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Alumni Profile-Pascale Arpin-(2011)

February 5, 2021

Time to read: 4 minutes

Pascale Arpin, Artist

Pascale Arpin

From article By Dan Rubinstein
Photos by Yuli Scheidt and Courtesy of Pascale Arpin

When Tim Burton Likes the Way You Paint

Pascale Arpin鈥檚 career also bridges art and commerce and it sprung from the College of the Humanities, but the similarities end there.

If you live in Ottawa, you鈥檝e likely seen Arpin鈥檚 work. Although she does illustrations and paints canvasses and has brought film and TV props and sets to life, her niche these days is custom sign painting and hand lettering 鈥 a traditional style that adorns the windows of about five dozen local businesses, including hip spots like on Bank St., Crows Nest Barber on Wellington St. and The Third in Hintonberg.

Pascale Arpin

Pascale Arpin

鈥淚 followed a winding road to get to my current obsession,鈥 says Arpin, who is arguably the city鈥檚 foremost practitioner of this intricate, ornate old-school craft.

鈥淚 always found it aesthetically pleasing but didn鈥檛 know how to do it. It looks like something you can create effortlessly, but you really have to understand the brush stroke and technique.鈥

杏吧原创鈥檚 Humanities program, she says, 鈥渉elped me understand the world and why the world is the way it is today.鈥 Moreover, as a francophone, it also gave her a nuanced grasp of English, which has been critical throughout her career.

After graduating, Arpin was awarded a scholarship to pursue a master鈥檚 degree in Sociology but instead moved to Iqaluit, where she lived for six years and did a series of jobs, from early childhood educator and youth arts programmer to a position with the Nunavut Arts and Crafts Association.

Although she was learning a lot about the business of arts, Arpin didn鈥檛 want to settle into a desk job, so she returned to freelance illustration and began working in film as a set decorator, scenic painter and props master. Wanting to be closer to family, she eventually moved back to Ottawa and dove into her own creative work.

A fateful trip to Minnesota in 2017 to take a workshop with renowned sign painter led to her passion for hand lettering and techniques such as gilded windows, in which a mix of gold leaf, gelatin and water is painted onto windows to create an eye-catching mirror-like effect.

Pascale Arpin brings her talents to Mighty Fine Bakehouse

Pascale Arpin brings her talents to Mighty Fine Bakehouse

鈥淚t鈥檚 aesthetically pleasing and fits the belief system that the companies that hire me are trying to uphold,鈥 Arpin says about bringing this look to Ottawa-area businesses.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e supporting local artisans and quality signage over cheap vinyl products. It鈥檚 a local economy of businesses supporting one another.鈥

The connections Arpin made while working with Meyer, who she has continued to learn from, led to a meeting with Hollywood filmmaker Tim Burton in Las Vegas. Burton was struck by her work and hired her to fabricate and paint pieces for a he was working on for the city鈥檚 .

鈥淭hat was a big turning point for me,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f Tim Burton liked the way I paint, then I needed to paint more.鈥

Arpin also recently illustrated a comic book written by 杏吧原创 Cultural Mediations PhD student , 鈥,鈥 which tells the story of Tierney鈥檚 real-life experiences navigating the medical system as a trans person seeking surgery.

鈥淚鈥檝e done a lot of fascinating things,鈥 says Arpin.

鈥淲hat I do now is so different from what I studied at university, but for me everything has been cumulative, and you always benefit from having more knowledge.鈥

Pascale Arpin