workers at the new LNG plant being built on Howe Sound at Woodfibre.
The ship has actually been in the news recently. The town council in Squamish has yet 
to approve its use, and in early June they actually ordered it to leave. On the other 
hand, the BC government has officially ordered it to be used at Woodfibre. As of mid-June 
the folks in Squamish are chewing this over. As usual, there are at least two different 
schools of thought about it.
 
MAY 24: ART IN THE CITY 2024 PHOTOGRAPHS

Here are a couple of belated photographs of the Art in the City event May 3 - 5 at the West End 
Community Centre. I took down some large drawings and two framed etchings for display. They were 
all admired but not sold. It was actually a bit of a slow event. For one thing there was a Canucks 
game at the same time as the Friday night opening, and there was a marathon being run around the 
West End on Sunday. Luckily, Saturday was quite busy. I took my self-published greeting cards to sell 
for the first time in years, and a steady stream of $5 bills trickled into my wallet. I also sold 
a few limited edition prints, and people took a lot of business cards.
I made a point of taking samples of all the tools and materials that I use for making relief prints 
and etchings, and spent a lot of time describing how I get the results that I do. A couple of 
people asked if I give lessons, which was interesting. I had organized two linocut workshops in 
early 2020, but they were cancelled because of the pandemic, and I haven't tried again.

MAY 11: WEST END LIVING LIBRARY
Yesterday I tried something different, and for an hour became a "living book" across 
the street at Barclay Manor, headquarters of the West End Seniors Network. I talked 
about my book Railway Rock Gang, and the kinds of things the Rock Gang did on 
a daily basis, or on special projects. I took along a number of photographs taken 
at the time, plus assorted ephemera. Although the audience was intended to be quite 
small, a number of un-registered visitors swarmed the room and more chairs were 
brought in. Eventually there were 13 people in the room besides me. The talk went 
well, and there were a lot of interesting questions.
MAY 5: NEW LIMITED EDITION PRINTS
 
 
 
 

Mock Turtle, Southern Snail, Northern Snail (click images for more info)
APRIL 30: NEW RELIEF PRINT "CANADA GOOSE"

Canada Goose
This linocut is made from a photograph that I took at Lost Lagoon, Stanley Park, Vancouver. 
I liked the reflection of the goose in the water. This impression is from the second state of 
the lino block. The actual image is 6" high by 8" wide, and is now available for purchase 
in a limited edition of 30 impressions.
APRIL 18: 2024 ART IN THE CITY FLYER

Greetings! The Art in the City event is just two weeks away, and I am busy getting 
my artwork ready for the show. There will be a number of new artworks on exhibit, as 
well as artworks created in other years. This year I will also have a number of 
greeting cards for sale.
APRIL 16: NEW RELIEF PRINT "TREE SWALLOWS"

Tree Swallows
I saw these two swallows sitting on a branch beside Lost Lagoon, Stanley Park, Vancouver. 
I was out for a morning walk, and it struck me that these birds would make a simple but 
striking composition for a new relief print. This impression is from the second state of 
the lino block. The actual image is 6" high by 8" wide, and is now available for purchase 
in a limited edition of 30 impressions. Japanese Unryu paper was laid across the branch 
in a few places to provide some random texture on the branch.
MARCH 24: THE BRITISH COLUMBIA REVIEW POSTS ARTICLE ON BC ARTISTS AND SIM

Screen capture from online article
The British Columbia Review is an online web site that reviews publications related to B.C. and 
also provides occasional editorial articles and commentaries. For some years there has been an 
offer outstanding for them to write a review of BC Artists. Trevor Marc-Hughes recently asked author 
Christina Johnson-Dean to do the review, and it was posted yesterday. 
It is a very complimentary article, and the review extends beyond the BC Artists project to include 
my own biographical and personal activities through the years. There are lots of active links in 
the article that provide instant access to web pages that are mentioned in the text. Johnson-Dean 
clearly "dove deeply" into both the BC Artists and Sim Publishing websites to find information 
and images. Luckily my policy of "don't lie in writing" kept the review accurate.
An interesting part of the article compares how Johnson-Dean used the project 13 years ago, 
researching artist Ina D.D. Uhthoff for Mother Tongue Publishing's Unheralded Artists 
series of books, to how much information is in the file about the artist (and others) today. 
Typically the well-known artists with numerous monographs are updated only with 
additional exhibition information or newspaper reviews. I prefer not to tell life stories if 
they have already been well told, as Johnson-Dean did with Ina Uhthoff and Mary Filer, for example.
MARCH 13: EXHIBITION NOW ON AT WEST END COMMUNITY CENTRE

