GUIDE TO GALLERIES + MUSEUMSpreview-art.com/oldsite/to-go/preview02-2015.pdf · 205 8th Ave SE....
Transcript of GUIDE TO GALLERIES + MUSEUMSpreview-art.com/oldsite/to-go/preview02-2015.pdf · 205 8th Ave SE....
ALBERTA� � BRITISH COLUMBIA � OREGON � WASHINGTONGUIDE TO GALLERIES + MUSEUMS
FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015www.preview-art.com
denbigh fine art services
Denbigh provides a full range of fine art services includinglocal and international transport, installation, storage,custom packing and case construction, worldwide shipping,collection management and framing.
We have provided these local and international services to thearts community since 1985. Our clients include artists, designers,art consultants, private and corporate collectors, galleries,museums and art institutions from around the world.
Denbigh guarantees the expert handling of your fine artwith the highest standard of care and attention. Our dedicatedteam of art handling specialists is committed to providingthe best possible service in the industry.
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6 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015
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Feb/Mar 2015Vol. 29 No.1
ALBERTA 8 Banff, Black Diamond, Calgary 15 Edmonton 16 Lethbridge 17 Medicine Hat, St AlbertBRITISH COLUMBIA 18 Abbotsford 19 Bowen Island, Burnaby 20 Campbell River, Castlegar, Chilliwack, Coquitlam 21 Fort Langley, Grand Forks, Greenville 22 Kamloops, Kelowna 23 Maple Ridge 26 Nanaimo, Nelson, New Westminster 27 North Vancouver 29 Penticton 30 Port Alberni, Port Moody, Prince George, Prince Rupert 31 Qualicum Beach, Richmond, Salmon Arm, Sidney, Squamish, Sunshine Coast (Gibsons and Roberts Creek) 32 Surrey 34 Tsawwassen, Vancouver 48 Vernon, Victoria 52 West Vancouver 53 Whistler, White Rock 54 Williams Lake
OREGON 54 Cannon Beach 55 Marylhurst, Portland 62 Salem
WASHINGTON 62 Bainbridge Island 64 Bellevue, Bellingham 65 Everett, Friday Harbor, La Conner, Lynden, Port Angeles 66 Seattle 72 Spokane, Tacoma© 1986-2015 Preview Graphics Inc. ISSN 1481-2258Member of Tourism Vancouver, Tourism Victoria andVisit Seattle.Reproduction in whole or in part is strictly forbidden.
HEAD OFFICE + CANADIAN EDITORIAL + SALESTEL 604-254-1405 FAX 604-254-1314TOLL FREE 1-877-254-1405E-MAIL [email protected] ADDRESS P.O. Box 549, Station A,Vancouver, BC V6C 2N3 Canada Janice Whitehead, PublisherShirley Lum, Listings EditorAnne-Marie St-Laurent, Art Director
U.S. EDITORIAL + SALES OFFICEAllyn Cantor TEL 415-971-8279E-MAIL [email protected] SUBSCRIPTIONS $24
28 Conservator’s Corner58 Confessions60 Gallery Views71 Catalogues of Interest73 Art Services + Materials76 Index of Galleries78 Openings + Events
contents
Printed on FSA approvedand recycled paper
Cover: Jeff Nachtigall, Wild Man 5 (2014), acrylic on paper [Newzones, Calgary AB, Mar 14-May 2]
vignettes
previews
The views, opinions and positions expressed are those of theauthors and do not necessarily reflect those of the publisher.Please note that all gallery particulars are set out as submittedby clients prior to the date of publication.
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10 Future Station: Alberta Biennialof Contemporary Art
Art Gallery of Alberta
12 Antonia Hirsch: Negative Space Southern Alberta Art Gallery
14 Crossed: Ahmad Tabrizi grunt gallery
18 Eloquent Objects: Georgia O’Keeffeand Still Life Art in New Mexico
Tacoma Art Museum
22 Ancestry and Artistry: Maya Textilesfrom Guatemala
The Reach Gallery Museum
26 Geometry of Knowing (Part 3) Simon Fraser University Gallery
34 Michael Levin: Memento Elissa Cristall Gallery
40 Gleaners Nanaimo Art Gallery
44 In Session – One Legacy Art Gallery
46 Cézanne and the Modern Vancouver Art Gallery
48 Faster Than the Speed of Sound Kamloops Art Gallery
54 Gillian Redwood: Energetic Universe Martin Batchelor Gallery
62 Jo Hamilton: Whom Laura Russo Gallery
64 Italian Style: Fashion Since 1945 Portland Art Museum
66 the city before the city Museum of Anthropology Museum of Vancouver Musqueam Cultural Centre Gallery
70 Future Ruins: Rodrigo Valenzuela Frye Art Museum
73 Jason Walker: On the River, Down the Road Bellevue Arts Museum
9 Alberta24 British Columbia63 Oregon69 Washington
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8 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015
LindsayPark
Calgary
StampedeExhibition &
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Prince's IslandPark
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CALGARY
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EAU CLAIRE
NEWZONES
PAUL KUHN
WALLACEGALLERIES
STRIDE
ESKERFOUNDATION
COLLECTORS'GALLERY
OF ART
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TO FOUNDERS’ GALLERY,NICKLE GALLERIES (University of Calgary)
CONTEMPORARYCALGARY (C)
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TO ILLINGWORTH KERR, ACAD
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Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies111 Bear St �403-762-2291 whyte.orgSummer Hours (Jun 15-Sep 15):9:30am-5pm, Winter Hours (Sep 16-Jun 14): 10am-5pm. Thru Mar 8FOUNDER'S GALLERY A PainterlyProcess: Sketches and Paintings byPeter and Catharine Whyte, artisticpractice showing their love of the out-doors, visits to various internationaldestinations and proximity to multiplevistas; Thru Mar 29 High Adventure –Byron Harmon on the Columbia Ice-field, 1924, the route of the expedi-tion organized by Harmon is traced inphotographs, film, lantern and stereo-slides; Through the Lens, photogra-phy program immerses studentsfrom Bow Valley high schools in thecreative process of traditional anddigital photography; Karen McDi-armid, “Everything Sings: Imagesfrom Here and There”, photographsfrom travels in Northern India andnear her home in Banff, using a vari-
ety of photographic techniques;OngoingHERITAGE GALLERYGateway tothe Rockies, history of the CanadianRockies through artifacts, artworks,archival photographs, recordingsand documents.
Bluerock Gallery110 Centre Ave W �403-933-5047 bluerockgallery.cadaily 10am-6pm including holidays,thurs 10am-9pm. A destination forhandmade, one-of-a-kind fine artand craft, we represent close to 200regional artists, most of whom liveand work within 100 miles of thegallery.
Alberta Printmakers Galleryand Studio4025 4th St SE �403-287-1056 albertaprintmakers.cawed-sat 11am-4pm, +15 Window –Epcor Centre for the Performing Arts,205 8th Ave SE. MAIN GALLERY ThruFeb 21 Jeff Kulak, “String and Tape";Feb 25-Apr 11 Emmanuelle Jacques,“The Creation of the Universe"; +15WINDOW Feb 7-Mar 31 Shawn Reynar,“Past Iterations".
Christine Klassen Gallery200-321 50th Ave SE �403-262-1880 christineklassengallery.comtues-sat 10am-5pm or by appt. ThruMar 7 Gary Campbell, Ben Cope,Sarah Fuller, Michael Levin and Col-in Smith, “5 Cameras reprise”, photo-graphs celebrating the diversity of themedium and our gallery artists; DianaThorneycroft, photographs of diora-mas exploring the complexities ofCanadian identity through populartoys and icons; Mar 12-Apr 18Michael Schreiner: Paints and Poets,tightly structured paintings exploringthe boundaries of the canvas throughcalculated pathways of line.
BANFF
BLACK DIAMOND
CALGARY
Graeme Patterson, Secret Citadel (2013),animation still [Southern Alberta Art Gallery,Lethbridge AB, Feb 14-Apr 12]
V I G N E T T E S • February/March 2015Alberta VIEW FROM A WINDOWArt Gallery of Alberta, Edmonton, Dec 6-Mar1 Photographs by four exceptional Canadian artists, Edward Bur-tynsky, Robin Collyer, Eamon MacMahon and Laura St. Pierre,challenge our understanding of the interface between untouchedwilderness and the human-altered landscape. Images range frommassive mining and industrial sites to deserted urban scenes andfrom the homes of the privileged to the improvised shelters of thehomeless. The show’s title is a reference to an early 19th-centuryphotograph by Nicéphore Niépce, one of the pioneers of themedium.
5 CAMERAS REPRISE & DIANA THORNEYCROFT Christine KlassenGallery, Calgary, Jan 29-Mar 7 Gary Campbell, Ben Cope, SarahFuller, Michael Levin and Colin Smith appear for the second timein a group exhibition that ranges across photographic styles, formsand techniques. Including images of endangered tribes, landscapetropes, portraits of celebrities, and furnished interiors reconfiguredby a camera obscura, this show inspires wonder and admiration.Also on view are Winnipeg artist Diana Thorneycroft’s colourphotos of cheeky and satirical dioramas on the nature of Canadianidentity.
OH, CANADA: CONTEMPORARY ART FROM NORTH NORTH AMERI-CA Various venues, Calgary, Jan 31-Apr 26 This landmark exhibi-tion, which debuted at the Massachusetts Museum of Contem-porary Art in 2012, is so large and comprehensive that it is beingpresented at four Calgary sites: Esker Foundation, Glenbow,Illingworth Kerr Gallery and Nickle Galleries. To bring ittogether, American curator Denise Markonish spent three yearscrossing Canada, visiting studios and consulting with curatorsand artists. Among the nearly 60 artists represented are RebeccaBelmore, Shary Boyle, Douglas Coupland, Marcel Dzama, Wan-da Koop and Kent Monkman.
KYLE BEAL: ELECTRIC PARK Douglas Udell Gallery, Edmonton, Mar14-28 Riffing on found images of a destructive fire at a New Jer-sey amusement park, Kyle Beal has produced linked series ofdrawings, inkjet prints and wall-mounted objects. This reimagin-ing of the original event speaks to notions of spectacle and leisureas well as to issues of representation. The prints use souvenir post-cards from “Funtown Pier” to construct fictional characters andnarratives, while the mixed-media objects reinterpret formal, aes-thetic and textual elements associated with amusement parks.
JEFF NACHTIGALL: WILD MEN Newzones, Calgary, Mar 14-May 2Saskatchewan artist Jeff Nachtigall quotes a range of styles, formatsand media in his humorous investigation of the wild man figure –here deployed as a form of self-portraiture. The wild man of thewoods has appeared widely in art, legends and lore across time andplace. While he can sometimes symbolize a violent and uncivilizedperson, a “savage,” he can also represent a being who lives in a stateof nature, repudiating all that makes up contemporary society.
Edward Burtynsky
Gary Campbell
Janice Wright Cheney
Kyle Beal
Jeff Nachtigall
The Collectors' Gallery of Art1332 9th Ave SE �403-245-8300 collectorsgalleryofart.comtues-fri 10am-5:30pm sat 10am-5pm. Thru Mar 10 “Chase Away theWinter Blues”, rotating group exhibi-tion of works by gallery and estateartists Steve Coffey, Rajka Kupesic,Shelley McMillan, Hans Nissen,Raymond Theriault and others; Mar14-Apr 11 Will Millar, “Ireland: Inthe Rare Oul Times”, paintings by aformer Irish Rover.
Contemporary Calgary (C)C - Stephen Ave Location:117 8 Ave SW �403-770-1350C2 - City Hall Location:104-800 Macleod Trail SE �403-262-1737contemporarycalgary.comVisit the website for updates.
� Esker Foundation444-1011 9th Ave SE �403-930-2490 eskerfoundation.comtues-sun 11am-6pm thurs & fri 11am-8pm. Feb 1-Apr 26 Oh, Canada: Con-
temporary Art from North NorthAmerica, largest survey producedoutside Canada of contemporaryCanadian art, featuring more than 100artworks by 62 artists and collectivesfrom across the country, also showingat Nickle Galleries, Illingworth KerrGallery and Glenbow, organized by theMassachusetts Museum of Contem-porary Art; Thru Mar 29 PROJECT SPACERita McKeough, “Tender".
Founders' Gallery4520 Crowchild Trail SW �403-410-2340 themilitarymuseums.ca/galleryfoundersmon-fri 9am-5pm sat & sun 9:30am-4pm. Thru Apr 12 Ali Nadjian andRamyar Manouchehrzadeh, AzadehAkhlaghi, Gohar Dashti, ShadiGhadirian, Babak Kazemi, AbbasKowsari, Sadegh Tirafkan and New-sha Tavakolian, “Burnt Generation”,contemporary Iranian photographyseeks to convey the impact of decadesof political unrest and social upheavalon the population – central themes are
the isolation, loneliness and desola-tion of youth and the personal, politi-cal and social consequences of war.
Glenbow130 9th Ave SE �403-268-4100 glenbow.orgtues-thurs 9am-5pm fri 11:30am-7:30pm sat 9am-5pm sun 12-5pm.Admission: adults $14, seniors $10,students/youth $9, family $32, chil-dren under 6 free, members free. ThruApr 26 Oh, Canada: ContemporaryArt from North North America, morethan 100 artworks by 62 Canadianartists and collectives, also showing atEsker Foundation, Nickle Galleries andIllingworth Kerr Gallery; From OurCollection – Canadiana, ongoingprocess of examining our collective,regional and community identities,our sovereignty, and our relationshipswith the land and environment; Feb14-May 17 Geoffrey James: InsideKingston Penitentiary, photographsdocumenting and memorializing thislegendary institution, Canada’s oldest
10 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
youraga.ca
Future Station: Alberta Biennial of Contemporary ArtART GALLERY OF ALBERTA, EDMONTON AB – Jan 24-May 3, 2015 Now approaching its 20thanniversary, the Alberta Biennial is one of the oldest such exhibitions in this country, and is distinctfrom longer-standing biennials because of its open-call process. However, like the more storiedbiennials, Alberta’s employs aguest curator. This year it ispublic art expert Kirsty Trinier atthe helm.
Titled Future Station, namedafter an abandoned light rapidtransit stop beneath Edmonton’scivic centre, the 2015 biennialexhibition is described in the pro-motional materials as “a physicaland allegorical place of transitionand stasis: part urban mythologyand part monument to the banali-ty of dormant infrastructure” – anappropriate metaphor when oneconsiders an emerging generationthat spends more time negotiat-ing the world through its mobiledevices than by city bus or train.
Most of the 40-plus artistsparticipating this year hail from Calgary and Edmonton. Those living outside Alberta’s biggestcities include Sundre’s Jude Griebel, High Prairie’s Robin Lambert, Rich Lake’s Amy Malbeuf,and St. Albert’s Brad Necyk. Michael Turner
Jude Griebel, Accident Mouth (2013), papier mâché, epoxy resin, foam, wood, oil paint[Art Gallery of Alberta, Edmonton AB, Jan 24-May 3]
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prison and home to many of the coun-try’s most notorious criminals from1835 to 2013; From Our Collection –Geoffrey James: The LethbridgeProject, photographs of both the ruraland urban landscape characterizingLethbridge as a prairie experience thatis part mythic and part ordinary. TheLethbridge Project was commis-sioned in 1999 by the SouthernAlberta Art Gallery to mark the end ofthe last millennium.
Herringer Kiss Gallery709A 11th Ave SW �403-228-4889 herringerkissgallery.comtues-fri 10am-5:30pm sat 11am-5pm. Thru Feb 21 David Burdeny –XS – 2011-2014, images made overthree years while visiting architec-tural theme parks in Nikko, Japan,and Shenzhen, China, were achievedby layering between 10 to 20frames of shallow focus into onesharply delineated frame. Feb 28-Mar 28 New Work by Ken Webb,multimedia paintings incorporateorphaned photographic imagery
with a post-modern abstraction.
Illingworth Kerr GalleryAlberta College of Art + Design1407 14th Ave NW�403-284-7600 ext 633 acad.ca/ikgtues-sat 10am-5pm. Thru Apr 11 Oh,Canada: Contemporary Art fromNorth North America, largest surveyever produced outside Canada of con-temporary Canadian art, comprisingmore than 100 artworks by 62 Cana-dian artists and collectives fromacross the country, organized by theMassachusetts Museum of Contem-porary Art. Also showing at EskerFoundation, Nickle Galleries andGlenbow; Rodney LaTourelle: TheStepped Form, participatory sculp-tural installation addressing institu-tional common spaces and the natureof social interaction in an increasinglyprivatized and digitized world.
The New Gallery (TNG)208 Centre St SE �403-233-2399 thenewgallery.orgtues-sat 12-6pm. Admission is free.
+15 Window, Epcor Centre for thePerforming Arts, 205 8th Ave SE.MAIN SPACE Thru Feb 14 GrierEdmundson, “Form(al) Economics”,drawings and sculptures includereframing of Monopoly game cardsinto conceptual comments on currenteconomies; Feb 20-Mar 28 Jacque-line Hoang Nguyen, “Space Fiction &the Archives”, documentary aboutCanada’s first UFO landing pad juxta-posed with current day immigrationpolicies; +15 WINDOW Feb 6-Mar 28Jennifer Laiwint, “Relics on Trial”,sculptural and material constructionsreimagining a difficult history thatinteract with, conceal and imposethemselves on the human subject.
Newzones730 11th Ave SW �403-266-1972 newzones.comtues-fri 10:30am-5:30pm sat 11am-5pm. Feb 7-Mar 7 Virginia Mak,“Character Reference”, photographsof portraits drawn from figures in lit-erature, folklore and mythology rep-resenting contemporary allusions to
12 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015
saag.ca�
Antonia Hirsch: Negative SpaceSOUTHERN ALBERTA ART GALLERY, LETHBRIDGE AB – Feb 14-Apr 12, 2015 Volume, space and orderare key variables in the pictures, sculptures and book works that have emerged from Antonia Hirsch’sstudio since her arrival in Vancouver in the mid-1990s. Now a resident of Berlin, the German-bornartist has shifted from anthropometric and geographic representations to installations that evokemetaphysical questions concern-ing the interrelationship of innerand outer worlds.
In this installation, Hirschemploys a range of materials,objects and lighting regimes to sit-uate the viewer in what amountsto a cosmos – a space where trans-parency and reflection are compli-cated with the use of a free-stand-ing clear glass screen and a wall-mounted obsidian mirror, andwhere discarded mobile devicesdesigned to relay information arearranged as modules in a staticform.
Most notable is an anamor-phic video projection of what at first appears to be an asteroid hurtling through space but is in fact alife form associated with the earth from which it grows: a potato. That the optimal view of this pro-jection is from behind the glass screen – which has a similarly ambiguous image of an “asteroid”affixed to it – only reminds us of what we think we are seeing. Michael Turner
Antonia Hirsch, Negative Space (2014), installation [Southern Alberta Art Gallery,Lethbridge AB, Feb 14-Apr 12]
characters; “Perception”, process-driven photo-based works showcas-ing the methods employed in thecreative process, featuring DianneBos (Calgary), Franco DeFrancesca(Toronto), John Folsom (Atlanta,GA), James Holroyd (Calgary),Joshua Jensen-Nagle (Toronto),Holly King (Montreal), Stuart McCall(Vancouver) and Sarah Nind (Toron-to); Mar 14-May 2 Jeff Nachtigall,“Wild Men”, paintings – self-por-traits and explorations into process,material and mark making.
Nickle GalleriesUniversity of Calgary,410 University Court NW�403-220-7234 nickle.ucalgary.camon-fri 10am-5pm thurs 10am-8pmsat 11am-4pm. Feb 1-Apr 26 Oh,Canada: Contemporary Art fromNorth North America, largest surveyorganized outside Canada of con-temporary Canadian art featuringmore than 100 artworks by 62 artistsand collectives from across the
country, also showing at Esker Foun-dation, Illingworth Kerr Gallery andGlenbow, organized by the Mas-sachusetts Museum of Contempo-rary Art; Thru Apr 4 Money, Sover-eignty and Power: The Paper Cur-rency of Revolutionary Ukraine,1917-1920, examining the issue ofnational sovereignty and how it wasportrayed on currency by variousideologically driven governments inthe context of revolution, war andsocial upheaval.
Paul Kuhn Gallery724 11th Ave SW �403-263-1162 paulkuhngallery.comtues-sat 10am-5:30pm and by appt.Feb 7-Mar 7 Anthony Redpath, Wal-ter May, Ric Kokotvitch, ChristianGrandjean and Alexander Caldwell,“Exposed”, photographs by galleryartists; Brent Mykytyshyn, “The LoveStare”, 109 tin-type portraits; Mar14-Apr 11 Geoffrey Hunter, “NewWorks" paintings and works onpaper.
Stride Art Gallery Association1006 MacLeod Trail SE�403-262-8507 stride.ab.catues-sat 11am-5pm. Admission isfree. +15 Window, Epcor Centre forthe Performing Arts, 205 8th Ave SE.MAIN GALLERY Thru Feb 13 JonathanVilleneuve, “When I am Gone LetHappen What May/Après Moi LeDéluge”, poetically kinetic sound andlight producing machines assembledfrom familiar objects, featuring a newpiece, Life Saver, conceived during aresidency presented by Stride in col-laboration with the National MusicCentre; Feb 27-Apr 3 Svea Fergu-son, Jake Klein Waller, GrahamMacaulay and Sarah Nordean,works by emerging artists usingmaterials in a unique way with thegallery functioning as a frameworkfor their concepts; +15 WINDOW Feb-Mar Xstine Cook, “Animating theSpirit”, installation and retrospectiveof work over the past 30 years by amaster puppet maker, theatre maker,community activist and filmmaker.
14 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015
grunt.ca
Crossed: Ahmad TabriziGRUNT GALLERY, VANCOUVER BC – Jan 15-Feb 21, 2015 Vancouver’s post-Expo ’86 film, televisionand gaming industry has had an enormous impact on the city’s art scene, but in a mixed way.
Every art school graduating class has astory to tell of a talented young artistwhose studio practice got set aside forjobs in set decoration, carpentry orcomputer-generated imagery.
For those at Emily Carr University ofArt + Design in the early 1990s, AhmadTabrizi might be remembered as one suchartist, though he has made occasionalcontributions to gallery events. Howappropriate, then, that in his first soloexhibition in recent memory, Tabrizicrosses materials related to his work incostume design with the petite genre ofportraiture.
Tabrizi’s crossing strategy includesmore than just the literal play of dress-making pins laid out in the shape of ahead. In the exhibition’s promotionalimage, the ground on which this pinhead and its cut-out eyes appear containsa diagonally rendered Farsi text. Viewers
unfamiliar with Farsi will have to do better than to ask questions of this mouthless face, particularlywhen the only other option is to listen. Michael Turner
Ahmad Tabrizi, Untitled (2012), photograph [grunt gallery, Vancouver BC,Jan 15-Feb 21]
Wallace Galleries500 5th Ave SW �403-262-8050 wallacegalleries.common-sat 10am-5:30pm. Thru Feb 10“Group Show 2015”, new works in avariety of media by gallery artistsincluding Herbert Siebner, HaroldTown, Alain Attar, Andre Pettersonand others; Feb 12-25 “Valentine'sGroup Show 2015”, smaller works ina variety of media by Diana Zasadny,Simon Andrew, Linda Nardelli,William Duma, Leslie Poole, BrentLaycock, Toni Onley and others; Mar5-18 Kenneth Lochhead, “ColourSpaces".
Alberta Craft Council Gallery10186 106th St NW �780-488-6611 albertacraft.ab.camon-sat 10am-5pm thurs 10am-6pm. FEATURE GALLERY Thru Mar 2815 on 35, celebrating the AlbertaCraft Council's 35th anniversary, 15members reflect on how the ACC hasenriched their careers; DISCOVERYGALLERY Thru Feb 14 The Recipients,celebrating the 2014 recipients of theAlberta Craft Awards; Feb 21-Apr 4Kari Woo, “The Anatomy of My
Heart”, Woo’s dioramas are boxesmade from salvaged wood and othermedia, including photographs andjewellery; Ed Bamiling, “EarthRhythms”, works by the Banff-basedceramic artist exploring the move-ments and rhythms of the earth.
Art Gallery of Alberta2 Sir Winston Churchill Sq�780-422-6223 youraga.catues-sun 11am-5pm wed 11am-9pm. Admission: Members free,adults $12.50, seniors (65+)/stu-dents $8.50, children under 6 free,children 7-17 $8.50, family (up to 2
EDMONTON
preview-art.com PREVIEW 15
DAVID HAUGHTON NOCTURNES IIINEW PAINTINGS OF THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST
FLASH EXHIBITION – 3 DAYS ONLYMAY 29, 30 & 31VISUAL SPACE GALLERY3352 DUNBAR STREETVANCOUVER, BC
VIEW PAINTINGS AT HAUGHTON-ART.CA
adults + 4 children) $26.50. Feb 13-Apr 12 Christian Marclay, “TheClock”, 24-hour loop of a montage ofarchival clips that share referencesto time and timepieces, demarcating,minute by minute; Thru Mar 1Edward Burtynsky, Robin Collyer,Eamon MacMahon and Laura St.Pierre, “View from a Window”,recent photographs; RBC NEWWORKS GALLERY Col in Smi th :Obscure Inversions, series of highdefinition, large format cameraobscura images of found and con-structed archetypal hotel room sets;Suburbia: A Model Life (Pho-
tographs 1970s-1980s), images tak-en across North America representthe suburbs and modern urbandesign strategies. Also showingHubert Hohn, “The Project: Subur-ban Landscapes”, black and whitearchetypal studies of early suburbanneighbourhoods; Thru Apr 16 BMOWorld of Creativity: The World ofBoo by Jason Carter and BridgetRyan, family-friendly installationinspired by their Who is Boo? bookseries; Thru May 3 Future Station:2015 Alberta Biennial of Contempo-rary Art, examination of the creativepractices at work with Alberta artists.
� Bugera Matheson Gallery10345 124th St NW �780-482-2854 bugeramathesongallery.comtues-sat 10am-5:30pm thurs 10am-7pm. Feb 14-21Red Hot Reds, worksfeaturing gallery artists; Feb 28-Mar14 Barbra Edwards and MichaelThiessen, “Season Debut"; Mar 20-Apr 4 Jamie Evrard and Jane Everett ,“First Day of Spring".
� Daffodil Gallery10412 124th St �780-760-1278 daffodilgallery.catues-sat 10:30am-5pm thurs 10:30-am-7pm and by appt. Thru Feb 14Not Your Parents' Watercolour!works by selected artists; Feb 25-Mar 18 Bernadette McCormack, “Allthe Flowers".
Douglas Udell Gallery10332 124th St NW �780-488-4445 douglasudellgallery.comtues-sat 10am-5:30pm. Feb 7-21Matthew Pillsbury: Tokyo, photo-graphs capturing the growing role oftechnology, shifting energy and sur-real scenes, first show in Canada by2014 Guggenheim Fellowship recipi-ent; Mar 14-28 Kyle Beal: ElectricPark, new series of drawings, printsand wall-based objects based onfound images of Funtown Pier, a NewJersey amusement park destroyed in2013 by an electrical fire after largelysurviving Hurricane Sandy.
West End Gallery12308 Jasper Ave NW �780-488-4892 westendgalleryltd.comtues-sat 10am-5pm. We are moving!Visit us at our new space at 10337124th St NW in March. Check ourwebsite for details, new arrivals andcurrent exhibitions.
Southern Alberta Art Gallery601 Third Ave S �403-327-8770 saag.catues-sat 10am-5pm sun 1-5pm.Admission: general $5, students/seniors $4, groups $3 per person,members & children under 12 free.Feb 14-Apr 12 Graeme Patterson:Secret Citadel, stages of life fromchildhood to adulthood are conveyedin idiosyncratic animated videos thataccompany large sculptures contain-ing highly detailed miniature worlds;
LETHBRIDGE
16 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
For more exhibitions/programs, visit thereach.ca
The Reach Gallery Museum32388 Veterans WayAbbotsford, BC V2T 0B3604-864-8087
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22 January – May 3, 2015 Sonny Assu, Jordan Bennett, Cheryl L'Hirondelle,Heather Igloliorte, Nigit'stil Norbert, Barry Pottle,Bear Witness
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Antonia Hirsch, “Negative Space”,new works using images and objectsinvestigate the interrelation of innerand outer worlds.
� University of LethbridgeArt Gallery
4401 University Dr, W600 Centre forthe Arts �403-329-2666 ulag.caMain Gallery: mon-wed fri 9am-4:30pm thurs 9am-8:30pm, HelenChristou Gallery: daily 8am-9pm.HELEN CHRISTOU GALLERY Feb 13-Mar27 “Sharing Stories, Bridging Cul-tures”, research and education proj-ects from a collection of portraits byNicholas de Grandmaison; MAINGALLERY Thru Mar 19 “Selfies”, explor-ing classic and contemporary self-representation through artworks fromthe U of L Art Collection, new works byAngela Glanzmann and the CedarTavern Singers, and historical mate-rial from the Sir Alexander GaltMuseum & Archives.
Esplanade Art Gallery401 First St SE �403-502-8793 esplanade.camon-fri 10am-5pm sat & holidays 12-5pm. Thru Feb 7 Dan Hudson ,“Between Heaven and Earth”, mid-career survey of his art practice as aphotographer, painter, sculptor andvideographer; Jessica Plattner, “IfYou Wander Far Enough”, new oilpaintings of exquisitely rendered ani-mals, birds and children populatingverdant landscapes littered withstrange archaeological and industrialruins; Feb 21-Apr 11 Susan Shantz,“Creatures in Translation”, exploringthe creative potential of digital 2-D and3-D technologies in 3-D printed sculp-tures, drawings and digital prints basedon 19th century Japanese ceramics;Laara Cassells, “after”, historical por-traiture transformed by integratingcontemporary subjects and creatingdouble portraits based on ‘Old Master’paintings from the last 600 years.
� Art Gallery of St Albert19 Perron St �780-460-4310 artgalleryofstalbert.catues-sat 10am-5pm thurs 10am-8pm. Feb 5-28 Alysha Creighton,
MEDICINE HAT
ST ALBERT
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Port de Grave, oil on canvas, 31x31in
Ochre Pit Cove, oil on canvas, 31x31in
Jean Claude Roy
“Proximities”, site-specific videoinstallations consider the connected-ness, disconnection, intimacy andtension between people; Mar 5-May 2Patrick Bulas, Megan Gnanasi-hamany, Gerri Harden and TrishShwart, “Talking Creatures”, worksby artists who use anthropomorphicanimals to communicate the intrica-cies of human nature and behaviour.
BRITISHCOLUMBIA
Kariton Art Gallery & Boutique2387 Ware St �604-852-9358 abbotsfordartscouncil.orgtues-fri 12-5pm sat & sun 9:30am-
4:30pm. Feb 7-Mar 3 Serena Trinder,“A Tale of Two Counties”, water-colours; Mar 7-31 University StudentShow, multimedia works.
The Reach Gallery Museum Abbotsford32388 Veterans Way �604-864-8087 thereach.catues wed fri 10am-5pm thurs 10am-9pm sat & sun 12-5pm, Admission:free. Feb 5-Mar 1 Maps of Weather:Willa Downing, depictions of weatheron real or imagined maps inspired byrandom cloudspotting, the visual andconceptual beauty of maps and thegraphic marks that activate our dailyweather maps; THE GROTTO Thru Mar 1Marcia Pitch, “Between Madness andDelight”, exploring a dark and twistedworld of playful but terrifying sculpturessalvaged from children's toys andhousehold objects; Mar 5-Aug 2 Fauna
Crowned: Lorena Krause, updatedviewers’ portraiture shown through aneosurreal pictorial interpretation of ourirremediable state of outer and innerinterdependence with history andnature; THE GREAT HALL Mar 5-Apr 26Buy One Get None: Conformity, Con-sumerism and the Collective Voice –Young Contemporaries Exhibition,bringing light to the struggle betweenour propensity towards silence as indi-viduals and the desire for a collectivevoice in response to the deafening din ofconsumer culture; GREAT HALL EAST ThruApr 26 Andrea Aragón, VerónicaRiedel and Jean-Marie Simon,“Ancestry and Artistry: Maya Textilesfrom Guatemala”, textiles patternedwith evocative designs trace a centuryof dynamic change; GREAT HALL WESTThru May 3 Sonny Assu (Laich-kwil-tach [Kwakwaka'wakw]), Jordan Ben-nett (Mi'kmaq), Heather Igloliorte
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tacomaartmuseum.org
Eloquent Objects: Georgia O’Keeffe andStill Life Art in New MexicoTACOMA ART MUSEUM, TACOMA WA – Mar 1-Jun 7, 2015 This major exhibit focuses on the role of
still-life art in New Mexico during the first half of the20th century, and brings together the work of GeorgiaO’Keeffe and her contemporaries. O’Keeffe is a preemi-nent American artist best known for her softly huedpaintings of enlarged floral subjects. The AmericanSouthwest was a primary inspiration in her work. In 1929,she spent the first of many summers painting in NewMexico, before relocating there from New York in 1949.Her iconic paintings of sun-bleached bones and starkdesert landscapes are some of the most captivating of herartistic oeuvre. Twenty-two of her pieces are includedhere, making up about a third of the entire show.
Among the still-life works by other important mod-ernists are those by Marsden Hartley and Stuart Davis. Aswell, the work of artists from major art centres in NewMexico are featured – Gustave Baumann, CatherineCritcher and Eliseo Rodriguez among them.
Here is a pioneering generation of artistic visions,told through the unusual objects, forms and sense oflight and colour felt in the unique American Southwestdesert. Together, these works reveal something intimateabout place and time. Much of the binding artistic sub-
ject matter in the exhibit is drawn from daily details, evoking still-life compositions as very personalimpressions of the region from the 1920s to the 1950s, when many of these artists were refining theirpersonal modern style. O’Keeffe and other artists who travelled west helped establish a dynamiccommunity of artists who found aesthetic delight in New Mexico’s vast beauty. Allyn Cantor
Georgia O’Keeffe, Mule’s Skull with Pink Poinsettia(1936), oil on canvas [Tacoma Art Museum, TacomaWA, Mar 1-Jun 7]
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(Inuit), Cheryl L'Hirondelle (MétisCree),Nigit'stil Norbert (Gwich'in), Barry Pot-tle (Inuit) and Bear Witness (Cayuga),“Decolonize Me”, exploring the issuesand outcomes of both colonizationand decolonization while exposinghow these processes have impactedAboriginal and settler Canadian identi-ties; LOBBY Thru May 3 100 Years ofLoss: The Residential School Systemin Canada, developed by the Legacy ofHope Foundation, a national, charitableAboriginal organization whose purposeis to educate and create awareness andunderstanding about the legacy of resi-dential schools.
S'eliyemetaxwtexw Art GalleryUniversity of the Fraser Valley33844 King Rd�604-504-7441 ext 4405 ufv.ca/ufv_visual_artsmon-fri 10am-6pm. Feb 2-18 (Para-digm) Connections: Doing what welove!, projects showcasing design,community building and typography;Feb 23-27 UFV Visual Arts SilentAuction, donated artworks – eventdedicated to the development andsupport of the visual arts at the Uni-versity of the Fraser Valley; Mar 6-24Diploma Show, diverse selection ofinventive works including 2-D and 3-D, conceptual, interdisciplinary, newmedia and multimedia practices; Mar27-Apr 10 Lens of Empowerment.
The Gallery @ Artisan Square589 Artisan Sq �604-947-2454 biac.cafri-sun 12-4pm or by appt. Feb 6-22Annual Mini-Gala Exhibit, featuringmore than 65 mini-masterpieces cre-ated on 8"x8" canvasses by localartists; Feb 27-Mar 22 “Floral Immer-sions”, Gregg Simpson, paintings;Jeanne Sarich, ceramics.
Burnaby Art Gallery6344 Deer Lake Ave �604-297-4422 burnabyartgallery.catues-fri 10am-4:30pm sat & sun 12-5pm. Admission by donation. ThruMar 29 Visualizing a Culture forStrangers: Chinese Export Paintingsof the Nineteenth Century, presentinga cross-section of Chinese export
watercolour paintings, a specialgenre that flourished in Guangzhou(Canton), China, and influenced West-ern art traditions; OFFSITE BOB PRITTIELIBRARY (METROTOWN), 6100 WILLING-DON AVE 604-436-5400 Feb 9-Mar 22Bernadette Phan; MCGILL LIBRARY,4595 ALBERT ST 604-299-8955 ThruFeb 8 Maya Beaudry; Feb 10-Mar 23Alan Wood: Winter Ranch Series.
Deer Lake GalleryBurnaby Arts Council6584 Deer Lake Ave �604-298-7322 burnabyartscouncil.orgtues-sat 12-4pm. Admission is free.
Feb 7-28 Evan Locke, Iris Low andKaren Santos, “Expressions inAbstract”, paintings by emergingartists from different generationsand backgrounds who share theirown interpretations and philoso-phies of abstraction; Mar 7-28Anson Aguirre Firth, Aimee HennyBrown and Teodora Zamfirescu,“Drawn: Exploring the Line”, draw-ings and sculptures exploring thebroad scope of abstract line draw-ings and the realistic reflections ofhuman existence through a series ofsketches revolving around the dis-courses of life and mortality.
BOWEN ISLAND
BURNABY
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Nikkei National Museum6688 Southoaks Cres �604-777-7000 nikkeiplace.orgtues-sun 11am-5pm. Thru Apr 5 TheInstant Coffee Collective, “MagicHour”, an unexpected and innovativelook at the gems from our archives.“Magic hour” is the name of thattime just before sunrise or just aftersunset; Ongoing UPPER LEVEL Taiken– Japanese Canadians Since 1877,from the hardships of pioneers to thestruggles of the war years to theNikkei community today.
Simon Fraser University GalleryAQ 3004-8888 University Dr�778-782-4266 sfu.ca/gallerytues-fri 12-5pm. Thru Feb 28 and Mar21-May 15 Geometry of Knowing,works from the gallery collection andnew works by 30 contemporary localand international artists investigatingapproaches to the acquisition ofknowledge. Organized in four parts:Part 1 Jan 15-Feb 28 SFU Gallery; Part2 Jan 15-Feb 28 Audain Gallery, 149W Hastings, Vancouver; Part 3 Mar21-May 15 SFU Gallery; Part 4 Mar19-28 Audain Gallery. Curated by AmyKazymerchyk and Melanie O’Brian.
Campbell River Art Gallery1235 Shoppers Row �250-287-2261crartgallery.catues-sat 12-5pm. Feb 12-Mar 27MAINGALLERY Rachel Yoder, “MementoMori: Remember you must die”, con-ceptual colour field paintings that playwith the biological interpretation ofcolour, musing on existential ques-tions regarding mortality; DISCOVERYGALLERY Nathalie Quagliotto, “Stuck”,everyday prefabricated objects asso-ciated with disuse, social regulations,safety and risk are reconfigured tooffer a whimsical yet poignant trick ofthe eye.
Kootenay Gallery120 Heritage Way �250-365-3337 kootenaygallery.comtues-sat 10am-5pm. Feb Galleryclosed; gift shop open Tues-Sat 10am-5pm; Mar 6-Apr 18 Julie Elliot, “Unionof Opposites”, recent works by theKelowna-based painter and printmaker.
Chilliwack Visual Artists Association, Chilliwack ArtGalleryChilliwack Cultural Centre9201 Corbould St �604-392-8000 chilliwackvisualartists.cawed-sat 12-5pm. Thru Feb 14 CVAAMembers, “Newest & Best”, groupexhibit featuring new artwork bymembers of the Chilliwack VisualArtists Association; Feb 19-Mar 28Robert V. Harms, “Art in HarmsWay”, large oil paintings and water-colour sketches.
Art Gallery at EvergreenCultural Centre1205 Pinetree Way �604-927-6550 evergreenculturalcentre.camon-sat 12-5pm. Admission is free.Thru Feb 14 Emerging Talent 18,18th annual juried exhibition featuring2-D and 3-D works by senior art stu-dents from high schools throughoutSchool District 43; Feb 21-Mar 14
CAMPBELL RIVER
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Doing & Teaching, diverse worksproduced by past and current educa-tors from School District 43; Mar 21-May 9 Ben Reeves: Object Things,new and recent paintings.
Place des Arts1120 Brunette Ave �604-664-1636 placedesarts.caLeonore Peyton Salon: mon-wed, fri9am-2pm thurs 9am-9pm sat 2:30-5pm sun 1-5pm (call to confirm view-ing availability); Atrium and MezzanineGalleries: mon-fri 9am-9pm sat 9am-5pm sun 1-5pm. Thru Feb 7 ATRIUMGALLERY BOB Photography Collective,“Exploring Iceland”, photographs;LEONORE PEYTON SALONMy Artist’s Cor-ner Group, “Visible Form”, multiplemedia; MEZZANINE GALLERY Moira Car-roll, “Monokuro”, grisaille; Feb 12-Mar8 ATRIUM GALLERY Leanne Christie,“Theatre of Public Life”, oil on canvas,in collaboration with Festival du Bois;LEONORE PEYTON SALON Photoclub Van-couver, “The Members’ Exhibition2015”, photography; MEZZANINE GALLERYBoris Sichon, “Musical Instrumentsfrom Around the World”, rare ethnicinstruments; Mar 26-Jun 6 ATRIUMGALLERY Ann Wilsie, “Last Night IDreamed”, oil on canvas; LEONORE PEY-TON SALON Amy Thompson, “The Hid-den River”, acrylic on canvas; MEZZA-NINE GALLERY Joy Kirkwood, Artist inResidence, drawings.
Barbara Boldt Original Art Studio25340 84th Ave �604-888-5490 barbaraboldt.complease call ahead. In-home studiogallery of Barbara Boldt, located 5km outside of Fort Langley, featuringlocal landscapes, forest and gardenscenes in oils and soft pastels andher signature EarthPatterns paintingsof sandstone formations found onGaliano Island. Copies of biographyPlaces of Her Heart: The Art and Lifeof Barbara Boldt, by Barbara Boldtwith K. Jane Watt, available at thestudio and various bookstores; visitthe website. For directions to the stu-dio, see map on website or call.
The Fort Gallery9048 Glover Rd �604-888-7411 fortgallery.cawed-sun 12-5pm. Thru Feb 15 Full
Circle, works by gallery alumni; Feb18-Mar 8 Kristin Krimmel, “Happen-ing"; Mar 11-29 Spring Group Show.
Gallery 2, Grand Forks andDistrict Art and Heritage Centre524 Central Ave �250-442-2211 gallery2grandforks.catues-fri 10am-4pm sat 10am-3pm.Thru Apr 18 Jack Shadbolt: Workson Paper; William Featherston:Sociolgical Sensibilities; RobertKeziere: The Days of Augusta.
Nisga'a Museum810 Highway Dr �250-633-3050 nisgaamuseum.caNov-May: by appt only. Ancestors'Collection, Nisga'a masks, bent-wood boxes, charms, headdresses,regalia, rattles and other treasures –objects that left the Nass Valley at atime of radical change, the Nisga’aMuseum proudly proclaims the dis-tinctive Nisga’a art and cultural sym-bols that were once so misunder-stood by the outside world.
FORT LANGLEY
GRAND FORKS
GREENVILLE
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Chazou Art Gallery791 Victoria St�250-374-0488 250-572-6333chazou.comusually open wed-fri 1-4:30pm andby appt. Feb 14-Mar 27 Ann Diehl,William Frymire, Royden Joseph-son, Linda Kamille Schimdt, MarieScott and Tricia Sellmer, “Seeing(Red)”, exploring the many possibil-ities of the primary colour red.
� Kamloops Art Gallery101-465 Victoria St �250-377-2400 kag.bc.camon-sat 10am-5pm thurs 10am-9pmclosed stat holidays. Thru Mar 14Pam Hall: HouseWork(s), artworkcelebrating the extraordinary that isfound in so-called “ordinary" lives.The works are intentionally provoca-tive and are embarkation points thatinvite responses and engender candidconversations; The Cube Thru Mar 21
Michael Markowsky, “Faster Thanthe Speed of Sound”, the artist willoccupy and transform The Cube intoa working art studio to build hisscaled-down fighter plane sculptureout of wood and canvas around whichpaintings will be displayed. While cre-ating the paintings, Markowsky willsimulate the experience of movingthrough space. Members of the pub-lic are invited and encouraged to visithim Tuesdays, through Mar 10,11am-4pm, to learn about his artisticprocess.