Adventures of Noman - click image for exhibition information

Birds Around Us - click image for exhibition information
The two new exhibitions went up smoothly yesterday, despite the large number of 
artworks and all of the ephemera added to the birds part of the show. For the first time 
I simply used gridwall hangers, with the artwork attached to them with super magnets. 
No picture frames to purchase or lug around, and no glass to cause unwanted reflections. 
The intent of the Noman show is to make it look like a deconstructed sketchbook that has 
been spread across the wall. The birds exhibition shows the final artworks, plus all the 
tools and equipment used to produce the prints. Yesterday a number of people came to see 
the show while I was there (and not there), so it is off to a good start!
MARCH 10: EXHIBITION OF BIRD DRAWINGS & PRINTS ADDED TO WECC SHOW
MARCH 8: THREE NEW LITTLE BIRD LINOCUTS
 
 
 
 

Red-breasted Nuthatch, White-breasted Nuthatch, Oregon Junco
I spent quite a bit of time this winter trying to photograph a number of species of "little birds" 
that visit my porch. After taking hundreds of pictures - most showing either a blurred 
bird or a place where a bird had just flown away - I managed to take a few that were 
useful for making linocuts. Each bird is represented life size, each linocut image 
is 3" high x 4.5" wide. Click on images for more information.
FEBRUARY 25: MAJOR UPDATES TO BC ARTISTS PROJECT
It may seem silly to announce "major updates" to the BRITISH 
COLUMBIA ARTISTS project, considering that there are already over 6,000 web pages 
and images posted. However, a lot of information has been added this year in two main 
series of updates. First, eight exhibition catalogues for the 
B.C. Society of Fine Arts from 1950 to 1957 
have been transcribed and all artist biographies updated or created. 
Second, a number of newspaper clippings have been transcribed related to artist 
Maud Sherman and her father 
R.S. Sherman, both of them exhibiting with the 
Vancouver Sketch Club from 1918 to 1924. In addition to expanding 
their exhibition records, this has created numerous artist biographies, updated many more, 
and listed hundreds of artworks.
The project continues to receive many visitors. In the past week alone, there were 553 
visitors, who looked at 1,738 web pages, an average of 3.14 page views per visitor. Each 
visitor's average duration of visit was 207 seconds, for a combined total of almost 32 hours! 
Thank you to all visitors, I hope that you found some useful information.
FEBRUARY 16: THE ADVENTURES OF NOMAN EXHIBITION MARCH 12 - APRIL 2

Nomanclature
New exhibition of Sim drawings just booked starting March 12, refer to:
JANUARY 29: SIM PRINT "WAITING" AT ONLINE AUCTION

Waiting
A friend emailed to let me know that one of my limited edition prints is up for 
auction at Invaluable on-line auctions. Very little of my artwork has come onto the 
secondary market. I donated this particular print to the Alcuin Society's annual 
book auction 20 years ago, and it was purchased by collector and printer Don Atkins. 
He passed away in 2006, and his widow Barbara in 2023, some of their collection is now 
coming onto the market. This auction closed on February 11.
JANUARY 3: BC ARTISTS DONATION OFFER
I have been compiling information on BC Artists for over 25 years, and have 
produced a massive amount of material that is posted for free public 
access at BC Artists. However, posting the 
project for free access means that I pay for absolutely everything. Since a 
lot of people use the project on a regular basis, I thought it would be 
appropriate to solicit donations in support of the project. I cannot offer 
a tax receipt, but I have put together a rewards program for donors. Please 
look at the web page at:
JANUARY 2: TRIAL PROOFS OF A NEW PRINT

Blackberry Harbour State 1.
This is another old fishing boat that I saw when I was on vacation at Egmont, 
at the northern end of the Sechelt Peninsula. I can see a few things that I'd 
like to work on before I do an edition, but this is pretty close to what I wanted.
JANUARY 1: ANOTHER NEW YEAR
Best wishes for a happy and successful New Year to all visitors to my website. 
For the first time in years I didn't even wake up at midnight due to all of the 
cheering, yelling, honking, and fireworks. There were no fireworks, and luckily no 
parties that I could hear in this apartment building, and if anyone was cheering 
they weren't very loud.
2023 was a pretty crazy year in a lot of ways, two major wars in progress and a lot 
of smaller ones, and lots of climate disasters including floods, wildfires, tornadoes, hurricanes, 
earthquakes, landslides, and all the rest. It seems that all of that will get worse.
2023 was a good year for my artwork, I created 11 limited edition prints, and 
exhibited at three successful events during the year, selling 40 artworks. Hopefully 
2024 will be even better.
I plan to do less work this year on BC ARTISTS and will 
try to finish LOOKING FOR MAUD, my biography of early Vancouver artist 
Maud Rees Sherman and her family, her life, and times. 
I have essentially been working on that since 1996, and I need to finish it. I made 
good progress on it last year, although I spent much time working on a spreadsheet 
of the Sherman family's residences, families, and employment, gleaned from extensive 
searches on the internet for City Directories in BC and in Ontario. That produced 
some interesting results, especially in Ontario prior to 1900, before most of the Sherman 
family moved to BC.
Thanks to everyone who has helped with BC ARTISTS, and to everyone who purchased or 
expressed interest in my artwork.
Continue to 2023
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