� Alternator Centre for Contemporary Art
103-421 Cawston Ave, Rotary Centrefor the Arts �250-868-2298 alternatorcentre.comtues, wed, sat 11am-5pm thurs &fri 1-8pm. Thru Mar 7 Kevin Dayand Nathan McNinch, “A ScannerUbiquity".
� ARTE funktional – The Factory1302 St Paul St �250-549-4249 250-540-4249artefunktional.common-fri 10am-4pm. Dealer on premis-es wed-fri or by appt. Thru Mar 27“Impassioned Abstraction”, MichelleSorensen, sculptural glass piecesreflect and transmit light; BarryRafuse, paintings with a dynamic,spontaneous and dramatic impact;Ongoing Paintings, textiles, sculp-tures, ceramics and functional art by adiverse group of emerging and estab-lished Okanagan and Canadian artists.
Geert Maas Sculpture Gardens and Gallery250 Reynolds Rd �250-860-7012 geertmaas.orgmon-sat 10am-5pm, sun by chance.Internationally acclaimed artist GeertMaas invites the public to visit hisexceptional sculpture gardens andindoor gallery, with one of the largestcollections of bronze sculpture inCanada; changing exhibitions, Maas
KAMLOOPS
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thereach.ca
Ancestry and Artistry: Maya Textiles from GuatemalaTHE REACH GALLERY MUSEUM, ABBOTSFORD BC – Jan 22-Apr 26, 2015 The Spanish word trajetranslates to English as suit or dress. In Guatemala, traje refers specifically to the traditional dress ofthe Maya, both as a garment and as a signifier of everything from one’s ancestral lineage to one’scommunity.
But cultures, no matterhow long established, are notstatic. This might explainwhy the curator RoxanneShaughnessy has woven intoher exhibition the work ofcontemporary Guatemalanartists Andrea Aragón andVerónica Riedel and Ameri-can photojournalist Jean-Marie Simon: her aim is tohighlight the effect of global-ization on the traje today.
In Aragón’s photographs,we can see evidence of aGuatemalan housing boomfunded by the thousands ofGuatemalans who have leftthe country to work in the United States. For Riedel, the focus is mestizas, “women who are of mixedwhite and Maya blood.” And for Simon, author of the 1998 book Guatemala: Eternal Spring, EternalTyranny, the focus is civil war.Michael Turner
Andrea Aragón, from the Home series (2009), digital photo print [The Reach Gallery Museum,Abbotsford BC, Jan 22-Apr 26]
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creates distinctive, rounded, semi-abstract figures, architectural struc-tures as well as installations in a widevariety of materials, including bronze,stainless steel, aluminum, wood,stoneware and multimedia. The greatdiversity of outdoor art is comple-mented in the gallery by an over-whelming number of paintings, seri-graphs, medals, reliefs and sculp-tures in various media.
Hambleton Galleries1290 Ellis St �250-860-2498 hambletongalleries.comtues-sat 10am-5pm, sun & mon byappt. Hambleton Galleries is the old-est gallery in the Okanagan, workingwith contemporary and historicalworks, appraisals, restoration, clean-ing and framing.
� Kelowna Art Gallery1315 Water St �250-762-2226 kelownaartgallery.comtues-sat 10am-5pm thurs 10am-9pmsun 1-4pm. Admission: adults $5,seniors & students $4, family $10,group of 10 or more $40, membersfree, Thurs free. Thru Mar 1 A TerribleBeauty: Edward Burtynsky in Dia-
logue with Emily Carr, 18 photo-graphs produced between 1983 and2013, and 6 paintings by Emily Carr;Mar 7-Apr 26 Ron Shuebrook: Draw-ings, large-scale, abstract charcoaldrawings; Thru Mar 8 Superheroes &Supervillains, artworks by over 30artists exploring the subculture andphenomena of their favourite super-hero and villain cartoon characters,with works ranging from classical ani-
mation drawing to digital media andsculpture, in collaboration with ArtBrew; Mar 14-Apr 12 Ink Belly: Print-making at UBCO, prints created byUniversity of British Columbia Okana-gan (UBCO) printmaking students;Thru Apr 5 Pete Smith: New Frontier,new abstract paintings; SATELLITE SPACEAT THE KELOWNA INTERNATIONAL AIRPORTThru May 11 Johann Wessels: SideShow, painted depiction of a caravanof wheeled carts, reminiscent of a trav-elling carnival.
Maple Ridge Art Gallery11944 Haney Pl �604-476-4240 theactmapleridge.orgtues-sat 11am-4pm. Thru Feb 28Jeff Wilson, “60° North: Shetland”,paintings inspired by his sojourn atThe Booth, an acclaimed residencyprogram based in the ShetlandIslands; Mar 7-Apr 25 “Of Clay, Wat-tles and Cloth”, Melanie Thomp-son, mixed media; Claire Olivier,ceramics; Kaija Rautiainen, fibre-works imbued with natural and for-mal elements.
MAPLE RIDGE
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Amanda Kadatz, The Mighty Menagerie,Issue #1 (2015), digital media [Kelowna ArtGallery, Kelowna BC, thru Mar 8]
24 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015
V I G N E T T E S • February/March 2015British ColumbiaKATHI HOFMANN: MATER FAMILIAS Oxygen Art Centre, Nelson,Jan 9-Feb 7 Ceramic and mixed-media assemblages characterizethis Nelson artist’s solo exhibition. Originally trained in geologyand then in functional pottery, Kathi Hofmann made the leap tosculpture in 2013. Her recent work combines hand-built ceramicforms with found objects and other materials, such as rope, bitsof hardware and small pieces of furniture. In her artist’s state-ment, Hofmann speaks of “the dramas of materials … theirinherent qualities, how they are connected, and the emotionalresonances they provoke.”
JEFF WILSON: 60� º NORTH: SHETLAND Maple Ridge Art Gallery,Maple Ridge, Jan 10-Feb 28 The tropical colours of Jeff Wilson’spaintings stand in brilliant contrast to the place they depict: therainy, grey Shetland Islands, a subarctic archipelago off thenorthern coast of Scotland and the site of the artist’s recent resi-dency. Born in Scotland, based in Vancouver and with a PhD inmining engineering, Wilson now devotes himself full time topainting. His work reveals influences from a range of sources,including Scottish Realist painters of the late 19th century.
A TERRIBLE BEAUTY: ED BURTYNSKY IN DIALOGUE WITH EMILYCARR Kelowna Art Gallery, Kelowna, Jan 10-Mar 1 Humankind’simpact on the natural world and ideas of the industrial sublimeare addressed in this extraordinary show of 18 large-scale colourphotographs by contemporary artist Edward Burtynsky juxta-posed with six historic paintings by the ever-iconic Emily Carr.Burtynsky’s astounding works include images of fish farms inChina, mine tailings in Ontario and an oil spill in the Gulf ofMexico. The selection of Carr’s work focuses on her paintings oflogged-over landscapes and gravel quarries.
RECORD (RE)CREATE Nanaimo Art Gallery (Campus Gallery), Nanaimo,Jan 10-Apr 12 Subtitled “Contemporary Coast Salish Art from theSalish Weave Collection,” this exhibition highlights the works of 14outstanding First Nations artists, including Susan Point, JohnMarston, Stan Greene and Kelly Cannell. The pieces display arange of materials and art forms, from carved wood to etched glass,cedar bark weaving and silkscreen printing. However diverse theirorigins, these artists have in common the impulse to negotiate thecomplex realm between past and present, tradition and innovation.
CAROL PRUSA: OVERFLOW Jennifer Kostuik Gallery, Vancouver, Jan29-Feb 22 Florida-based artist Carol Prusa specializes in the classi-cal medium of metal point drawing. Her surfaces, however, are notflat pieces of paper or board, but 3-D ceramic spheres or acrylicdisks, free-standing or wall-mounted and often twinkling with fibreoptic lights. Prusa’s intensely detailed, almost hallucinogenic silver-point and graphite drawings range from the cosmic to the micro-cosmic. Physics, mathematics, geometry and cosmology inspire herexplorations of multiple universes, realities and possibilities.
Kathi Hofmann
Jeff Wilson
Carol Prusa
Susan Point
Robin LauRence
Emily Carr
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Vignettes • February/March 2015
British Columbia
VISUALIZING A CULTURE FOR STRANGERS: CHINESE EXPORTPAINTINGS OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY Burnaby Art Gallery,Burnaby, Jan 30-Mar 29 The paintings on view in this show werecreated in Guangzhou (Canton) for export to the West. Workingin Western media such as oil paint and watercolour, Chineseartists catered to a taste for scenes of everyday life, includingimages of city streets and dockyards, game playing, opium smok-ing, weddings, funerals and the manufacturing of furniture andporcelain. As well, Chinese export painters gratified a gruesomeWestern taste for images of executions and physical punishment.
MIKE ANDREW MCLEAN: LATENT IMAGE (PART ONE) 2012–2015 Del-uge Contemporary Art, Victoria, Feb 6-Mar 14 This artist’s LatentImage project explores some of the earliest photographic formsand techniques, including cyanotypes, ferrotypes and albumenprints. McLean employs these antique methods to record contem-porary subjects, from giant trucks to subway commuters, alongwith photo graphy’s traditional subjects, such as landscapes, gardensheds and star-filled night skies. His intention is to reignite inter-est in the way photographs are made and perceived in a worldawash in digital images.
BEYOND THE SURFACE: THE DRAWINGS OF NINGEOKULUKTEEVEE Inuit Gallery, Vancouver, Feb 14-Mar 6 This show of draw-ings by Cape Dorset artist and writer Ningeokuluk Teeveereveals her deep knowledge of Inuit legends and her keen obser-vations of the natural world. The 27 coloured-pencil and graphiteworks on view demonstrate, too, her ability to bridge generationsand cultures. At the forefront of Inuit graphic art, Ningeokulukwrote and illustrated the acclaimed children’s book Alego, nomi-nated for a Governor General’s award in 2009.
THE PHOTOGRAPHS OF ALLEN GINSBERG (1953–1996) PresentationHouse Gallery, North Vancouver, Feb 21-Apr 5 Renowned as a prolif-ic poet of the Beat Generation, Allen Ginsberg was also a compos-er, archivist and photographer. He used the camera to documenthis life and times, taking pictures of friends, lovers, muses and fel-low writers, among them Jack Kerouac, Lucien Carr, Neal Cassadyand William S. Burroughs. Wonderfully titled We Are ContinuallyExposed to the Flashbulb of Death, this exhibition of photographs alsocalls up Ginsberg’s interests in music, political freedom and Bud-dhist philosophy.
KEEWATIN WOMEN IN STONE Spirit Wrestler Gallery, Vancouver,Mar 14-Apr 4 The stone carvers of Keewatin (now officiallyKivalliq) are known for the minimal or semi-abstract style of theirwork. The two renowned artists featured here, Lucy TasseorTutsweetok (1934–2012) and Camille Iquliq (1963–2005), sharedan interest in the subjects of mothers and children and familygroups. However, Tasseor’s sculptures are angular and shallowlyincised, while Iquliq’s are more deeply carved, with gently roundedcurves and folds – each artist immensely expressive in her own way.
Mike Andrew McLean
Ningeokuluk Teevee
Allen Ginsberg
Camille Iquliq
Robin LauRence
Visualizing a Culture for Strangers
Nanaimo Art GalleryCampus Gallery: 900 Fifth St 2nd location, Downtown Gallery:150 Commercial St�250-740-6350 250-754-1750nanaimoartgallery.comCampus: mon-fri 10am-5pm sat 12-4pm; Downtown: tues-sat 10am-5pm.CAMPUS Thru Apr 12 Record (Re)cre-ate: Contemporary Coast Salish Artfrom the Salish Weave Collection;DOWNTOWN Thru May 2 Gleaners.
Oxygen Art Centre3-320 Vernon St (Alley Entrance)�250-352-6322 oxygenartcentre.orgwed-sat 1-5pm or phone. Thru Feb 7Kathi Hofmann, “Mater Familias”,mixed-media sculptures. Visit thewebsite for information.
Touchstones Nelson:Museum of Art and History502 Vernon St�250-352-9813 touchstonesnelson.camon, tues, fri, sat 10am-5pm sun10am-4pm, thurs 10am-8pm, 5-8pm by donation. Feb 4-Apr 8 Bouk-je Elzinga, exhibition of paintingsand sketches of the artist’s travels inMexico and Peru; Thru Feb 15 AmyBohigian: Wide Shot/Close Up, onepart art video installation, one partsocial experiment and one partcommunity development exercise;Feb 21-May 10 Unlimited Edition,the exhibition looks at how prints byIndigenous artists represent a driveto preserve, represent and popular-ize oral histories and address socialinequities, works are drawn fromthe Kamloops Art Gallery’s perma-nent collection, curated by TaniaWillard (Secwepemc Nation), Abo-riginal curator-in-residence, Kam-loops Art Gallery.
Amelia Douglas GalleryDouglas College, 700 Royal Ave�604-527-5723 douglascollege.ca/aboutdouglas/groups-and-organizations/art-gallerymon-fri 10am-7:30pm sat 11am-4pm.Thru Feb 13 Kathryn Gibson O'Reganand Robert Shiozaki, “Essence”, col-laboration with photographs andceramics; Feb 19-Apr 10 Paul Bur-goyne, “Journey”, new works – a life-time of renderings in mixed media.
New Media GalleryAnvil Centre, 777 Columbia St, 3rd Flr�778-833-1864 newmediagallery.cadaily 10am-5pm, thurs 10am-8pm.Feb 14-Apr 12 Tracey Emin, TraceyMoffatt, Pipilotti Rist, NicolasProvost, R. Luke DuBois, MatthiasMüller & Christoph Girardet, JillianMcDonald, Brendan Van Hek andAngela Washko, “Amour Fou" (mad or
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sfu.ca/galleries�
Geometry of Knowing (Part 3) SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY GALLERY, BURNABY BC – Mar 21-May 15, 2015 For this four-part,multi-venue exhibition, curators Amy Kazymerchyk and Melanie O’Brian have gathered a rangeof artists in an effort to lay bare “approaches to the acquisition of knowledge in the full mind-body-spirit sense of intelligence.” Most of these approaches – “tactics of fieldwork, embodimentand materiality” – are evident; others are fleshed out through artist talks.
Part 3 of Geometry of Knowing is a curious mix that includes works by Black Mountain colouristJosef Albers, mid-century Van-couver painter and designerB.C. Binning, and youngerartists such as Kika Thorne,whose latest sculpture, TheQuestion of a Hunch (2015),“extends her ongoing interestin geometry, the visible spec-trum and magnetism as a fieldupon which to project ques-tions regarding chemical com-position and its politicalramifications.”
Thorne’s work is timely giv-en the recent interest in thelives of inanimate objects. Inpolitical theorist Jane Bennett’s2009 book, Vibrant Matter: APolitical Ecology of Things, the
author writes of a “vital materiality” that passes through both the observant body and the objectunder view. Michael Turner
Carole Itter, Euclid (from the slide series Euclid’s 13th Theorem, which was used incollaboration with an Al Neil performance (1979) [Simon Fraser University Gallery,Burnaby BC, Mar 21-May 15]
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anti-social love), works exposed in alltheir messy, destructive glory chart anobsessive journey to love gone wrong.
Artemis Gallery104C-4390 Gallant Ave �778-233-9805artemisgallery.catues-sun 12-5pm thurs 12-3pm. ThruMar 8 Shannon Browne, “Hierophany”,(hiero: sacred, phany: appearance), digi-tal metallic prints on aluminum, imagesfrom Rice Lake and the space in between;Mar 27-May 3 “Radix: the hiddenessence of trees”, Bill Stewart, asculptural installation of natural,hand-peeled roots and trees; Shan-non Browne, photographs – archivalinkjet prints on the theme of roots andshadow.
� Caroun Art Gallery1403 Bewicke Ave �778-372-0765 caroun.nettues-sat 12-8pm. Feb 3-14 “WinterGroup Exhibition 1”, calligraphy,drawings, paintings, photography andinlay works by Afsoon Montazeri,Ahmad Hessami, Fereshteh Sha-
hani, Homa Naeli, Leila ShokrGozar, Padideh Dehdari, SaraHasani Nalosi, Sahar Seyedi andSiminzar Khosravi; Feb 17-27Faranak Mohebbi, paintings anddrawings; Mar 2-6 Afsoon Montazeri,paintings; Mar 7-8 10am-6pm “NorthShore Art Crawl 2015”, paintings,drawings, illustrations, photography,calligraphy and inlay works by AtefehSafaei Nia, Azadeh M., BahmanDoustdar, Faranak Mohebbi, FarhadVarasteh, Fatemeh Javadi, FereshtehShahani, Houshang Seyhoun, HomaNaeli, Hossein Kashian, Jamal Abiri,Kaveh Rasouli, Leila Shokr Gozar,Liyu Wu, Masoud Soheili, Moham-mad Salahshour, Morteza Khan Ali,Mostafa Hamidi, Padideh Dehdari,Padideh Hashemi, Saeedeh Tarkash-vand, Sahar Seyedi, Sara HasaniNalosi, Sara Yousef Panah, Shab-nam Tolou, Siminzar Khosravi, SoniaKajavi, Tollt, Venus Arastoo Nejad,Zohreh Hamraz and others; Mar 11-28 Nowrouz 1394, jewellery.
CityScape Community Art SpaceNorth Vancouver Community ArtsCouncil 335 Lonsdale Ave �604-988-6844 nvartscouncil.ca
CityScape: tues-sat 12-5pm, DistrictFoyer Gallery, North Vancouver DistrictHall: mon-fri 8am-4:30pm, DistrictLibrary Gallery, Lynn Valley MainLibrary: mon-fri 9am-9pm sat 9am-5pm sun 12-5pm, City Atrium Gallery:mon-fri 8:30am-5pm. CITYSCAPE ThruFeb 28 Cerulean, showcasing abstractpaintings that incorporate the colourcerulean in varying degrees; Mar 6-Apr11 Rachael Ashe, Anyuta Gusakova,Mehran Modarres, Connie Sabo andJoseph Wu, “Paper Art Exhibition”,large-scale installations, sculptures,drawings, origami and 2-D and 3-Dpaper cuts; DISTRICT FOYER GALLERY, DIS-TRICT HALL OF NORTH VANCOUVER, 355 WQueens Rd Feb 4-Mar 31 PhilipeGadenne, “Dramatic skies”, an interpre-tation of the world around us regardingglobal warming and its effects on ourenvironment; Nancy Cramer, potteryinspired by spiritual beliefs of primitivesocieties and rustic art forms; DISTRICTLIBRARY GALLERY, LYNN VALLEY MAINLIBRARY, 1277 Lynn Valley Rd Feb 11-Apr 7 Leef Evans, works incorporatingfound or household materials inspiredby interesting compositions found ineveryday life; CITY ATRIUM GALLERY, 141W 14th St Thru Mar 16 Ying-Yueh
NORTH VANCOUVER
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Conservator’s Corner BY NADINE POWERconservationoffineart.com
Cleaning Acrylic Paintings: A Dilemma SolvedKeeping up with new materials, techniquesand, of course, technology is an importantpart of being a conservator. Until recently,cleaning acrylic painted surfaces was prob-lematic, as little was known about thebehaviour of acrylic films when water or sol-vents were introduced to the paint film.Most conservators used dry cleaning meth-ods or experimented with water or saliva toremove imbibed grime. The results wereoften disappointing, and the use of wateroften risked unwanted alterations of the sur-face texture of the painting.
In August 2014, the Canadian Con-servation Institute (CCI), in part with theGetty Conservation Institute, hosted aworkshop on the cleaning of acrylic paintedsurfaces (CAPS). Over four days, an inti-mate group of conservators gathered fromaround the world in Ottawa to hear severalof the top conservation scientists discusstheir latest findings.
The mornings were spent in lectures,learning about the molecular structures andphysical properties of acrylic paint films, aswell as about new cleaning solutions andtheir mechanisms of action. The afternoons
were spent in the CCI laboratories, with participants watching demonstrations by expert paintingconservators and trying out the new cleaning methods themselves.
The foundation of the CAPS system is that the conservator must first understand the propertiesof the paint film with which he or she is working and develop cleaning solutions customized to thatstructure. Participants reviewed the behaviour and aging properties of acrylic paint as well as theresponse of paint to water-based cleaning systems.
Participants also learned how to measure properties such as the pH and conductivity of paintedsurfaces – knowledge that would prepare them to tailor their cleaning solutions to a specific painting.Choosing aqueous or solvent-based cleaning systems, conservators can then alter the pH or conduc-tivity and add chelating agents or surfactants, depending on the desired effect.
Each participant was given large samples of acrylic paint that had been aged for several years andartificially soiled to mimic the grime often found on the surface of indoor paintings (including grimefrom tobacco smoke, dust, fingerprints, and food and beverages). The group was then encouraged toexperiment with combinations of new and old cleaning solutions, making note of qualities such aswhether the solutions were efficient cleaners, changed the texture of the painted surface or mistaken-ly removed paint.
The cleaning systems detailed at the CAPS workshop, however, now provide conservators withsolutions and emulsions that are more easily customized to the paintings being worked on. The resultof these advances means safer conservation practices and more brilliant outcomes.
Next Issue: Coming Apart at the Seams: A Polychrome Crucifix Project
Lists of formulations, samples of artificially soiled acrylic paints and vials ofcleaning solutions made for a busy and educational workshop
Chuang, stylized porcelain and fabricinstallation referencing status and classin China; Mar 17-May 11 CatherineNicholls, large-scale hand-crafted tex-tile pieces inspired by spring and cherryblossoms.
Gordon Smith Galleryof Canadian Art2121 Lonsdale Ave �604-998-8563 gordonsmithgallery.catues-sat 12-5pm closed holidays.MEZZANINE GALLERY Thru Feb 21 RozMarshall: Memory and Metamor-phosis, paintings – contemporarymeditations on the female figureinspired by study of the Renaissance;PROCESS GALLERY Robert Young: Spa-tial Understanding, showing severalprints from his archive along with hisnewest paintings; PROCESS AND MEZZA-NINE GALLERIES Opens Mar 3 RossPenhall, paintings; MAIN GALLERYThru May 2 Figurative Contempla-tion, figurative works from the Artistsfor Kids Teaching Collection.
Graffiti Co. Art Studio/Gallery171 E 1st St, 2nd Flr �604-980-1699 graffiticoart.comwed-fri 1:30-5:30pm or by appt. Art
Studio/Gallery offering original con-temporary fine art, located on the sce-nic North Shore close to LonsdaleQuay. Feb-Mar Paintings by Lucy God-win and Sian Woodward, mixed mediaand unique jewellery by Gabriele Mau-rus, CDs and art prints by Meg Troy,and more; participating in the NorthShore Art Crawl Mar 7-8 10am-6pm.
Presentation House Gallery333 Chesterfield Ave �604-986-1351presentationhousegallery.orgwed-sun 12-5pm. Feb 21-Apr 5 WeAre Continually Exposed to theFlashbulb of Death: The Photo-graphs of Allen Ginsberg (1953-1996), photographs capturing hislife, loves and artistic community,including Jack Kerouac, William S.Burroughs, Neal Cassady, PeterOrlovsky and others of the Beat Gen-eration of writers, poets and activists.
Seymour Art Gallery4360 Gallant Ave �604-924-1378 seymourartgallery.comdaily 10am-5pm. Thru Feb 7 Discov-ery: Fire, annual juried exhibition fea-turing new and emerging artists; Feb11-Mar 8 Neil Chung, Suzanne Ful-
brook, Yvonne Hachkowski,Eliza-beth MacKenzie, Tamara Skuboviusand Janice Wu, “Make, Remake,Unmake”, video, painting, photogra-phy, drawing, sculpture and illustra-tion – repetition is used as a device toexplore diverse ideas and themes;Mar 11-Apr 11 Nomi Chi, GerryKramer, Joel Rich, Alison Wood-ward and others, “Tattoo”, photo-graphs by BC tattoo artists show theirmost memorable works on skin anddiscuss how they address, overcomeand embrace the challenges of tattooas an artistic medium.
The Lloyd Gallery18 Front St �250-492-4484 lloydgallery.common-sat 10am-5:30pm. Galleryartists Aunaray, Irvine Adams, LailaCampbell, Rod Charlesworth, ConnorCharlesworth, Glenn Clark, SharonClarke-Haugli, Peter Corbett, JanCrawford, Les Dunlop, Serge Dubé,Valerie Eibner, Shannon Ford, JimGlenn, Perry Haddock, Julia Harg-reaves, Frances Harris, Anne-Marie
PENTICTON
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Harvey, Erika Hawkes, Kevin Healy,Michael Hermesh, Beverly Inkster,Therese Johnston, Bob Kebic, DenisKleine, Dongmin Lai, Robyn Lake,Gerda Lattey, Viv McElgunn Lieskovs-ki, Angie Roth McIntosh, Min Ma,Julie Mai, Ingrid Mann-Willis, GregMetz, Debbie Milner, Toni Onley,Diane Paton Peel, Graham Pettman,Lance Regan, John Revill, BonnieRoberts, Anita Skinner, Theo Tobi-asse, Marla Wilson, Nel Witteman,Annette Witteman, Marjolein Witte-man, William Watt and Robert Wood.
Penticton Art Gallery199 Marina Way �250-493-2928 pentictonartgallery.comtues-fri 10am-6pm sat & sun 12-5pm.Thru Mar 15 MAIN GALLERY CulturalAwakening Through the Arts: En’OwkinStudents and Faculty, The NationalAboriginal Professional Artist TrainingProgram (NAPAT), professional Indige-nous artists from across Canada workas mentors to help emerging artistsrediscover, re-examine and re-interprettraditional art forms; PROJECT ROOMSophia Burke: All About Boys, photog-raphy, video and installation with afocus on themes of intimacy, emotionand narrative; TONI ONLEY GALLERYYvonne Adams (1921-2014): A Lega-cy Remembered – The Landseer Col-lection/Sonia Cornwall Collection,donations to the gallery's permanentcollection: engravings by British artistSir Edwin Landseer (1802-1873) anda collection of works by Cariboo artistSonia Cornwall (1919-2006); LOBBYGALLERY In the Eye of the Beholder,preview of works curated and gatheredfrom the dark recesses of the gallery,thrift stores, auction houses and dona-tions, works available Mar 15 7:30pm;Mar 23-May 10 MAIN GALLERY Steam-rolled: How Steam Colonized theWest, invited artists from across Cana-da examine the role the railway hasplayed in the history of Canada over thepast 148 years; PROJECT ROOM AND TONIONLEY GALLERY Elementary Basic: ASteampunk Primer, an artistic anddesign subculture combining sciencefiction, history, fantasy and the Victori-an era into a fanciful blend.
Tumbleweed Galleryand Framing452 Main St �250-492-7701 tumbleweedgallery.catues-sat 10am-5pm sun & mon byappt. Artist in attendance Fridays
10am-5pm. Thru Jun 15 Liz Marshall,Margo Cooper, W.L. Hibberd, JillLeir Salter, Susan McCarrell, CarolMunro and Jenny Long, “Push andPull”, new works by gallery artists.
DRAW Gallery4529 Melrose St �250-724-20561-855-755-0566 drawgallery.comMay thru Dec: thurs-sat 12-5pm. OurGallery Beyond Walls offers con-temporary Canadian West Coast artin an intimate setting, celebrating thediversity and talent of local andregional artists. Feb-Apr Galleryclosed. Works by gallery artists canbe viewed and purchased online oron location. Paintings, photographs,mixed media, glass, copper, paper,cedar, photographic giclées, ink andpaper by Lucas Chickite, ColleenClancy, Nanci Cook, Cathy Corbett,Barbara Desmarais, Gordon James,Martha James, Louise Lavallee,Amy Louise, Davyd Oram, PerrinSparks, Laurence Subra-Bieusses,Catherine Tableau, Cat Thom, Dar-ren Willis, Tamas Zalatnai and oth-ers.
� Port Moody Arts Centre2425 St Johns St �604-931-2008 pomoarts.camon-fri 10am-8pm sat-sun 10am-
5pm closed holidays. Thru Feb 19Not Just Round – Greater Vancou-ver Woodturners Guild, interestingand innovative ways of combiningwoodturning with something else –texture, colour, form or material; Feb26-Apr 2 Wearable Arts, evocative,imaginative and thought-provokingsculpture for the human body, creat-ed by artists from five countries.
Two Rivers Gallery725 Canada Games Way�250-614-7800 tworiversgallery.camon-sat 10am-5pm thurs 10am-9pm sun 12-5pm. Thru Mar 1 RUSTADGALLERIA A Lexicon of the North,works by local teens; Feb 12-Apr 26Adad Hannah, Philippa Jones, Mar-ianne Nicolson, Ann Smith and Jen-nifer Pighin, “Elapsed”, artworkbridging the past and the future –each artist brings a unique perspec-tive and philosophical approach totheir practice; “North: An Exhibitionfor the 2015 Canada Winter Games”,artwork exploring what North meansto us, featuring Anna-Maria Lawrie,Annerose Georgeson, AzucenaRudland, Betty Kovacic, Bill Horne,Caroline Anders, Crystalynn Tarr,Desiree deRuiter, Elmer Gunder-son, Frances Gobbi, Jennifer Pigh-in, Judy Hilgemann, Kim Stewart,Mary Mottishaw, Perry Rath, SusanBarton-Tait, Victoria Edgarr, Roder-ick Brown and Saul Miller.
Museum of Northern BC100 First Ave W �250-624-3207 museumofnorthernbc.comtues-sat 9am-5pm. Admission: adults$6, students $2, children under 12 $1,children under 5 free, members free.Feb-Mar Lynn Cociani, “The Place inYour Heart”, new artworks in a varietyof media, including paintings, draw-ings, pastels and charcoal inspired byphotographs submitted by local con-tributors, depicting life on the NorthCoast of British Columbia; OngoingPermanent exhibits of NorthwestCoast history, art and culture in sev-eral galleries; the KWINITSA RAILWAYSTATION MUSEUM and the TSIMSHIANDANCE LONGHOUSE, exhibits, art andperformances.
PORT ALBERNI
PORT MOODY
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Gigi Hoeller, Possibilities, 20” x 25”[[email protected], gigibutterfly.com;604-885-6650, solo exhibition in March atLanding Gallery Artists’ Co-op, Gibsons BC,on the Sunshine Coast]
The Old School HouseArts Centre122 Fern Rd W �250-752-6133 theoldschoolhouse.orgmon-sat 10am-4:30pm. Feb 2-21Nicola Morgan, Royden Josephsonand Brenda Elliot, paintings; Feb23-Mar 14 Nancy Broad, JoannaRogers and Kelly Irving, mixedmedia; Mar 16-Apr 10 Tony Bousall,David Hunwick, David Ladmore,Laurie Ladmore and Paul Peregal,paintings by Victoria artists; Con-versation between photographerBarry Herring and painter RichardMotchman.
Richmond Art Gallery7700 Minoru Gate �604-247-8300 richmondartgallery.orgmon-fri 10am-6pm thurs 10am-9pmsat & sun 10am-5pm. Thru Mar 29 EliBornowsky, Jeremy Hof, MoniqueMouton and Jinny Yu, “Close Listen-ing”, exploring the medium of paintthrough nontraditional techniques,including assemblage, sculpture,video and installation, while challeng-ing the definition of the act of paintingorganized and circulated by theOttawa Art Gallery.
Salmon Arm Art Gallery70 Hudson Ave NE �250-832-1170 salmonarmartscentre.catues-sat 11am-4pm. Thru Feb 28Game On, annual juried membersexhibition inspired by sports andrecreation; Mar 7-28 Cathy Stubing-ton, “Puppets, Peonies and Commu-nity Plays”, the art of engagementfeaturing installations from severalpast Runaway Moon productions.
Peninsula Gallery100-2506 Beacon Ave�250-655-1282 1-877-787-1896pengal.common-sat 9am-5pm sun 11am-4pm.Feb-Mar Showing works by galleryartists Mickie Acierno, Gaye Adams,Don Bastian, Robert Bateman, KristinaBoardman, Lindsay Branson, PhilipBuytendorp, Elynne Chudnovsky,Brent Cooke, Carol Evans, Douglas Fish-er, Real Fournier, Tim Hall, Tom Hamer,W. Allan Hancock, Tiffany Hastie, MarkHobson, IceBear, Gail Johnson, Mal-colm Jolly, Jack Kreutzer, ClementKwan, Sheena Lott, Dennis Magnus-son, Jerry Markham, Sheila Mather,Richard McDiarmid, Glen Melville,Catherine Moffat, Pieter Molenaar,
Murray Phillips, Clive Powsey, MichaelO'Toole, Nancy O'Toole, Jim Park, RonParker, Janice Robertson, Gail Sibley,Sandhu Singh, Blu Smith, MichaelStockdale, Ray Ward and Alan Wylie.
Foyer Gallery at theSquamish Public Library37907 2nd Ave�604-892-3110 604-815-3629squamish.bclibrary.ca/services-programs/foyer-gallerymon-thurs 12-8pm fri-sun 10am-4pm. Feb 3-Mar 2 WALLS Rich Rawl-ing, “Jars. Boats. Trees.” watercolourpaintings; CASES Paul Li, “CalligraphicExpression”, framed pen and ink onpaper; YOUNG AT ART Quest UniversityStudents, works in various media; Mar3-Apr 6 WALLS & CASES Compassion,group exhibition in various media inhonour of International Women’s Day.
Gibsons Public Art Gallery431 Marine Dr, Gibsons�604-886-0531 gpag.cathurs-mon 11am-4pm. Feb 5-Mar 1Alan Sirulnikoff, Maurice Spiraand Richard Nelson, “Still Life”,photography, painting and film; Tor-rance Beamish, ceramics; Mar 5-29
QUALICUM BEACH
RICHMOND
SALMON ARM
SIDNEY
SQUAMISH
SUNSHINE COAST
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Shout Out, annual young people'sart exhibition.
Goldmoss Gallery2840 Lower Rd, Roberts Creek�604-886-1968 goldmoss.comby appt. Large-scale sculpture exhi-bition of works in progress by LeeRoberts and Nicolas Meyer. Ongo-ing Sunshine Coast artists converg-ing and collaborating in preparationfor the Roberts Creek Arts Festival.
Landing Gallery Artists' Co-op436 Marine Dr, Gibsons�604-886-0099 landinggallery.cadaily 11am-4pm. Feb Winter GroupShow; Mar Gigi Hoeller, “EarlySpring”, pastels.
Kwantlen Art Gallery & Arbutus Gallery at Coast Capital Savings LibraryKwantlen Polytechnic UniversityD126-12666 72nd Ave�604-599-2219 kpu.ca/arts/fine-artsCheck the website for hours. SURREYCAMPUS: ARBUTUS GALLERY AT COAST CAP-ITAL SAVINGS LIBRARY Feb 2-27 GeorgeRammell, “Arrows, Anvils and Anti-Monuments”, selections from a decadeof sculptural production; Mar 6-Apr 1Nancy Duff and Linda Corrigan, “Aper-ture, Aporia, Afterimage”, video instal-lation built around their documentaryabout Nancy's father, Lawrence Duff,who served as an aerial photographerin the RCAF in World War II, and as areluctant soldier in the Army of Occu-pation in post-war Hamburg.
� Surrey Art Gallery13750 88 Ave (at King George Blvd)�604-501-5566 surrey.ca/artgallerySep 21-Jul 4: tue-thurs 9am-9pm fri9am-5pm sat 10am-5pm sun 12-5pm(closed mon & holidays). Thru Feb 8Crescent Beach Photography Club:Global Views; Feb 14-Apr 26 Art bySurrey Elementary School Students;Thru Mar 15 Views from the South-bank I: Histories, Memories, Myths,first of three exhibitions celebrating thegallery’s 40th anniversary through sto-ries of Surrey and its region; Thru Mar22 Taryn Hubbard: Surrey City Centrenée Whalley, an audio map of Surreydocumenting a city in transition, part ofOpen Sound 2015: Polyphonic Carto-graph; Thru Mar Scarlet Black, “Truth
and Beauty and Floral Forms: Selec-tions from Two Photo Series"; Thru Aug2 Orijit Sen: from Punjab, with Love, a10-metre-long digital reproduction of amural chronicling the daily life, history,myths and festivities of the Punjabregion through the centuries; Thru OctRobert Davidson: Supernatural Eye,aluminum sculpture; Thru Dec 15 JimAdams, Polly Gibbons, Cora Li-Leg-er, Haruko Okano and Mandeep Wirk,“Re:Source – A Living Archive 1975-2015”, bringing the gallery’s fourdecades of archives to life through anever-revolving installation in celebrationof our 40th anniversary; OFFSITE, SUR-REY'S URBANSCREEN (PROJECTING ARTAFTER DARK DAILY), EXTERIOR OF CHUCK BAI-LEY RECREATION CENTRE, 13458-107AAVE, surreyurbanscreen.ca, OperativeAgency (Bryan Lemos Beça and SteveDiPasquale), “The Space of Differ-ence”, video matrix responds to move-ment of the SkyTrain.
Gallery 17101710 56th St �604-943-3313 southdeltaartistsguild.comthurs-sun 11am-4pm. Thru Feb 22Love of Beauty, guild membersshow their artistic love of beauty;Mar 5-22 Deliberately Painted.
221A100-221 E Georgia St �604-568-0812221a.catues-fri 10am-5pm sat 12-5pm. ThruMar 14 Dustin Brons, Ellis Sam,Emma Metcalf-Hurst, Gabi Dao, KaraHansen, Scott Kemp and Zebulon
Zang, “No Monologue"; OFFSITE SEMI-PUBLIC, 271 UNION ST Feb 21, 2015-Feb 20, 2016 Ken Lum, “VancouverEspecially (A Vancouver Specialscaled to its property value in 1973,then increased by 8 fold)”, installa-tion.
Access Gallery222 E Georgia St �604-689-2907 accessgallery.catues-sat 12-5pm. Thru Mar 7 Kath-leen Ritter and Guillermo Trejo,“Far Away So Close Part II”, explor-ing the idea of bridging distance as aquixotic gesture, and the particularrelationship of this gesture to art-making.
Art Beatus (Vancouver)Consultancy Ltd.108-808 Nelson St �604-688-2633 artbeatus.common-fri 10am-6pm. Feb 13-Mar 20Junichiro Iwase, Mimi Chen Ting,Taiga Chiba, Tomoko Taniguchi andTakehiro Yoshimitsu, “Colours andForms”, works by gallery artists.
The Art Emporium2928 Granville St �604-738-3510 theartemporium.caby appt mon-sat 10am-6pm. Excep-tional inventory of paintings by Cana-dian, American and French mastersof the 20th century, featuring EmilyCarr and all members of the Group ofSeven and several of their contempo-raries, C. Krieghoff, David Milne,J.W. Morrice, Tom Thomson; paint-ings by Karel Appel, A. Calder, E.Cortès, Montague Dawson, Jean andRaoul Dufy, A. Hambourg, J. Hervé,Picasso, Utrillo, A. Volti, AndrewWyeth, and Canadians Max Bates,Donald Flather, H.G. Glyde, E.J.Hughes, F. Lansdowne, John Little,Henri Masson, Rudolph Messner,Hugh Monahan, Riopelle, GoodridgeRoberts, Jack Shadbolt and AndrewWong.
Art Works Gallery225 Smithe St �604-688-3301 artworksbc.common-fri 9am-6pm sat 10am-6pm sun12-5pm. Thru Feb 14 Urbanity, the artof urban landscapes finds beauty fromstreet to skyscraper and everything inbetween; Feb 18-Mar 18 Emergence,new works by gallery artists who havefound a new source of inspiration toexpress their creativity; Mar 21-Apr 30
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David Bailin, Listening (2012), coffee &charcoal on prepared paper [PrographicaGallery, Seattle WA, thru Feb 14]
Harninger, abstract works by some ofour most renowned artists.
Arts Off Main Gallery216 E 28th Ave �604-876-2785 artsoffmain.cawed-sun 11:30am-5:30pm. An artist-run gallery with work exclusively byBC artists, offering original andaffordable paintings, photographs,prints, sculpture, jewellery, potteryand professional framing. Showingnew artists Marina Crawford, pho-tography, Cindy-Wynne Kolding,acrylics, and Chardon Labrie, mixedmedia. Also works by Linda Read,Eileen Mosca, Sabine Simons, LeeSanger and Jennifer Mitton. Fea-tured artist for Feb, Gary Nay, andMar, NapoleonV.
Artspeak233 Carrall St �604-688-0051 artspeak.catues-sat 12-5pm. Thru Mar 7 ValérieBlass: My Life, sculptures - tensionsexplored between form, figure, mate-rials and art historical tropes, usingeveryday objects and industrial mate-rials to investigate voids and absencesin natural history and art history.
ArtStarts Gallery808 Richards St�604-336-0626 ext 105 artstarts.com/gallerytues-fri 10am-5pm sat 10am-4pm.Thru Mar 28 Dwellings: FromSeabeds to Cityscapes, showcasingthe ways that young people fromacross BC have reflected on theirimmediate surroundings and exam-ined the concept of dwelling, in bothhuman and natural worlds.
Audain Gallery149 W Hastings St, SFU Woodward's�778-782-9102 sfugalleries.catues-sat 12-6pm. Thru Feb 28 Geom-etry of Knowing, group exhibitioninvestigating approaches to the acqui-sition of knowledge in the full mind-body-spirit sense of intelligence; Mar19-28 SFU School for ContemporaryArts visual arts course in which stu-dents respond to the exhibition'stheme. Four-part exhibition in two gal-leries – Part 1 Jan 15-Feb 28 SFUGallery, Burnaby; Part 2 Jan 15-Feb 28Audain Gallery; Part 3 Mar 21-May 15SFU Gallery, Burnaby; Part 4 Mar 19-28 Audain Gallery. Curated by AmyKazymerchyk and Melanie O’Brian.
Bau-Xi Gallery3045 Granville St �604-733-7011 bau-xi.common-sat 10am-5:30pm sun 11am-5:30pm. Feb 7-21 Tom Burrows,“Echo”, new resin works coincidingwith a 50-year review of his career atthe Morris and Helen Belkin Gallery,University of British Columbia, 1825Main Mall; UPPER GALLERY StevenNederveen, “Illuminated Lands”,new mixed-media works focusing onthe mystical energy of nature, reveal-ing a hidden magical world; Mar 7-21Joshua Jensen-Nagle, “The PictorialUncanny”, photographs of Europeanlocales including urban night scenes,coastal beaches and mountain views;UPPER GALLERY Pat O'Hara, newabstract paintings highlighting theuse of vivid colour and texture.
Beaty Biodiversity MuseumUniversity of British Columbia2212 Main Mall �604-827-4955 beatymuseum.ubc.camon-sun 10am-5pm. Thru Feb 15CWILL BC (Children’s Writers andIllustrators of BC), “Backyard Biodi-versity”, featuring books and illustra-tions engaging children and families
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with nature through stories and art,as well as local animal and plantspecimens from the museum; Mar10-Sep 7 Ian Lane, “ShutterBUG”,photographs of insects – showcas-ing Lane's contributions to art andscience.
Bill Reid Galleryof Northwest Art639 Hornby St �604-682-3455 billreidgallery.cawed-sun 11am-5pm. Admission(+GST): adults $10, seniors/students$7, youth/child 5-17 $5, kids 4 andunder free, family (2 adults + 2 chil-dren) $25. Group rates and guidedtours available when booked inadvance. Showcasing the permanentcollection of Bill Reid works andchanging exhibitions of contempo-rary Northwest Coast art. Thru Feb15 AKOS: Corey Bulpitt, featuringmonumental works of spray canart, a natural fusion between HipHop and Haida cultures that speaksunobstructed across language andcultural barriers; Thru Feb 18
Gwaai Edenshaw, “Godanxee’wat:Stone Ribs”, an eight-and-a-half-foot bronze totem pole; Mar 4-Sep27 Beau Dick, Gigame WalisGyiyam (Gray whale), “The Box ofTreasures: Gifts from the Supernatu-ral”, masterworks created for Kwak-waka’wakw potlatches by the masterartist and traditional chief.
Britannia Art Gallery1661 Napier St, Britannia Library,Britannia Community Centre�604-718-5800 604-874-5916britanniacentre.orgmon thurs fri 8:30am-5pm tues-wed8:30am-9pm sat 9:30am-5pm sun 1-5pm. Mar 4-27 “Mixed Tapes”, KateMacDonald and Leslie Sears, mixed-media works; David Fukuhara, Celticknotting.
Catriona Jeffries Gallery274 E 1st Avenue �604-736-1554 catrionajeffries.comtues-sat 11am-5pm. Thru Feb 28 IanWallace, “The Construction Site";Mar 21-May 2 Myfanwy MacLeod.
Centre A, VancouverInternational Centre forContemporary Asian Art229 E Georgia St �604-683-8326 centrea.orgtues-sat 11am-6pm. Thru Mar 28“(transgression/cantosphere)”, theCantonese language, with a long-standing home base in Vancouver, isunder threat globally. The gallery istransformed into a space of resistanceby artist collective Hong Kong Exile(Milton Lim, Remy Siu and NatalieTin Yin Gan), in collaboration with lin-guist Zoe Lam and artist Howie Tsui.
� Chali-Rosso Art Gallery2250 Granville St �604-733-3594 chalirosso.comtues-sun 11am-6pm and by appt.“Masters of Fine Art”, original worksby Picasso, Chagall, Miró, Dalí,Matisse, Ernst, Kandinsky, Mother-well, Rembrandt and Renoir.
Charles H. Scott GalleryEmily Carr University of Art + Design1399 Johnston St, Granville Island
34 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
cristallgallery.com�
Michael Levin: MementoELISSA CRISTALL GALLERY, VANCOUVER BC – Jan 22-Feb 21, 2015 Before taking up the camera,Michael Levin studied flamenco guitar inSpain. Of his experience, he writes:“Unlike classical guitar, which is governedby an established set of rules, flamencoguitar is more spontaneous as it works tocolour and shade the performance of theflamenco dancer.”
Now an established fine-art photogra-pher, Levin has used flamenco to informhis more recent works. “I’ve been spend-ing time over the last three years primarilyin France, Germany and Japan trying tofind my way with colour,” he writes. Theresult of these journeys is a new body ofwork “about the possibility of colour –how it can be both old and new again.”
Inspired by the muted colours of19th-century landscape painting, theenergetic fields of the post-painterly mod-erns, and what the Kodak No. 1 cameracan achieve, Levin’s latest works include aseries of circular pictures that could havebeen shot 125 years ago, when the camera debuted. And the subject matter, too, Levin says, isdrawn from the painters of that time. Michael Turner
Michael Levin, Canal Boats (2014), archival Ultrachrome print [Elissa CristallGallery, Vancouver BC, Jan 22-Feb 21]
�604-844-3809 chscott.ecuad.cadaily 12-5pm. Thru Feb 8 AspenMagazine: 1965-1971, displaying all10 issues of the groundbreakingmagazine out of New York from themid to late 1960s; Feb 25-Apr 19David Zink Yi, works by the Peru-vian-born, Berlin-based artist.
Chinese Cultural Centre Museum555 Columbia St�604-658-8880 604-658-8883cccvan.comtue-sun 11am-5pm. Thru Feb 15Interwoven Stories: Textiles, Cos-tumes, Cultures – A MulticulturalFest; Feb 21-Mar 18 Chinese NewYear Wood Block Prints – Nian HuaExhibition; Ongoing Generation toGeneration – History of ChineseImmigrants in British Columbia; Chi-nese Canadian Military Museum.
Choboter Fine Art23 Alexander St �604-688-0145 604-779-7050choboter.common-sat 12-6pm. Ongoing presenta-tion of recent and older figurativeabstract paintings by local artist DonChoboter.
Circle Craft Gallery1-1666 Johnston St, Granville Island�604-669-8021 circlecraft.netdaily 10am-7pm. Thru Feb 24Megan Rosner, Merlyn Richelhoff,Nathalie Scott Desfosses and Mura-co Wolfe, “Circle Craft StudentScholarship Exhibition”, works bywinners from 2014; Mar 5-30 FaribaMirzaie, original transformativewearable art created from naturalmaterials.
Coastal PeoplesFine Arts Gallery1024 Mainland St, Yaletown2nd location: 312 Water St, Gastown�604-684-9222 604-685-9298coastalpeoples.comdaily 10am-6pm. GASTOWN GALLERYOngoing “Winter Solstice I: Celebrat-ing the coming of light”, an epic eventwhen the “sun stands still” (from Latinsolstice), a time of new beginnings andgrowth with a focus on the celestialbeings of sun and moon, with multi-media artworks by Beau Dick, KevinCranmer, Susan Point, Norman Tait,Richard Sumnar, Tim Paul, TomPaul, Isabel Rorick, Derek Wilson,Phil Gray, Doug David, Tom Eneas,Marcus Alfred, Tim Alfred, Barry Wil-son, Henry Robertson and others.
Contemporary Art Gallery555 Nelson St �604-681-2700 contemporaryartgallery.catues-sun 12-6pm. Thru Feb 15 GraceSchwindt, “Only A Free IndividualCan Create A Free Society”, new fea-ture length film installation – a narra-tive that questions how freedom was,and is, understood, who has accessto it and what political and socialstructures need to be in place to cre-ate a free society; Krista Belle Stew-art, “Motion and Moment Always”,new works alongside archivalphotographs and objects, the culmi-nation of a fall 2014 residency at theNisga’a Museum, presented withPuSh International Performing ArtsFestival; OFFSITE 110-750 HAMILTON ST(MEETING POINT) Feb 4-6 3pm and Feb7-8 10:30am & 3pm Lotte van denBerg, “Cinema Imaginaire”, outdoorwalking performance gives us a sen-sory adventure. 150 minutes, no
intermission, $36 ticketstonight.caor tel. 604-605-8284 ext 200, pre-sented with PuSh International Per-forming Arts Festival; OFFSITE YALE-TOWN-ROUNDHOUSE STATION, CANADALINE AND GALLERY FACADE Thru Feb 15Gunilla Klingberg “Brand New View(Vancouver)”, two new interrelatedlarge-scale commissions, both chal-lenging and exploiting the opportu-nities presented at each location, thefirst Canadian exhibition by Swedishartist Klingberg; OFFSITE YALETOWN-ROUNDHOUSE STATION, CANADA LINEThru Apr 19 Shannon Bool, “TheFlight of the Medici Mamluk”, newcommission – commenting on therole of decorative arts within art his-tory, here presenting an exact scalephotograph of the 16th centuryEgyptian Medici Mamluk carpet,recently rediscovered stored in thePalazzo Pitti in Florence, Italy.
Craft Council of BC Gallery1386 Cartwright St, Granville Island�604-687-7270 604-687-6511craftcouncilbc.cadaily 10:30am-5:30pm. Feb 5-Mar 19Fiona Duthie, “Full(Filled)”, fibre – hol-low 3-D full-scale bodies hung fromabove, containing text and imagesviewed through cracks in skin madefrom felt, an exploration of resistanceand fulfillment, the barriers we con-ceive or construct that stand in thepath of our personal fulfillment; Mar26-May 7 Amanda McCavour, “Test-ing Testing 123”, mixed media – aprocess-based installation resultingfrom play, mistakes, patterns andcolours, incorporating thread-basedpieces reflecting small imaginedecosystems with those that have theirown internal logic.
preview-art.com PREVIEW 35
36 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015
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preview-art.com PREVIEW 37
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MUSEUM OF ANTHROPOLOGY
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FEDERATIONGALLERY
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CSA Space5-2414 Main St �604-876-4311 csaspace.caFor admission during regular busi-ness hours, see Pulpfiction Books(2422 Main St): mon-wed 10am-8pm,thurs-sat 10am-9pm, sun 11am-7pm.Thru Feb 22 Stephen Brekelmans.
Doctor Vigari Gallery1816 Commercial Dr �604-255-9513doctorvigarigallery.common-sat 11am-6pm sun 12am-5pm.Works that go back to the roots ofsignature designer furniture, homeaccessories, jewellery, glass, potteryand fine art.
Douglas Reynolds Gallery2335 Granville St �604-731-9292 douglasreynoldsgallery.common-sat 10am-6pm sun 12-5pm.Specializing in contemporary and his-toric Northwest Coast Native art andoffering a wide selection of works byleading First Nations artists, includingBill Reid, Robert Davidson, DonYeomans and Beau Dick; artworkincludes carved wood masks, cedarbentwood boxes, totem poles, bronzeand glass works, baskets, prints andhandcrafted gold and silver jewellery.
Dundarave PrintWorkshop + Gallery1640 Johnston St, Granville Island�604-689-1650 dundaraveprintworkshop.comwed-sun 11am-5pm. Feb 4-Mar 1Maria Tratt and Alexa Thornton,“Between the Lines”, new etchings,collagraphs, silkscreens and reliefprints; Mar 4-29 Denise Tonner,“Things in the Seed”, whimsical andfantastical series of intaglio, digitaland monoprints that explore individ-ual development.
Eagle Spirit Gallery1803 Maritime Mews, Granville Island�604-801-5205 eaglespiritgallery.comdaily 11am-5pm or by appt. Special-izing in Northwest Coast First Nationsand Inuit art, featuring museum qual-ity hand-carved masks, panels, bent-wood boxes, totem poles, argillite,button blankets, glass sculpture andInuit stoneworks.
Elissa Cristall Gallery2239 Granville St �604-730-9611 cristallgallery.comtues-sat 11am-6pm. Thru Feb 21
Michael Levin, “Memento”, newcolour photographs; Mar 7-28 CarrieWalker, “The Effect of Space”, penand ink drawings.
Emily Carr Alumni GalleryQueen Elizabeth Theatre630 Hamilton St �604-630-4562 ecuaa.caOpen during theatre performances orby appt. MEZZANINE & BALCONY LEVELSThru Mar 22 Nadine Agoste, “Bound-aries”, new photographs addresscommunity, the lines between publicand private, and fact and fiction; Mar23-May 24 Nicola Swaine, “NewWorks".
English Bay Gallery103-1535 Johnston St,Granville Island �604-688-3006 EnglishBayGallery.comdaily 10am-6pm. Ongoing Exhibitingpaintings by Ted Seeberg, photo col-lages by Bill Frampton and photog-raphy by Yoshi Yamamoto.
Equinox Gallery525 Great Northern Way�604-736-2405 equinoxgallery.comtues-sat 10am-5pm. Thru Feb 7HaroldTown: Park Paintings; Feb 14-Mar 21Philippe Raphanel: New Paintings;Mar 28-May 2 Marten Elder: Photo-graphs; Storefront Photographs.
The Fazakas Gallery145 W 6th Ave �604-876-2729 fazakasgallery.comtues-sat 11am-5pm. Rotating exhibi-
tions with artists Beau Dick, DonYeomans, Corey Bulpitt, Phil Gray,Carlos Colin, Rande Cook, TraceYeomans, James Picard, CaroleLandau, John Bennett, Alano Edz-erza, Cole Speck, Gary Petersonand Wayne Alfred.
Federation Gallery1241 Cartwright St, Granville Island�604-681-8534 artists.catues-sun 10am-4pm. Feb 3-15 Artists’Choice, members' works highlightingtheir creativity in subject, medium andstyle; Feb 17-Mar 6 Landscapes, art-works by Active and Signature mem-bers in their preferred media, from tra-ditional, to cityscapes, seascapes andbeyond; Mar 9-22 Success! works bymembers who have been newlyawarded “Signature Status"; Mar 23-Apr 5 Abstract Show, abstract artworkfrom Active and Signature memberartists.
Firehall Arts Centre Gallery280 E Cordova St �604-689-0691 firehallartscentre.cawed-sat 1-5pm and before eveningperformances. Thru Feb 28 ElaineMari, “Today's Lesson will be inLife”, pathos and humour-filled oil onmylar paintings reveal an approach tocurrent events and life's turmoil; Mar4-Apr 25 Invitational Exhibition,curated by Susan Gransby.
Fragrant Wood Gallery2447 Granville St �604-558-2889 fragrantwood.comdaily 10am-6pm. Showing galleryartists Robert Jess Marshall, BobHuxtable, Cathy Ludgate, FrancesSky, Perrin Sparks, Raymond Chow,Margaret Reece, IB Oka and others.
Framagraphic Custom Picture Framing8-1128 W Broadway �604-738-0017framagraphic.common-fri 9:30am-6pm sat 10am-5pm.A selection of scenic panoramicphotos of Vancouver, past and pres-ent, and surrounding local land-scapes, along with original land-scape paintings by Canadian artists.
Gallery Gachet88 E Cordova St �604-687-2468 gachet.orgwed-sun 12-6pm. Thru Feb 22 Oddi-ties: Gallery Gachet CollectiveShow, works by gallery members
38 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
Shannon Browne, Acrolith: Rhea (2014),digital metallic print on aluminum[Artemis, Deep Cove, North Vancouver BC,778-233-9805, artemisgallery.ca]
engaging audiences with contempo-rary disability/mental health diversi-ty/politicized art practices, artistsand allies; SALON SHOP Bruce Ray,“The Inward Eye”, drawings, sculp-tures and poetry; Mar 6-Apr 12 TheRight to Remain, showcasing art-work and documentation from work-shops guided by Downtown Eastsideartists who engaged their communi-ty in dialogue about human rights.
Gallery Jones1725 W 3rd Ave �604-714-2216 galleryjones.comtues-fri 11am-6pm sat 12-5pm andby appt. Feb 4-28 George Vergette,“Mysterious Mountain”, new works;Mar 5-31 Erin O’Keefe, Ehryn Torrelland Jeff Depner, “The Avoidance ofthe Real”, works with spatial relationsand perceptions in a 2-D format.
Gallery of BC Ceramics1359 Cartwright St, Granville Island�604-669-3606 bcpotters.comdaily 10:30am-5:30pm. Feb 4-Mar 1Keith Lehman and Carole Henshell,“Two For Joy!”, new works; Mar 5-29 Brendan Tang, Kathleen Raven,Robin Dupont and Sarah Lawless,“Dig It!”, shown in conjunction withNorthwest Ceramics Foundation'sworkshop at the Shadbolt Centre forthe Arts, Burnaby, BC.
grunt galleryUnit 116-350 E 2nd Ave�604-875-9516 grunt.catues-sat 12-5pm. Thru Feb 21Ahmad Tabrizi, “Crossed”, installa-tion of self-portraits comprising Per-sian poetry written by the artist andsimplified representation formed bypiles of pins, curated by MakikoHara; Feb 26-Mar 28 Brandon Vick-erd, “Chopper”, sculptures resem-bling 1960s motorcycle exoskele-tons are abstracted past the point oftheir utilitarian purpose, referencinga lapsed future; OFFSITE SATELLITEGALLERY, 2nd Flr, 560 Seymour StThru Mar 14 Mainstreeters: TakingAdvantage 1972-1982.
Havana Gallery1212 Commercial Dr �604-253-9119 havanarestaurant.camon-thurs 11am-11pm fri 11am-mid-night sat 10am-midnight sun 10am-11pm. Thru Feb 4 Suzann Kingston,“Touch the Art”, paintings; Feb 5-18James Roney, “A Cabaret of Mystics”,
paintings; Feb 19-Mar 4 Gail Taylorand Mariette Smith, “A Study inReflection”, paintings; Mar 5-18 KylaBailey, “Holi: Festival of Colour”, pho-tographs; Mar 19-Apr 1Michael Grif-fin, paintings and drawings.
Heffel Fine Art Auction House2247 Granville St�604-732-6505 1-800-528-9608heffel.common-fri 9am-5pm sat 10am-5pm.Online Auction Feb 5-26 Fine Cana-dian Art/Estates and Corporate Col-lections; Online Auction Mar 5-26Post-War & Contemporary Art.
hfa contemporary320-1000 Parker St�604-876-7606 604-349-7606hodnettfineart.comdaily by appt. Feb-Mar Noel Hodnett,paintings, drawings, photographsand sculptures.
� Hill's Native Art165 Water St, Gastown�604-685-5422 hillsnativeart.comdaily 9am-9pm. Feb-Mar THIRD FLOORGALLERY A selection of visiting artistsoffering carving and paintingdemonstrations.
preview-art.com PREVIEW 39
� Hot Art Wet City Gallery2206 Main St �604-764-2266 hotartwetcity.comwed-sat 12-5pm or by appt. Thru Feb14 Meaghan Kennedy and AliBruce, “Pinata”, new works; Feb 18-Mar 7 It's A Sheep Show, Lunar NewYear/Year of the Sheep group show;Mar 11-Apr 2 David Suzuki, groupshow tribute.
Howe Street Gallery of Fine Art& The Soul of Africa Collection555 Howe St �604-681-5777 howestreetgallery.comdaily 10am-6pm. Works in the clas-sical Renaissance style by newgallery artist David Shepherd andlimited edition mythological, Greekand biblical bronzes by RichardMinns, with exclusive representationin North America. Also showingworks by Evguenia Ioganov, RahimNavassi and Stephen Man-FaiCheng.
Ian Tan Gallery2202 Granville St �604-738-1077 iantangallery.common-sat 10am-6pm sun 12-5pm.
Feb 1-Mar 31 Winter Group Show,new work by gallery artists.
Il Museo, Il Centro,Italian Culture Centre3075 Slocan St �604-430-3337 ext 230 italianculturalcentre.catues-sat 10am-4pm. Thru Mar 5 TheSacred and the Arcane: The MythicVision of Evie Katevatis, mostly oilpaintings; Mar 17-May 15 Mended,textiles – the BC’s Surface DesignAssociation’s juried exhibition.
Initial Gallery2339 Granville St �604-428-4248 initialgallery.comtues-sat 12-6pm. Thru Feb 14 After-math: New Work by Craig Sibley,sculptures; Feb 19-Mar 21 LauraBrothers, Sara Ludy, Brenna Mur-phy and Krist Wood, “Witchcraft”,new media; Mar 21-Apr 25 DavidEllingsen, photographs.
Inuit Gallery of Vancouver206 Cambie St, Gastown�604-688-7323 888-615-8399inuit.com
mon-sat 10am-6pm sun 11-5pm.Thru Feb 13 Small Treasures, 12thannual exhibition of over 100 Inuitsculptures in diverse media, includ-ing stone and bone; Feb 14-Mar 6Beyond the Surface: The Drawingsof Ningeokuluk Teevee, a collectionof original drawings by a brilliantartist at the forefront of contempo-rary Inuit art.
� Jennifer Kostuik Gallery1070 Homer St �604-737-3969 kostuikgallery.comtues-sat 10am-6pm sun 1-5pm. ThruFeb 22 Carol Prusa, “Overflow”,sculptures supplemented by fibreoptics and programmed lights; Mar19-Apr 19 Stephen Hutchings,“NewPaintings”.
� Kafka's Coffee & Tea2525 Main St �604-569-2967 kafkascoffee.camon-fri 7am-9pm sat & sun 8am-8pm. Thru Feb 23 Priscilla Yu,“Kaleidoscope Resort”, illustrationsand paintings; Feb 26-Mar 30 SarahClement, “Cabinet of Curiosities”,illustrations.
40 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
nanaimoartgallery.com
GleanersNANAIMO ART GALLERY, NANAIMO BC – Jan 24-May 2, 2015 This exhibition of seven Canadian andinternational artists takes its namefrom Jean-François Millet’s paint-ing The Gleaners (1857). In place offood crops left behind after the har-vest, this show substitutes storiesgathered, as curator Jesse Birchputs it, from “travel to distantplaces, slow engagement with a sin-gle place or idea, or a combinationof the two.”
Among the participating artists isCanadian Kara Uzelman, whoseperipatetic lifestyle has taken her toremote residencies in the North andentrepreneurial projects on thePrairies, experiences that find theirway into her delicate yet refinedinstallations. The architectural train-ing of Joar Nango, a Norwegian-based Sami artist, is evident in his careful articulations of discarded building supplies.
The travels of word-of-mouth artist Michael Drebert have resulted not in art objects per se, butin stories given to gallery staff to be conveyed to those asking, “Where’s Michael?”Michael Turner
Joost Conijn, Wood Car (2002), video [Nanaimo Art Gallery, Nanaimo BC, Jan 24-May 2]
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GALLERY ROW1 UNO LANGMANN 604.736.8825 langmann.com
2 KIMOTO GALLERY 604.428.0903 kimotogallery.com
3 POUSETTE GALLERY 604.563.2717 pousettegallery.com
4 PETLEY JONES 604.732.5353 petleyjones.com
5 IAN TAN 604.738.1077 iantangallery.com
6 ELISSA CRISTALL 604.730.9611 cristallgallery.com
7 MASTERS GALLERY 604.558.4244 vancouver-mastersgalleryltd.com
8 HEFFEL 604.732.6505 heffel.com
9 DOUGLAS REYNOLDS 604.731.9292 douglasreynoldsgallery.com
10 MARION SCOTT 604.685.1934 marionscottgallery.com
11 KURBATOFF 604.736.5444 kurbatoffgallery.com
12 ART EMPORIUM 604.738.3510 theartemporium.ca
13 BAU-XI GALLERY 604.733.7011 bau-xi.com
Take the elevatorin the courtyardto the 4th floor
Katherine McLean Studio1-1359 Cartwright St (Rear),in Railspur Alley opposite Agro Cafe,Granville Island�604-684-8452 604-377-6689katherinemclean.comthurs-sun 11am-5pm or by chance.Feb-Mar Katherine McLean, “TheLuminous Garden”, encaustic paint-ings and ceramics.
Kimoto Gallery1525 W 6th Ave�604-428-0903 604-230-5287kimotogallery.comtues-sat 10am-6pm. Feb 6-28Michael Soltis, “Refinement”, newpaintings; Mar 6-28 Scott Sueme,“Arena”, new paintings; Mel Yap, “Ka-bloom!” new photographs.
Lattimer Gallery1590 W 2nd Ave �604-732-4556 lattimergallery.common-sat 10am-5:30pm sun 11am-5pm holidays 12-5pm. Originalworks of art by First Nations artists,including gold and sterling silver jew-ellery, masks, panels, bentwood box-es, totem poles, argillite, sculptures,paintings and limited edition prints.
Leighdon Studio Galleryleighdon.caThe Leighdon publications Artists ofBritish Columbia, Volumes 1, 2, 3and 4, are available through a varietyof gift shops, bookstores and gal-leries throughout BC. Visit the web-site for more information.
Lookout Gallery5800 University Blvd, Regent College�604-224-3245 regent-college.edu/our-campus/lookout-gallerymon-fri 8:30am-5pm sat 12-4pm. ThruFeb 12 Caitlin Ambery, Brian Liu, Brit-ta Fluevog, Adam Back, LindsaySchroeder and Cara Bain, “Life Lines”,mixed-media works featured in thesecond volume of WeMakeStuff, abook that documents and affirms thevocation of artists and innovators whoshare a common pursuit of living a lifethat embodies the teachings and spiritof Jesus Christ; Feb 19-Mar 19 Artistsfrom The Grunewald Guild and TheRegent Community, “What SustainsUs”, mixed media, considers the ques-tion, “Where do we find nourishmentfor our bodies, our spirits, our commu-nities, and our land?”; Mar 26-Apr 30
Adam Back, “The Whole Enchilada”,new mixed-media works generatedthrough reflection on the gratuity andexcess embedded in life.
Marion Scott Gallery/Kardosh Projects2423 Granville St �604-685-1934 marionscottgallery.comtues-sat 10am-6pm. Feb 21-Mar 21Nicotye Samayualie, "Plants, Objects,Landscapes", drawings.
Masters Gallery2245 Granville St �604-558-4244 vancouver-mastersgalleryltd.comtues-sat 10am-5pm. Specializing inhistorical Canadian art: CanadianImpressionism, The Group of Sevenand their contemporaries, CanadianGroup of Painters, Tom Thomson,Emily Carr, 19th and 20th centuryBC and western Canadian artists andhistorical photography.
Miriam Aroeste Fine Art215-1000 Parker St �604-716-8485 miriamaroeste.comby appt only. Contemporary abstractpaintings by international artist Miri-am Aroeste, showing new oil andacrylic paintings and a wide selectionof original works on paper.
Monny's Art Gallery2675 W 4th Ave �604-733-2082 envisionoptical.camon-sat 11am-6pm. Long-time col-lector Monny's permanent collectionof artwork, as well as rotating exhibi-tions of local artists Andrea Gower,Kerensa Haynes, Ted Hesketh, SoniaKobrahel and Stanimir Stoylov.
Morris and Helen BelkinArt GalleryUniversity of British Columbia1825 Main Mall �604-822-2759 belkin.ubc.catue-fri 10am-5pm, sat & sun 12-5pm,closed holidays. Thru Apr 12 TomBurrows, survey of sculptures, resinpaintings and archival works, from hisearly career on the Maplewood Mud-flats on the North Shore in the 1960sto the present, also showing Feb 7-21at Bau-Xi Gallery, 3045 Granville St.
Museum of AnthropologyUniversity of British Columbia6393 NW Marine Dr �604-822-5087 moa.ubc.cawed-sun 10am-5pm tues 10am-9pm.
42 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015
ROY KIYOOKA
JONATH
ANGLEED
MADRONA GALLERYLinda Jones
February 21 - March 7
Halin de RepentignyMarch 21 - April 4
606 VIEW STREET250-380-4660
TUES-SAT 10AM-5:30PM | SUN-MON 11AM -5PMmadronagallery.com
WINCHESTER MODERNCollector’s Choice
February 12 - March 7, 2015
758 HUMBOLDT STREET250-382-7750 / 250-386-2773
TUES-SAT 10AM - 5:30 PMwinchestergalleriesltd.com
VICTORIA GALLERIESHALINDEREPENTIGNY
SUSIE CIPOLLA
THE AVENUE GALLERYRotating Exhibition of
British Columbia Painters
2184 OAK BAY AVENUE250-598-2184
theavenuegallery.com
couch*FINE ARTTRIO: New work by Emerson Schreiner,Michael den Hertog and Jonathan Gleed
March 12th - March 31stPreview March 12th, 5-8pm
1010 BROAD STREET778-432-4777
MON-SAT 10AM-6PMcouchartgallery.com
Admission: adults $16.75, students& seniors 65+ $14.50, UBC staff,students & faculty free with ID, fam-ily $44.75, children 6 and under free,tues 5-9pm $9. Thru Apr 4 PigaPicha! 100 Years of Studio Photo -graphy in Nairobi; Thru Jan 2016c̓əsnaʔəm, the city before the city,a groundbreaking exploration ofMusqueam's ancient landscape andliving culture, focusing on Musqueamidentity and worldview, and highlight-ing language, oral history and thecommunity’s recent actions to protectcə̓snaʔəm.� Museum of Vancouver1100 Chestnut St, Vanier Park�604-736-4431 museumofvancouver.catues-sun 10am-5pm, thurs 10am-8pm. Admission: adults $14, seniors& students $11, youth 5-17 $9, chil-dren 4 and under free, family (2adults & 2 youth) $35. Thru Jan 2016cə̓snaʔəm, the city before the city,exploring one of the largest ofMusqueam’s ancient village sites
from about 2,000 years ago, locatedin the area now known as the neigh-bourhood of Marpole in Vancouver;Thru Mar 8 From Rationing to Rav-ishing, the effect WWII had on socie-ty and the transformation of women’sclothing in the 1940s and 1950s –from the collections of guest curatorsIvan Sayers and Claus Jahnke; Ongo-ing Neon Vancouver/Ugly Vancou-ver, neon signs of the '50s, '60s and'70s; Vancouver History Galleries,stories from the early 1900s to thelate 1970s.
Musqueam Cultural Centre Gallery4000 Musqueam Ave �604-263-3261 1-866-282-3261musqueam.bc.ca/musqueam-culturalcentre-gallerytues-sat 11am-4pm. Admission: $5.Thru Jan 2016 cə̓snaʔəm, the citybefore the city, focuses on thesophistication of Musqueam knowl-edge and technology, past and pres-ent, and features soundscapes, oralhistories and community interviews;
curated by Leona M. Sparrow, co-curated by Terry Point and JasonWoolman.
Or Gallery555 Hamilton St �604-683-7395 orgallery.orgtues-sat 12-5pm. Feb 10-Mar 14Raymond Boisjoly, Jeff Downer andKyla Mallett, “Artists' RisographResidency"; Mar 28-May 9 DavidHartt, “adrift".
Pacific Wave Glass Art1560 W 6th Ave �604-566-9889 pacificwaveglassart.common & sat 10am-5pm, tues-fri10am-6pm. Featuring mouth-blownglass collections from local and inter-national glass artists, Murano glasscollections by Italian glass masterssuch as Oscar Zanetti, Luca Vidal,Andrea Tagliapietra, Mario Gam-baro and Heather Konschuh, Ameri-can artists Karen Ehart and Paul Har-rie, new glass pieces from local artistJan Benda, paintings from KarenLorena Parker and other local artists.
44 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
uvac.uvic.ca
In Session -- OneLEGACY ART GALLERY, VICTORIA BC – Jan 17-Mar 28, 2015This exhibition, curated by Mary Jo Hughes, is a celebra-tion of four of the University of Victoria’s sessionalinstructors. It has a special focus on the fields in whichthese individuals both work and teach: photography anddigital media. Megan Dickie, Laura Dutton, d. bradleymuir and Tara Nicholson are all professional artists whodivide their time between their studio practices and theirpart-time positions working with first-year art students.
About her piece, Dueling, Dickie writes, “In my prac-tice, video is strategically used to represent the trans-formable aspects of my sculptures .… Video is used as atool to display these interactions as physically comedic.”Dutton, presenting Cape Spear/Cape Scott, describes it as “atwo-channel video installation that situates the viewer inthe middle of an unending cycle of real-time sunrises andsunsets.”
In his latest work, muir asks us to consider the photo-graph (and, by extension, the landscape we photograph) asan object. For Supernova Scene, he first crumpled a series oflandscape photos and then photographed the crumpledimages. Nicholson’s work, Tether, is also photography. It isa meditation on the working and resting spaces of artists,with images she took in Victoria and during a residency inGermany. Christine Clark
Laura Dutton, Sunspots & Horizon (2014), C-printtransmounted to Plexiglas with Sintra backing[Legacy Art Gallery, Victoria BC, Jan 17-Mar 28]
� Pendulum Gallery885 W Georgia St (HSBC Building)�604-250-9682 pendulumgallery.bc.camon-wed 9am-5pm thur-fri 9am-9pm sat 9am-5pm. Feb-Mar Visit thewebsite for exhibition information.
Petley Jones Gallery1554 W 6th Ave �604-732-5353 petleyjones.common-sat 10am-6pm. Feb 2-14 MarieH. Becker; Feb 16-28 Clayton Ander-son; Mar 2-14 Deborah Worsfold;Mar 16-28 John Horton; Mar 30-Apr11 Marie-Doris Valois; OngoingShowing historic works – originalpaintings by J.E.H. MacDonald, Var-ley, Johnston, Casson and Lismer.
Pousette Gallery403 & 404-1529 W 6th Ave,Rooftop, 4th Flr �604-563-2717604-837-2716 pousettegallery.comtues-sat 12-5pm or by appt. Rooftopdestination art gallery showcasingoriginal works from French and EnglishCanada, featuring Jean Claude Roy,Nicole St-Pierre, Denis Chiasson,Roger Ricard, Réal Fournier, MartineOuellet and Janeth Rodriguez. Visitthe website for details on upcomingshows.
Rennie Collection51 E Pender St �604-682-2088 renniecollection.orgReservation is required. Bookingsshould be made through the form onthe website. No charge for admis-sion. Thru Mar 28 Mircea Cantor:Collected Works, video narratives,sculptures and photographs.
Republic Gallery732 Richards St, 3rd Flr�604-632-1590 republicgallery.comtues-sat 10am-5pm and by appt.Thru Feb 7 Carol Sawyer, “ShadowPuppet"; Feb 12-Mar 14 Andrea Pin-heiro, “Pulp".
Satellite Gallery560 Seymour St, 2nd Flr�604-681-8425 satellitegallery.cawed-sat 12-6pm. Thru Mar 14 PaulWong, Annastacia MacDonald,Jeanette Reinhardt, Charlie Rea,Carol Hackett, Deborah Fong, Mar-lene Macgregor and Kenneth Fletch-er, “Mainstreeters: Taking Advantage,1972-1982”, videos, still photographs,correspondence, sketch books and
related ephemera by a self-identifiedgroup of socially and artistically moti-vated artists who came of age on Van-couver's Main Street.
� Sidney and Gertrude Zack Gallery
Jewish Community Centre950 W 41st Ave �604-638-7277 604-257-5111jccgv.com/content/jcc-cultural-artsmon-thurs 8:30am-10:30pm fri 8:30am-Shabbat closing (varies through-out the year) sat closed sun 9am-9pm.Feb 12-Mar 15 “The Chutzpah ArtShow 2015”, paintings based on
dance, movement and music by OrlyAshkenazy, Suzy Birstein, OlgaCampbell, Claire Cohen, MelenieFleischer, Shelley Freedman, PninaGranirer, Ethel Karmel, Yael Kastiel,Naama Laniado, Assia Linkovsky,Ava Lee Millman Fisher, Joyce Ozi-er, Sidi Schaffer and Janet Strayer;Mar 18-Apr 13 Lauren Morris, “ATapestry of Flowers”, paintings.
Spirit Wrestler Gallery47 Water St, Gastown �604-669-8813 1-888-669-8813spiritwrestler.common-sat 10am-6pm sun & holidays
preview-art.com PREVIEW 45
12-5pm. Mar 14-Apr 4 Lucy Tasse-or Tutsweetok (1934-2012) andCamille Iquliq (1973-2005), “Kee-watin Women in Stone".
Teck Gallery515 W Hastings St �778-782-4266 sfu.ca/galleryopen daily during campus hours.Thru Apr 11 Neil Campbell: Interior,working directly on the wall, Campbelltransforms the gallery’s architecturalspace with geometric torus forms toinstigate questions of perception andaddress the electric field of the body.
Toni Onley Estate�604-263-8980 604-454-1928tonionley.com, onleyprints.comRepresenting the Estate: in Victo-ria, Winchester Galleries; in Van-couver, Art Beatus; in Calgary, Wal-lace Galleries.
UNIT/PITT Projects236 E Pender St �604-681-6740 unitpitt.cawed-sat 12-5pm. Thru Feb 28 DerekCoulombe, Tom Hsu, Kari Klein-
mann and Lida Pawliuk, “The Facilityfor Consideration”, exhibition engag-ing in a many-voiced conversationconcerning the artist's conception ofspace. Ongoing within one block ofthe gallery UNIT/PITT Radio 89.7FM, projects and music by artists,and audio documentation.
Unitarian Church of Vancouver949 W 49th Ave �604-261-7204 vancouverunitarians.casun 10am-1:30pm or phone for hours.Thru Mar 2Catherine Stewart, “Invok-ing Venus”, archival metallic printsmounted on aluminum – scannedimages of bird plumage with fabric;Mar 2-Apr 2 Hanna Haapasalo,"NewDawn”, jacquard tapestry – abstractand semi-realistic productions of theinteraction of nature and human activ-ities, also showing encaustic paintingsand India ink drawings.
Uno Langmann Limited2117 Granville St �604-736-8825 1-800-730-8825langmann.comtues-sat 10am-5pm or by appt. Feb
“Colonization of the West". Themigration and settlement of the Eng-lish in North America in the 17th to19th centuries was marked by notice-able shifts in power, the discovery ofimportant resources and the strugglefor survival in a harsh climate. Artistsdocumented each stage of our histo-ry with creative renderings – JohnInnes, William Armstrong, RobertWhale, James Henderson, ThomasMower Martin and others; MarShowing Canadian Master paintings,including works by A.Y. Jackson,Fredrick Arthur Verner, DorothyOxborough, Harold Beament, JohnInnes and others; Ongoing A selec-tion of fine antiques and objets d’art.
Urban Aboriginal Fair Trade Gallery29 W Pender St �604-558-3589 urbanaboriginal.orgmon-fri 9am-5pm sat & sun 10am-6pm. Part of the Authentic IndigenousArts Initiative designed to provide asimple way to clearly identify and pro-tect authentic indigenous art by sellingoriginal carvings, paintings, limited
46 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
vanartgallery.bc.ca
Cézanne and the Modern: Masterpieces of EuropeanArt from the Pearlman CollectionVANCOUVER ART GALLERY, VANCOUVER BC – Feb 14-May 18, 2015 Ask what the most significant artisticinnovation of the 20th century was, and the answeryou’ll likely get is collage or the “readymade.” Nev-ertheless, painting remained that century’s domi-nant medium (with film running a close second).And so: perhaps it was the meeting of these mediathat brought us Cubism?
Paul Cézanne is the artist with whom Cubism ismost closely associated. He set this path out of Post-Impressionism, and was considered by Matisse andPicasso to be the “father of us all.” The evolution ofCézanne’s brushwork and his complex multi-panedfields are on display in this five-city touring exhibi-tion of works from the Pearlman Collection, organ-ized by the Princeton University Art Museum.
Among the 24 paintings by Cézanne is hisgroundbreaking landscape, Mont Sainte-Victoire (c.1904–1906), a work central to his oeuvre and indeedto art history. Also included in the exhibit are worksby Edgar Degas, Édouard Manet and AmedeoModigliani. Michael Turner
Paul Cézanne, Mont Sainte-Victoire (c. 1904-1906), oil oncanvas [Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver BC, Feb 14-May 18]
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edition prints, bentwood boxes, jew-ellery, etc., to support local artists. Thegallery is located on the first floor ofSkwachays Lodge, an Aboriginalthemed hotel, with the proceeds tosupport social housing.
Vancouver Art Gallery750 Hornby St �604-662-4719 (24-hr info line) vanartgallery.bc.cadaily 10am-5pm, tues 10am-9pm.Admission: adults $20, seniors(65+) $15, students $15, children 5-12 $6, children 4 and under free,family (maximum 2 adults, 2 chil-dren) $50, members free. ReferenceLibrary mon-thurs 1-5pm. Feb 14-May 18 Cézanne and the Modern:Masterpieces of European Art fromthe Pearlman Collection, 24 mod-ernist works mark the first time inover 50 years that the collection hastravelled, and the Vancouver ArtGallery is the only stop in Canada;Feb 14-May 24 Andrew Dadson:Over the Sun, exploring abstractionin various media, including newmonumental paintings, works thathave not previously been exhibited inCanada; Thru Apr 6 Emily Carr &Landon Mackenzie: Wood Chopperand the Monkey, tracing correlationsbetween different bodies of Macken-zie's work and the paintings of EmilyCarr, who has been a touchstone forMackenzie throughout her career;Mar 27-Oct 4 Material Future: TheArchitecture of Herzog & de Meuronand the Vancouver Art Gallery, pre-senting a closer look at Herzog & deMeuron's design philosophy througha selection of projects includingmuseums and galleries around theworld; Thru Apr 6 “Unscrolled:Reframing Tradition in Chinese Art”, adiverse selection of Chinese contem-porary artists whose practices areinformed by their cultural heritage,featuring Ai Weiwei, Chen Shaox-iong, Ji Yunfei, Liu Jianhua, JenniferWen Ma, MadeIn Company, Qiu Shi-hua, Sun Xun, Xu Bing and ZhangEnli; Thru May 18 The Poetics ofSpace, historical and contemporaryworks that investigate the idea ofspace, whether they are conceptually,analytically or emotionally founded;OFFSITE 1100 W GEORGIA ST Thru Apr12 Robert Youds, “For Everyone aSunset”, a light installation that drawsupon the architectural vernacular ofdowntown Vancouver.
Vancouver Holocaust Education Centre50-950 W 41st Ave�604-264-0499 vhec.orgmon-thurs 9am-5pm fri 9am-4pm.Thru Mar 13 Carl Lutz and the Leg-endary Glass House in Budapest,illustrates a little-known story ofdiplomatic rescue and moral courageduring the Holocaust. After the Naziinvasion of Hungary, 825,000 Hun-garian Jews came under attack.Inside the Glass House, Swiss Vice-Consul Carl Lutz issued thousands ofsafe passes and provided asylum toJews threatened with deportation.
� Vancouver Maritime Museum1905 Ogden Ave �604-257-8300 vancouvermaritimemuseum.comtues-sat 10am-5pm sun 12pm-5pm*thurs: 5-8pm, by donation. Admis-sion (+GST): $11 adults, $8.50 stu-dents, seniors, youth, $30 family, 5and under free. The museum hasextensive galleries of model ships, aCHILDREN'S MARITIME DISCOVERY CEN-TRE, a recreation of the fo'c'sle (fore-castle) of Vancouver's ship DISCOV-ERY, an extensive collection of mar-itime art and a large library andarchives. ST. ROCH is one of theworld's great Arctic explorer vessels.
preview-art.com PREVIEW 47
Thru Apr 5 Chi-Ming Yeung, “Shipsand the Sea”, marine paintings; ThruSpring 2015 Western Waters: TheRoyal Canadian Navy on our Coast,a journey through individual stories,strategic operations and accom-plishments during the wars of the20th century.
Wendel Gallery1490 Johnston St, Granville Island�604-722-6987 wendelgallery.common-sat 9am-6pm sun by appt. Mar10-28 Imaginaria, paintings and finejewellery by renowned local andinternational artists.
Wil Aballe Art Projects/WAAPNEW LOCATION: 105-1356 Frances St �778-229-3458 waapart.comthurs-sat 12-5pm or by appt. ThruFeb 28 Angela Teng, “GentleGroove”; FRONT OF GALLERY MatthewBrown, Maegan Hill-Carroll, ScottMassey and Jade Yumang, “BecauseUnfathomable"; Mar 19-Apr 18 ScottBillings, kinetic sculptures andvideo.
Winsor Gallery258 E 1st Ave �604-681-4870 winsorgallery.common-fri 10am-6pm sat 10am-5pmsun by appt. Thru Feb 24 PatrickHughes, “Hues of Hughes: SelectedWorks 1999-2014”, retrospective ofworks; Feb 12-Mar 25 Paul Béliveau,“Vanitas".
Ashpa Naira Gallery & Studio9492 Houghton Rd�250-549-4249 ashpanairagallery.comClosed for the season. Nov-Apr: Sun-days 10am-5pm by appt only. Locat-ed on the west side of OkanaganLake, this contemporary art galleryand studio, owned by artist CarolinaSanchez de Bustamante, featuresoriginal art in a home and garden set-ting. Discover a diverse group ofemerging and established Okanaganand Canadian artists in paintings,textiles, sculptures, ceramics andfunctional art.
Vernon Public Art Gallery3228 31st Ave �250-545-3173 vernonpublicartgallery.common-fri 10am-5pm sat 11am-4pm.Feb 12-Mar 10 SD #22 SecondaryStudents, “Art and Soul”, artwork dis-plays a maturity of handling variousmedia and demonstrates a strong con-ceptual approach; Thru Mar 10 NeilMcClelland, “Apperception”, paint-ings based on the appropriation andreinterpretation of works of art; Mar19-May 21 Okanagan Print Triennial,open juried exhibition based on theinternational model for such projectsestablished over the past 40 years.
Alcheringa Gallery665 Fort St �250-383-8224 alcheringa-gallery.common-sat 10am-6pm sun 12-5pm orby appt. Thru Feb 15 “Gallery ArtistsExhibition”, works by Maynard John-ny Jr., Susan Point, John Marston,Robert Davidson, lessLIE, DylanThomas, Mark Preston, Chris Paul,
VERNON
VICTORIA
48 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
kag.bc.ca
Faster Than the Speed of SoundKAMLOOPS ART GALLERY, KAMLOOPS BC – Jan 17-Mar 21, 2015 Michael Markowsky bills himselfas a “dynamic visual artist,” a painter for whom performance is as important to his practice asbrushes and pigment. A commit-ted experiential artist, he hasdrawn and painted while ridingmoving cars, boats, trains anddogsleds. His latest sketchingsession took place inside thecockpit of a Canadian Air ForceCF-18 fighter jet travelling atsupersonic speed.
On the walls inside the KAG’sCube gallery are selections fromthe five 3- by 6-metre canvassesMarkowsky painted based on thedrawings he made while airborne.On the floor, the artist is con-structing a scaled-down wood andcanvas version of the jet he flew inwhen he made the drawings. Once the model is completed – by the later stages of the exhibition– gallery goers will be able to sit inside its cockpit and take in the view.
Markowsky welcomes visitors to assist him. However, for those who would prefer to use theCube as a place to draw, Markowsky, ever in motion, ever open to outcome, is open to that as well.Michael Turner
Michael Markowsky, The artist drawing while flying in a CF-18 (2013), photograph[Kamloops Art Gallery, Kamloops BC, Jan 17-Mar 21]
Teddy Balangu and other artists ofthe Pacific; Feb 16-Mar 29 RegDavidson and Don Yeomans Seri-graph Retrospective, featuring worksexemplifying their decades of ground-breaking printmaking.
� Art Gallery of Greater Victoria1040 Moss St�250-384-4171 ext 238 aggv.catues-sat 10am-5pm thurs 10am-9pmsun 12-5pm. Feb 7-May 3Marimekko,With Love, retrospective examinationof the iconic Finnish design company’smid-century origins and the role itplayed in shaping a new aesthetic andapproach to living through fashion anddesign; Thru Mar 9 Conversationswith Lucie Rie, the Austrian-bornBritish potter made a significant contri-bution to the history of ceramics in the20th century; Mar 26-May 31Kabuki: Japan's Dynamic Theatre inParis, Kabuki theatre is known for thestylization of its drama and for the elab-orate makeup worn by some of its per-formers. It became a common form ofentertainment in the registered red-light district in old Tokyo; Thru Apr 12A Study in Contrast: Sybil Andrewsand Gwenda Morgan, Andrews (1898-
1992), linocuts, and Morgan (1908-1991), wood engravings; Thru Apr 19Definiciones (Definitions): CarlosColín, exploring the impact, limits andruptures of language in our everydaylives, and the ways it shapes our think-ing about life, social structures, race,culture, geography, politics and art;Thru May 31 In Another Place, AndHere, works by eight local, national andinternational artists exploring the rela-tionships between geography, politics,identity and photography; Thru Aug 28Emily Carr and the Young Generation,a new vision of the iconic Victoria artistas both mentor and teacher.
� Avenue Gallery2184 Oak Bay Ave �250-598-2184 theavenuegallery.common-sat 10am-5:30pm sun 12-4pm,open most holidays 12-4pm. Featur-ing a rotating exhibit by some ofBritish Columbia's finest painters.
couch* – a Tanya Horn gallery1010 Broad St �778-432-4777 couchartgallery.common-sat 10am-6pm. Thru Feb 18Blythe Scott, “A Different Light”,colourful mixed-media paintings
inspired by Scotland's charming har-bour villages and dynamic land-scapes; Feb 19-Mar 10 David Rifat& Other Artists, expressive life draw-ings by featured artist Rifat and newworks by gallery artists; Mar 12-31Emerson Schreiner, Michael denHertog and Jonathan Gleed, “Trio”,showing restrained abstracts, sen-suous portraits, and tonally dramaticcityscapes and landscapes.
Deluge Contemporary Art636 Yates St �250-385-3327 deluge.wswed-sat 12-5pm. Feb 6-Mar 14 MikeAndrew McLean, “Latent Image (PartOne) 2012-2015”, focusing on varianttechniques that allow for reproductionof an image, stabilized photogenicdrawing, salt paper printing, cyan-otype, ferrotype, albumen printing andphotographs made with the Kodak 1,the first consumer oriented camera.
Gage Gallery2031 Oak Bay Ave gagegallery.camon-sat 10am-5pm. Thru Feb 12Deirdre Kelly, “Pacific Rim Connec-tions”, photographs and paintingswith images of Long Beach, Victoria
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and Japan; Feb 17-Mar 7 CameronKuntz and Francis Sullivan, “TakeTwo: Photographic Perspectives onthe Modern Landscape”, photographsreveal a reflection of ourselves, expos-ing the impermanence of the modernlandscape, with all its poignant storiesand imagery; Mar 10-28 NatalieShumka, “Offspring!” modern oilpaintings created under the influenceof her progeny; Mar 31-Apr 18 DianaDurrand, “Gallus Domesticus – Weare the keepers”, mixed-media paint-ings and felt sculptures celebratingthis often maligned bird and question-ing our role as “keepers" in the 21stcentury.
Gallery in the Oak Bay Village2223A Oak Bay Ave �250-598-9890 [email protected] 10am-5pm sat 10am-3pm.Featuring original artwork by leadinglocal artists Kathryn Amisson, JoanBaron, Sid Barron, Andres Bohaker,Jeffery Boron, Janice Bridgman,Robert Genn, Caren Heine, HarryHeine, Jennifer Heine, Mark Heine,Keith Hiscock, Evguenia Ioganov,Shawn A. Jackson, Brian R. John-son, David Ladmore, Ernest Marza,
Joane Moran, Allan Myndzak, PaulPaquette, Nicholas Pearce, NatashaPerk and Sandu Singh.
Legacy Art Gallery DowntownUniversity of VictoriaDowntown location: 630 Yates St,�250-721-6562; University of Victorialocation: Legacy Maltwood (at theMearns Centre & McPherson Library),3800 Finnerty Rd, �250-721-6673legacy.uvic.caLegacy Downtown: wed-sat 10am-4pm, Legacy Maltwood: library hours.LEGACY DOWNTOWN Thru Mar 28MeganDickie, Laura Dutton, d. bradleymuir and Tara Nicholson, “In Session– One”, artists who work as sessionalinstructors in the UVic Visual Artsdepartment celebrate photography,video and digital media arts and thesignificance and power of photo-based art; LEGACY MALTWOOD Thru Mar2 The Arts of World War I, books,prints and objects dating to the periodof the Great War, to mark the cente-nary of the commencement of thewar, drawn from the Legacy Art Gal-leries, the McPherson Library (Spe-cial Collections and Archives), andprivate collections in Victoria.
Madrona Gallery606 View St �250-380-4660 madronagallery.comtues-sat 10am-5:30pm sun & mon11am-5pm. Feb 21-Mar 7 LindaJones – The Simple Life, newencaustic and acrylic works focusedon rural life; Mar 21-Apr 4 Halin deRepentigny – Solo Exhibition, newoil paintings based on locationsaround the Yukon.
Martin Batchelor Gallery712 Cormorant St �250-385-7919 250-595-2919martinbatchelorgallery.camon-sat 10am-5pm. Feb 7-Mar 5Gillian Redwood, “Energetic Uni-verse”, large acrylic paintings on can-vas represent the forces that createand sustain our physical world; Mar7-Apr 9 “Slipping Glance”, Iris Nardi-ni, figurative bronze sculptures;Diana Brooks, mylar paintings.
Open Space Arts Society510 Fort St �250-383-8833 openspace.catues-sat 12-5pm. Thru Feb 21 JeremyHerndl, Todd Lambeth, Rick Leong,Neil McClelland and Jeroen Witvliet,
50 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
1560 West 6th Avenue, Vancouver, BC V6J 1R2604.566.9889 • [email protected] • pacificwaveglassart.com
Murano GlassITALY
“Realities Follies”, the artists are rep-resenting and interrogating the mean-ing of representation, questioning ourways of perceiving reality; Thru Sep2015 France Trépanier, Aboriginalcurator-in-residence, interrogation ofthe orthodoxies of curation and con-temporary arts presentation.
Polychrome Fine Art977-A Fort St �250-382-2787 polychromefinearts.comtues-sat 10am-5pm. Feb 12-26“Paper Trail”, works on paper by Alis-tair Bell, Charles Campbell, RoyGreen, Seng Yun Kwon, AndrewLewis, Attila Richard Lukacs, San-dra Millott, Lance Austin Olsen,Ingrid Mary Percy, Shawn Shep-herd, John Snow and Caleb Speller;Mar 5-19 PJ Kelly, “Frontier”, recentacrylic paintings with dried paintmanipulated into sculptural elementson densely coloured panel surfaces.
� Red Art Gallery2249 Oak Bay Ave �250-881-0462 redartgallery.catues-sat 11am-5pm. Feb 5-28 HighFive, works with the “five” theme invarious media by gallery artists;introducing new artists JustinaSmith, Cindy Pellerin and guestartist Suzi Kate Carson; Mar 5-28Tower of Song, paintings, mixedmedia and sculptures based on songtitles, by gallery artists.
Slide Room GalleryVancouver Island School of Art2549 Quadra St �250-380-3500 slideroomgallery.common-fri 9am-5pm or by appt. Thru Feb16Wendy Welch, Xane St Phillip andJohn Luna, “VISA Turns 10 FoundersExhibition”, current work by thefounders of the school, celebrating thegallery's 10th anniversary; Feb 20-Mar16 Jeremy Herndl, Todd Lambeth,Kate Scoones and Barrie Szekely,“Painting at VISA"; Mar 20-Apr 13Tony Bounsall, Wendy Degros, TaraNicholson and Megan Dyck, “Photog-raphy, Video, Printmaking and Sculp-ture at VISA".
West End Gallery1203 Broad St �250-388-0009 1-877-388-0009westendgalleryltd.common-fri 10am-5:30pm sat 10am-5pmsun 11am-4pm. Feb 14-26 Guy Roy,“An Exhibition of New Paintings”,
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landscape paintings featuring grandcanvases, vibrant colours and a dra-matic use of chiaroscuro, light anddark; Mar 14-26 Patricia Johnston,“An Exhibition of New Paintings”,exquisitely rendered landscape paint-ings of subtle harmony.
Winchester Galleries2260 Oak Bay Ave �250-595-27772nd location: Winchester Modern, 758Humboldt St �250-386-2773, 250-382-7750winchestergalleriesltd.com2260 Oak Bay Ave: tues-sat 10am-5:30pm, 758 Humboldt St: tues-sat10am-5:30pm. 758 HUMBOLDT ST Feb12-Mar 7 Brian Fisher, “Mandalas andBeachscapes"; “Collector's Choice”, acurated collection of works by RachelBerman, Eli Bornstein, John Hart-man, Harold Klunder, Jean McEwen,William Perehudoff, Jean PaulRiopelle, Harry Stanbridge, HerbertSiebner, Claude Tousignant and oth-ers, introducing New York artists AnnWalsh and Jim Walsh.
Xchanges Gallery6E-2333 Government St �250-382-0442 xchangesgallery.orgsat & sun 12-4pm. Feb 6-22 NeilMcClelland, “Bathers”, paintings ofpeople at the beach sourced from
image-sharing sites such as Insta-gram, creating images that exist some-where between past and present,between “the art in the museum" andcontemporary representations; Mar 6-22 Greg Klassen, “Who?”, photo-graphic portraits in landscape form,constructed from perceived fragmentsof identity through extensive dialoguewith subjects – examines the formationof personal identity from the uniqueperspective of Asperger’s Syndrome.
Buckland Southerst Gallery2460 Marine Dr �604-922-1915 bucklandsoutherst.com
mon-sat 10am-5:00 pm. Introducingthe work of Brian Eby, Maria Josen-hans, Shirley Williams, ElizabethTopham, Georgina Farah, YuanCheng Bi and Pei Yang. Also featur-ing paintings by Adam Noonan andTatjana Mirkov-Popovicki; still lifeand landscapes by Alessandra Bitel-li; European market and gardenscenes by Wilson Chu; street scenesand cityscapes by Morgan Dunnet;still life and street scenes by BrianHarvey; landscapes by Iola Scott;world scenes by Henry Huai Xu andglimpses of life by Lorena Ziraldo.
Ferry Building GalleryWest Vancouver Cultural Services1414 Argyle Ave, Ambleside Landing�604-925-7290 ferrybuildinggallery.comtues-sun 11am-5pm. Thru Feb 15Tannis Turner, Tony Kristopaitis andEva Francis, “Nature Re-Imagined”,mixed media, encaustic; Feb 17-Mar9 Ruth Leithal and Greg Allen, “Soul-ful Reflections”, mixed-media paint-ings; Mar 10-29 Therese Joseph, IrisLow, Nejood Al-Sehrewerdi andNiloofar Miry, “Windows on Culture”,mixed media; Mar 31-Apr 19 HansBreuer, Ursula Medley and AngusSimpson, “Illuminating Landscapes”,paintings in oil and acrylic.
WEST VANCOUVER
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Lucie Rie, porcelain pots [Art Gallery of GreaterVictoria, Victoria BC, Oct 17-Mar 9]
Silk Purse Arts CentreWest Vancouver Community ArtsCouncil, 1570 Argyle Ave�604-925-7292 silkpurse.catues-sun 12-5pm. Thru Feb 22 Jour-neying With the Totems: André J.Prevost, acrylic paintings of themajesty of First Nations totems andcarvings from around the WestCoast; Feb 24-Mar 15 CommunityOpen Invitation Exhibition, 2ndannual show with artwork from thecommunity and a People’s ChoiceAward for the piece that receives themost votes from visitors to thegallery; Mar 31-Apr 19 The Van-couver Guild of Fibre Arts andFibreEssence, “Cherry Blossoms:A Textile Translation 2015”, 7thannual juried exhibition of textile artinspired by cherry blossoms, withartists giving live demos every week-end during the exhibit.
Spirit Gallery6408 Bay St, Horseshoe Bay �604-921-8972 spirit-gallery.comdaily 10am-5pm. Spirit Gallery offersa superior collection of West CoastNative and Inuit art from renownedand emerging artists.
West Vancouver Museum680 17th St �604-925-7295 westvancouvermuseum.catues-sun 11am-5pm. Thru Mar 7 KimKennedy Austin, “Industry, Charity,Faith, Hope”, new watercolour andtext-based drawings, also showingwatercolours and needlework pro-duced over the last two decades; Mar25-Jun 13 Christos Dikeakos, “Trou-ble in Paradise”, photographs of theartist’s Naramata apple orchard andsurrounding environs, documentingthe supplanting of apple orchards andthe fruit industry.
Mountain Galleries at the Fairmont Chateau4599 Chateau Blvd �604-935-1862 mountaingalleries.comopen 7 days a week. Opens Feb 7Exhibition of New Work by KarelDoruyter, 3-D paintings; Feb 11-14Joan Baron, paintings – artist in res-idence Baron will be painting in thehotel lobby from 10am to 4pm, incollaboration with the FairmontChateau Whistler. The Canadian
Pacific Railway in the early 1900sused artwork to tell the story of thehotels and the destinations to poten-tial travellers.
Squamish Lil'watCultural Centre4584 Blackcomb Way �866-441-7522 slcc.catues-sun 10am-5pm, tues: admissionby donation. Thru Mar 31 Our Mark-ings, sharing both Coastal and Interi-or Salish traditional body markings,showcasing traditional and moderntattoos, various styles of body mark-ings and contemporary art.
White Rock Gallery1247 Johnston Rd�604-538-4452 1-877-974-4278whiterockgallery.comtues-sat 10am-5:30pm, closed holi-day long weekends. Gallery artistsMickie Acierno, Beverley Binfet,Nicholas Bott, Merv Brandel, PhilBuytendorp, Claudette Castonguay,Rod Charlesworth, Steve Coffey,Susan Flaig, Mark Fletcher, RobertGenn, Sara Genn, Terry Gilecki, W.Allan Hancock, Laura Harris, Paul
WHISTLERWHITE ROCK
preview-art.com PREVIEW 53
Healey, Debbie Hebert, Keith His-cock, H.E. Kuckein, Dongmin Lai,David Langevin, Raynald Leclerc,Don Li, Don Li-Leger, Min Ma, IngridMann-Willis, Danny McBride, PeterMcConville, Renato Muccillo, JimNedelak, Michael O'Toole, AlejandroRosemberg, Robert P. Roy, BillSaunders, Graeme Shaw, MichaelStockdale, Mike Svob, Linda Thomp-son, Christopher Walker, Ray Ward,Alan Wylie, Peter Wyse and DonnaZhang, paintings; Marilyn Armitage,Michael Hermesh, Helene Labrieand Nicola Prinsen, sculpture; BillBoyd, Laurie Rolland and GeoffSearle, pottery.
� Station House Gallery1 N MacKenzie Ave �250-392-6113 stationhousegallery.common-sat 10am-5pm. Feb 6-28 TomGodin, Lianne Heales, Kathy Craw-shay and Susan Kruse, “4 from 100
Group Show”, works by artists from100 Mile House; Mar 6-28 BillEdmonds Questions Anonymity,works based on images and textsreceived from complete strangersover the Internet; David J. Harder,“(Un)tamed and (Un)earthed”, paint-ings and sculptures inspired by thenatural world.
OREGON
Cannon Beach Gallery1064 S Hemlock �503-436-0744 cannonbeacharts.orgthurs-mon 10am-4pm. Feb 4-Mar 1Winter All Juried Show, an opentheme exhibition with 2-D and 3-Dworks in various media; Mar 5-29“Substrates”, a variety of media areused to explore impressions andexpressions of substrates, artistsinclude Marilyn Joyce, Mary Ann
Puls, Shawn Demarest, Liza Jones,Susan C. Walsh and Kathleen Ryan.
Cannon Beach Gallery Group�503-436-1055 cbgallerygroup.comCannon Beach, Oregon, has beencalled one of America's 100 best arttowns. National Geographic listed itas one of the world's 100 mostbeautiful places. Visit the websitefor updated information about theartists and the 12 galleries that fea-ture artwork from contemporary toclassical.
� Northwest By NorthwestGallery
232 N Spruce (downtown across fromcity park and info centre)�503-436-0741 1-800-494-0741nwbynwgallery.comdaily 11am-6pm and by appt. FebChristopher Burkett, “For the Love ofColor”, fine art colour photography;Jeff White, romantic oil landscapes;Georgia Gerber, “Two by Two”, bronzesculpture expressing the bonds of
WILLIAMS LAKE
CANNON BEACH
54 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
martinbatchelorgallery.ca
Gill ian Redwood: Energetic UniverseMARTIN BATCHELOR GALLERY, VICTORIA BC – Feb 7-Mar 5, 2015 Gillian Redwood is a Welsh-Canadi-an artist living in Victoria, BC, where she is an active member of Xchanges Gallery and Studios. Whenstudying art as a young woman atCardiff College of Art, she had thegood fortune to study with Britishpainter Tom Hudson, who, in his day,was well known for his experimentalapproach to teaching – especially ofcolour theory. Since that time,Redwood has travelled extensivelythroughout the UK, Europe, the USand Canada and has participated in avariety of exhibitions as a solo artistand in group shows.
In 2003, after a lifetime of workas a graphic artist, Redwood decid-ed to devote herself full time to herpassion for painting. Her currentbody of work is an interestingdevelopment, difficult to describebecause it tends toward a styleknown as “provisional painting.”These acrylic works consist of various expressionistic marks, vaguely suggestive of the human form,rendered on somewhat indifferent colour fields. However, the paintings are also large scale (54 by 46inches) and therefore quite assertive. This dichotomy of the fragile and the ambitious makes thepieces worthy of contemplation. Christine Clark
Gillian Redwood, Piquoté (2014), acrylic on canvas [Martin Batchelor Gallery,Victoria BC, Feb 7-Mar 5]
love; Mar Hazel Schlesinger, plein airoil paintings of wineries of the North-west and beyond, abstracts andoceanscapes; Mar 12-15 Savor Can-non Beach Wine & Culinary Festival2015.
White Bird Gallery251 N Hemlock St �503-436-2681 whitebirdgallery.comthurs-tues 11am-5pm, closed wed.Feb 1-Mar 15 Winter Group Show, across-section of works by galleryartists, including oil paintings, glasssculptures, contemporary ceramics,prints, art jewellery and mixed media;Mar 12-15 “Savor Cannon BeachWine & Culinary Festival 2015”,watercolours by Scott Johnson; Mar20-Apr 26 “Material Vision”, focus onartworks in glass, paper, clay andmetal – works by Helga Winter,paper/mixed media; Jeremy New-man and Allison Ciancibelli, glasssculpture; Larry Halvorsen, ceramicsculpture; Christopher Smith, glassand metal sculpture; Liza Jones,etchings on paper; Cynthia Miller,glass and copper fusions and JanRentenaar, ceramic sculpture.
The Art Gym atMarylhurst University17600 Pacific Hwy �503-699-6243 marylhurst.edu/theartgymtues-sun 12-4pm. Admission is free.Feb 17-Mar 27 Ben Buswell, "I DoNot Belong to the Sky", new works.
� Blackfish Gallery420 NW 9th Ave �503-224-2634 blackfish.comtues-sat 11am-5pm. Feb 3-28 SteveTilden and guest artist Jen Fuller,“Stories”, collaborations in glass andsteel; Mar 3-28 Jana DeMartini,“Through the Darkness”, charcoaldrawings; Sarah Fagan, “De Nov”,acrylic on panel paintings.
� Blue Sky GalleryOregon Center for Photographic Arts122 NW 8th Ave �503-225-0210 blueskygallery.orgtues-sun 12-5pm, first thurs 6-9pm.Feb 5-Mar 1Monika Merva, “Originsof Emotions"; Rebecca Norris Webb,
MARYLHURST
PORTLAND
preview-art.com PREVIEW 55
THE SACRED AND THE ARCANE:The Mythic Vision of Evie KatevatisJanuary 20 – March 5, 2015
MENDED:BC Surface Design Juried ShowMarch 17 – May 15, 2015
Evie Katevatis, Feast of the Cyclops
Il MuseoIl Centro, Italian Cultural Centre3075 Slocan StreetVancouver V5M 3E4Phone: 604 430 3337italianculturalcentre.ca
Barbara Boldt Original Art Studio
BarbaraBoldt.com
~ “Places Of Her Heart” ~
The art and life of Barbara Boldtby K. Jane Watt PhD, in
conversation with Barbara Boldt.Available at the studio
and in bookstores.
~ Visit Barbara Boldt’s Studio ~to view paintings available
and in progress.
~ Visitors Please Call Ahead ~
604-888-5490 [email protected]
“My Dakota"; Mar 4-29 HyoungTaeLim, “I See"; Nicholas Nixon, “Hos-pice Patients".
� Charles A. Hartman Fine Art134 NW 8th Ave �503-287-3886 hartmanfineart.netwed-sat 10:30am-5:30pm. Feb 4-Mar 14 Elliott Erwitt, “It's RainingCats and Dogs”, photographs.
Douglas F. Cooley MemorialArt Gallery, Reed College3203 SE Woodstock Blvd �503-517-7851 reed.edu/gallerytues-sun 12-5pm. Feb 17-May 10Emil Otto Hoppé (1878-1972), “E.O.Hoppé: Society, Studio, and StreetPhotographs, 1909-1945”, over 100original prints by one of the mostimportant art and documentary pho-tographers of the modern era, fromthe collections of the National Por-trait Gallery and the E.O. HoppéArchive in Pasadena, California.
� Elizabeth Leach Gallery417 NW 9th Ave (at Flanders)�503-224-0521 elizabethleach.comtues-sat 10:30am-5:30pm and byappt. Feb 5-Mar 28 “Words, Words,Words – An Exhibition of Text BasedArtwork”, featuring regional, nation-al and internationally renownedartists, who are recognized for utiliz-ing text in their work as a primaryvehicle for expression – artistsinclude Ghada Amer, Lisa AnneAuerbach, John Baldessari, RobertBarry, Pat Boas, Mel Bochner,Andrea Bowers, Peter Downs-brough, Jenny Holzer, Chris Johan-son, Barbara Kruger, MichaelLazarus, Glenn Ligon, Donald Lip-ski, Bruce Nauman, Melody Owen,Matthew Picton, Jack Pierson,Michelle Ross, Ed Ruscha, BuzzSpector and Lawrence Weiner;VIDEO WINDOW Deborah Stratman,“Second Sighted".
56 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
NW Everett
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ART GALLERY OFGREATER VICTORIA
VICTORIA
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Yesler Way
Olive Way
Jackson
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Western Ave2nd Ave
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Alaskan Way
Madison
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uSEATTLE ART MUSEUM
Pike St
Playfield
E. 15th Ave.
DOWNTOWNVANCOUVER
BC PlaceStadium
VanierPark Granville
Island
BILL REID GALLERYEMILY CARR
ALUMNI GALLERY(Q.E. THEATRE) u
u
uART WORKS
JENNIFER KOSTUIK
uART BEA-TUSu
CONTEMPORARYART GALLERY
Coal Harbour
Seawall
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Pender St
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GASTOWN
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REPUBLIC
GALLERYGACHET
ARTSPEAK
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Cordova St
ALCHERINGA
WINCHESTERMODERN
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LEGACYPo
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LISA HARRIS
E. Broadw
ay
Seattle Freeway
TO HENRY ART GALLERY
ASIANART MUSEUM
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PORTLAND
Morrison Bridge
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Gladstone St
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SATELLITE
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uu
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anco
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4th Ave S
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Downtown
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Fairfield Rd
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TO XCHANGES
TO SLIDE ROOMGALLERY
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uGALLERY 110
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SW Oak
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u SPIRITWRESTLER
7th Ave S
S King St.
TO MUSEUM OFCONTEMPORARY CRAFT
TO DOUGLAS F. COOLEYREED COLLEGE
Haro St
Pendrell St
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WESTINBAYSHORE
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VANCOUVERART GALLERY
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Bayshore Dr
Hastings St
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Cordova St Cordova St
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Burrard Bridge toDowntown Vancouver
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AUDAIN
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SHIFTGALLERY
uTECK GALLERY, SFU
RENNIE COLLECTION(by appt. only)
OLYMPICSCULPTURE PARK
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TO NORTHWEST BY NORTHWEST,WHITE BIRD, CANNON BEACHGALLERY in Cannon Beach
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uGALLERY JONES
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TO SPAC GALLERYat Seattle PacificUniversity
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uMARTINBATCHELOR
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W 15th Ave
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Granville St
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to airport
ART EMPORIUM
HEFFEL
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uMARION SCOTT
DOUGLAS REYNOLDSuINITIAL
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ELISSA CRISTALLMASTERS
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BLACKFISH
BLUE SKY
couch*a Tanya Horn gallery
Helga Winter, Insight is Not a View (2015),dyed and painted paper [White Bird Gallery,Cannon Beach OR, Mar 20-Apr 26]
58 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015
Practical Art History orConfessions of a Fine Art AppraiserChapter 45. The Case of Cruise Ship Art, Part 2Visual art as a form of cultural production speaks to the sophistication of a society that encourages andembraces the importance of art production.
Cruise ship art culture is vigorously promoted by cruise ship lines, as evidenced by the very popular on-board art auctions and the place-ment of original artworks through-out the vessels. In this way, cruiseship companies can demonstratetheir commitment to the visualarts, using this as a means to attractcustomers who, for their part, seekto demonstrate their aestheticappreciation of artworks as a reflec-tion of their sophistication, goodtaste and often wealth. Theseworks – “cultural signifiers” – rep-resent an important element of amarketing strategy targeted at
those presumed to be inclined to appreciate and purchase on-board artworks.As an art appraiser, I should refrain from taking cruise ship vacations because, more often than not, I
become enmeshed in “controversies” of my own making. Here is a case in point.Recently, while waiting for an elevator on a cruise ship bound for Hawaii, I found myself standing in
front of an oil-on-canvas painting. It appeared to be a diptych. A brass plaque mounted to the right of thepainting identified it as Blue Shore by Beatrice Findlay. Most of the elevator lobbies and stairwells on boardwere enlivened with original artworks, mostly paintings by well-known artists. On closer inspection (Icouldn’t help it; my professional curiosity got the better of me), I noticed that the painting was hung upsidedown: the artist’s name and the copyright symbol were clearly wrong side up in the top right-hand corner.As I was viewing the painting, the elevator doors opened and out stepped a group of people, among them amiddle-aged woman who, on noticing me there, approached and said in mid-stride, “My granddaughtercould do that with a bunch of crayons.”
“Oh, is your granddaughter an artist?” I politely retorted. She did not reply and just continuedwalking.
On my return to Vancouver, I emailed Beatrice Findlay, who I knew was born in Canada and lives inLos Angeles. I sent her a photo of the painting and inquired about it. (I also got her permission to repro-duce the image here.) Findlay confirmed that Blue Shore was indeed hung upside down and that, further-more, it had been cropped, losing about five inches across the top, likely in the course of being made to fitan available frame. The painting was one of several done for the cruise ship’s show lounge in 1996. Thecruise ship line was sold to a competitor in 2002 – a new owner, it seems, with a perfunctory commitmentto original artwork.
It makes one wonder about the value of visual culture. In this case, it would seem that cruise ship man-agement sees the presence of original art as a means of enhancing the aesthetic aspect of the cruise shipexperience, and therefore as a strategy for attracting customers. Yet, if that’s so, then I think the cruise shipcompany should, at the very least, make the effort to hang pictures in public spaces properly and to retainthe integrity of the originals. Wouldn’t that honouring of the artists’ intentions demonstrate a commitmentto the true aesthetic appreciation necessary to attract art-loving customers?
Next Issue: The Case of St. Michael Defeating the Devil
Beatrice Findlay, Blue Shore (1996), oil on canvas
BY JIM FINLAYFINLAY FINE ART
FinlayFineArt.com
� Laura Russo Gallery805 NW 21st Ave �503-226-2754 laurarusso.comtues-fri 11am-5:30pm sat 11am-5pm.Feb 5-28 Jo Hamilton, “Whom”, newportrait works in crochet; Joe Macca,“New Work”, minimal acrylic paint-ings on paper and panel by the guestartist; Mar 5-28 Michael Paul Miller,“New Paintings”, oils on canvas por-traying perseverance and history inthe face of post-apocalyptic settings;Manuel Izquierdo, “Sculpture fromthe Estate”, bronze, ceramic and woodsculptures, from the figurative to theabstract.
Michael Parsons Fine Art716 SW Madison St �503-206-8601 michaelparsonsfineart.comwed-sun 12-5pm. Thru Mar 1 HankKowert, "Clouds And Stones - Mod-ernist Oregon Landscapes", oils andwatercolours of natural surround-ings the artist absorbed during dailyliving and viewing. Visit the websitefor exhibition information.
� Museum ofContemporary Craft
724 NW Davis St�503-223-2654 mocc.pnca.edutues-sat 11am-6pm first thurs
11am-8pm. Feb 20-May 16 LivingWith Glass, the Ed Cauduro andDane Nelson Collections; Thru Jul11 Extra Credit: Students Mine theCollection.
Oregon Jewish Museumand Center for HolocaustEducation1953 NW Kearney St�503-226-3600 ojmche.orgtues-thurs 10:30am-4pm fri 10:30am-3pm sat & sun 1-4pm. Thru Mar 22Lyric Truth – Embroideries by Rose-marie Beck; Thru Apr 14 Anne Frank:A History for Today.
� OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS PREVIEW 59
60 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015
GALLERY VIEWS BY MARYSE DE LA GIRODAY [email protected]
Portland: a visual arts scene takes flight(part three of a three-part series)
Community support for the arts in Portland is remarkable and longstanding. The city opened an artmuseum only 41 years after its 1851 incorporation. Today, the Portland Art Museum (PAM) ranksas the seventh oldest and one of the 25 largest art museums in the United States.
Brian Ferriso, PAM’s executive director, inherited an institution $20 million in the hole whenhe arrived in 2006. While paying down the debt, due to be eliminated in June 2015, PAM hasrevamped its user experience. Ferriso says, “Our team developed a subtle, strategic approachfocused on content, using existing platforms, for a thoughtful use of technology to enhance theuser experience.” Other museums have taken note: Ferriso was invited to speak about PAM’stechnology and user experience at theAssociation of Museum Art Directors2015 conference in Mexico. Later, infall 2015, PAM will be the first toshowcase Microsoft co-founder PaulG. Allen’s collection of landscapes, fea-turing roughly 40 paintings and fivecenturies of European and Americanlandscape art prior to the show’s tour ofthe United States which ends in 2017.
Nature and the land are importantaspects of the local arts scene. ThePortland Japanese Garden, consideredone of the finest gardens outside of Japan, boasts its own art curator, Diane Durston. “Over thepast eight years,” she says, “we have evolved into a venue for museum-quality exhibitions featur-ing such internationally known artists as Kazumi Murose, designated as a Living National Treas-ure of Japan. We seek to show a balance of traditional and contemporary work to give visitors acontext in which to view today’s art and the garden itself.”
In April 2015, the garden will be exhibiting wood sculptures from the Goto family, a 29-gen-eration enterprise. According to Durston, “[The] current owner, the first woman head of herfamily studio, Hakkodo, in Kamakura, Japan, is making strikingly modern objects that are carvedand lacquered using the same techniques her ancestors used to carve Buddhist statuary.” Thefamily has a prior connection to Portland. The owner’s great-grandfather showed his work at the1905 Lewis and Clark Exposition, and won a gold medal.
Jeff Jahn (pronounced yawn), a classically trained musician who works as an art critic, art cura-tor and publisher of PORT one of the longest-standing art blogs in the United States, exemplifiesthe edgier aspects of Portland’s arts scene. As Jahn sums up his and his authors’ perspectives, “AtPORT we aren’t here to make friends, we want a frank, informed discussion and to make roomand prompt the entire community to question what is presented and considered as art. We offer asense of scope and scale since a city the size of Portland can easily devolve into cliquish mutualadmiration societies and it is poison. Effective criticism takes poison and makes it medicine.” Thisyear marks PORT’s 10th year of publication (portlandart.net).
Portland taxpayers deepened their commitment to the arts and arts education in 2012 by vot-ing in a $35 Arts Education and Access Income Tax. While there have been a few problems asadministrators have grappled with the realities of implementing this unique tax, about $7.6 mil-lion collected during the first year of the tax has been disbursed.
Deeply rooted in a history and geography of place, Portland’s arts scene is infused with a spiritof exploration that defies earthly boundaries.
Bonus material on online: Interview with Eva Lake, Portland painter, radio host and journalist.
The Portland Art Museum’s Mark Building
Portland Art Museum1219 SW Park Ave �503-226-2811 portlandartmuseum.orgtues, wed, sat, sun 10am-5pm, thurs& fri 10am-8pm. Admission: mem-bers free, adults $15, seniors (55+)and students (18+ with ID) $12, chil-dren (17 and under) free. Feb 7-May 3Italian Style: Fashion Since 1945, acomprehensive look at Italian fashionfrom the end of the Second WorldWar to the present; Thru Apr 5 Mas-terworks/Portland: El Greco, featur-ing El Greco’s greatest devotionalpainting, the magisterial Holy Familywith Saint Mary Magdalen, a rarelyloaned treasure of the ClevelandMuseum of Art; Thru Apr 12 TheEnclave: Richard Mosse, discontin-ued infrared military film renderinggreen landscapes, vibrant hues ofcrimson and hot pink, attempting tocast the forgotten tragedy of theconflict in the Democratic Repub-lic of Congo in a new spectrum oflight; Breaking Barriers: JapaneseWomen Print Artists 1950-2000,works by five exceptional women whowere pioneers of printmaking in the
postwar decades; Thru Oct 18 Handand Wheel: Contemporary JapaneseClay, intimately scaled artworkscrafted of unglazed stoneware orrefined porcelain that are a cherishedpart of daily life in Japan.
� Upfor Gallery929 NW Flanders St �503-227-5111upforgallery.comtues-sat 11am-6pm. Feb 5-28 JeremyRotsztain, "Electric Fields", software-generated animations and printsinspired by Colour Field paintings; Mar5-Apr 4 Rodrigo Valenzuela, video,installation and photography explor-ing contradictory traditions of docu-mentary and fictional narratives.
Hallie Ford Museum of Art700 State St �503-370-6855 willamette.edu/arts/hfma/tues-sat 10am-5pm sun 1-5pm. Feb14-Apr 26 Myra Albert Wiggins: APhotographer's Life, photographs andarchival material by the early 20th cen-
tury Salem photographer and memberof Alfred Stieglitz's Photo-SecessionistGroup; Thru Mar 29 Roger Shimomu-ra: An American Knockoff, paintingsand prints addressing sociopoliticalissues of Asian Americans through astyle that combines Shimomura’schildhood interest in comic books withthe traditions of American Pop Art andJapanese woodcut prints.
WASHINGTON
Bainbridge IslandMuseum of Art550 Winslow Way E�206-842-4451 1-855-613-1342biartmuseum.orgdaily 10am-6pm. Thru Feb 15 RachelFeferman Retrospective: A Hole inthe Heart; Artist's Books: ChapterThree; Thru Feb 22 Larry “Ulaaq"Ahvakana: Land/Water; Children'sBook Illustrators 1: Points of Entry;Harry Longstreet: Photography;
SALEM
BAINBRIDGE ISLAND
62 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
laurarusso.com
Jo Hamilton: WhomLAURA RUSSO GALLERY, PORTLAND OR – Feb 5-28, 2015 Port-land artist Jo Hamilton creates contemporary portraiture with theunexpected medium of crocheted yarn. A native of Scotland,Hamilton learned to crochet as a young child from her grand-mother. Her formal art training was in painting and drawing, earn-ing her a BFA from the Glasgow School of Art. Hamilton spentclose to 20 years working in oils and watercolour, feeling she hadn’tfound the right medium for her work until she hit on crochet as hermedium of choice. Her first crocheted piece of art – a large-scalecityscape of Portland – took years to complete.
Much of Hamilton’s recent work has been figurative, focusingon portraits of people she knows, images of mug shots, and lately,residents and staff at a local care facility for people living withHIV/AIDS, where she has been a long-time volunteer.
Using a photograph for reference, Hamilton’s labour-inten-sive process of “painting with yarn” is largely focused on colourrelationships and tonality to attain the depth of form and like-ness of character she seeks to capture. A signature element –loose dangling yarns that freely hang from the bottom of thewall-mounted portraits – adds to the warmth of these alreadysensitive pieces. This first solo exhibit at Laura Russo Galleryincludes yet another facet of Hamilton’s inventive work – three-dimensional head forms covered in her visually captivating mul-ticoloured crochet. Allyn Cantor
Jo Hamilton, Reckless Driver (2014), mixedcrocheted yarn [Laura Russo Gallery, PortlandOR, Feb 5-28]
preview-art.com PREVIEW 63
V I G N E T T E S • February/March 2015Oregon aLLyn cantoR
ROGER SHIMOMURA: AN AMERICAN KNOCKOFF Hallie Ford Museumof Art, Salem, Jan 17-Mar 29 Painter, printmaker and performanceartist Roger Shimomura has been exhibiting for over four decades,on themes that address the dichotomy between his American cultureand his Japanese descent. In his socio-political narratives, Shimomu-ra blends Pop Art and comic book imagery with the traditions ofJapanese woodblock printing. This large survey includes early worksrecalling his childhood time in an internment camp during WorldWar II, as well as newer pieces where the artist depicts himself bat-tling stereotypes in witty satire.
JEREMY ROTSZTAIN: ELECTRIC FIELDS Upfor Gallery, Portland, Feb 5-28 In this new collection of animations, Jeremy Rotsztain imagineshow Colour Field painters may have embraced the medium of virtualreality. Rotsztain uses software programming to write algorithms thatdescribe painterly gestures within a virtual 3-D space. Floatingarrangements of morphing shapes and harmonious colours present anatmospheric account of a seemingly infinite dream world. This inno-vative artist works at a unique cusp of digital media practice informedby painting attributes to create these ethereal compositions.
JOE MACCA Laura Russo Gallery, Portland, Feb 5-28 Oregon artist JoeMacca is known for his nuanced abstractions that reference col-orations from the natural world. With soft gradient fields of seamlesscolour, Macca’s minimal compositions offer quiet testimonies to thesubtle power of chromatic choices. In his most recent series, Nostal-gia, the formal investigations turn to an increasingly monochromaticpalette of rich sepias and greys that gently lean toward warm greens,violets and deep charcoal. These stark compositions exude lightinside the misty emptiness of immaculate surfaces.
REBECCA NORRIS WEBB: MY DAKOTA Blue Sky Gallery, Portland, Feb5-Mar 1 In 2005, Rebecca Norris Webb began photographing hervast home state of South Dakota. A year into the project, her brotherunexpectedly died and, as a way of processing her grief, she contin-ued the work in earnest. This exhibit combines luminous colourprints of the South Dakota landscape with the artist’s poetry, pen-cilled onto the gallery walls. The sentiment in this series is a personalreflection that echoes a journey of loss set in its own geography.
MASTERWORKS|PORTLAND: EL GRECO Portland Art Museum, Port-land, Dec 13-Apr 5 The rarely loaned Renaissance-era treasure onshow here is considered El Greco’s greatest devotional painting. HolyFamily with Saint Mary Magdalen is the latest installment of thePAM’s Masterworks series and a fine example of the Spanish artist’smature style. Painted in the 1590s, this dramatic painting depicts anotherworldly scene of the Holy Family. El Greco stylized the figuresand the setting into elongated forms that float among voluminousfolds of fabric below a turbulent sky.
Rebecca Norris Webb
Joe Macca
Jeremy Rotsztain
El Greco
Roger Shimomura
Karen Hackenberg: Watershed; Feb28-Jun 7 Rosalyn Gale Powell:Garden Path; Raymond Gendreau,photographs; Jenny Fillius, NiaMichaels, Deborah Paul, KathyRoss, Loran Scruggs and NanWonderly, “Cut & Bent”, tin art;Small Worlds, group exhibition;Artist’s Books: Chapter Four, groupexhibition.
Bellevue Arts Museum510 Bellevue Way NE �425-519-0770 bellevuearts.orgtues-sun 11am-6pm, free first fri11am-8pm. Feb 20-Jun 14 Emerge/Evolve 2014: Rising Talents in Kiln-Glass, works by emerging and evolv-ing artists; Thru Mar 1 Jason Walker:On the River, Down the Road, installa-tion – the ceramicist has transformed
the gallery into an enveloping, fantasy-driven world; Mar 13-Jun 7 Read MyPins: The Madeleine Albright Collec-tion, over 200 brooches highlightingjewellery's ability to communicate in anonverbal yet powerfully articulateway; Thru Mar 29 BAM Biennial 2014:Knock on Wood, 39 Northwest artists,makers and craftspeople push theboundaries of their vision and skill tocreate works in wood for the muse-um’s third biennial.
Allied Arts of Whatcom County1418 Cornwall Ave�360-676-8548 alliedarts.orgmon-fri 10am-5pm sat 12-5pm. Feb6-27Whatcom Reads! Art Challenge,works in all media inspired by thebook by Daniel James Brown, TheBoys in the Boat: Nine Americans and
Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936Berlin Olympics; Mar 6-30 AnnualAllied Arts Membership Show, worksin all media by current members.
Western GalleryFine Arts Complex, WWU �360-650-3963 westerngallery.wwu.edumon-fri 10am-4pm wed 10am-8pmsat 12-4pm. Thru Mar 7 Discovery:Department of Art and Design Bien-nial Exhibition, new works in draw-ing, graphic design, fibre, painting,photography, printmaking, sculptureand video by ten art faculty and sev-en design faculty.
Whatcom MuseumOld City Hall: 121 Prospect StLightcatcher Building: 250 Flora St�360-778-8930 whatcommuseum.orgLightcatcher: wed-sun 12-5pm thur
BELLEVUE
BELLINGHAM
64 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
portlandartmuseum.org��
Italian Style: Fashion Since 1945PORTLAND ART MUSEUM, PORTLAND OR – Feb 7-May 3, 2015 Organized by London’s Victoria andAlbert Museum, this comprehensive exhibit highlights the major figures in Italian fashion over the last70 years. Glamour, tailoring and trendsetting are a few of the themes captured by this incredibleoverview of garments created by some of fashion’s most notable players, including Giorgio Armani,Valentino, Gucci, Dolce & Gabbana, Pucci, Prada and Versace.
The exhibit chronicles both women’s fashion and menswear from the end of World War II to thepresent day, a time when the burgeon-ing fashion industry became a corner-stone of Italy’s post-war recovery. Theluxurious Sala Bianca catwalk showsheld in Florence in the 1950s gar-nered international attention, puttingItalian designers on the world stage.The exquisite outfits worn by AudreyHepburn, Elizabeth Taylor and otherHollywood actresses in films shot onlocation in Italy also helped popular-ize Italian style in the ’50s and ’60s. Bythe 1970s, Milan had grown to be thecountry’s fashion capital and Italiandesigners to be central in the world ofstyle, known for their techniques,materials and expertise.
The more than 100 ensemblesand accessories in the show trace thisevolution of style and design. At the conclusion of this stunning exhibit is a filmed interview with keyfashion industry figures who reflect on the future of Italian fashion.
Portland is the only West Coast venue on the show’s American tour. Allyn Cantor
Dolce & Gabbana, leather ankle boots with gold, white and pink embroidery(2000), [Portland Art Museum, Portland OR, Feb 7-May 3]
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12-8pm sat 10am-5pm. Admission:adults $10, students, military, seniors$8, children 2-5 $4.50, under 2 free,Thurs $5. Old City Hall: thurs-sun 12-5pm. Admission by donation. LIGHT-CATCHER BUILDING Feb 7-May 10 Min-gled Visions, Images from the NorthAmerican Indian by Edward S. Cur-tis, 40 photogravures from Curtis’sepic work include Princess Angeline,Chief Sealth's elderly daughter;Mag-ic Windows/Framing Place, adiverse exhibition tracing the wayartists represent multiple worlds ofreality and experience, drawn fromthe permanent collection, the showname is from a painting, Magic Win-dow, by Robert Colescott; Thru Feb22 Leo Adams: Eastern Light, paint-ings by the Yakima artist and designercaptures his unique vision of natureand the landscape surrounding hishome; Mar 7-Jun 14 Tom Sherwood:A Golden Perspective, unique worksof a master artist whose materials andtechniques reflect Renaissance art;OLD CITY HALL Ongoing PhotoArchives Sampler, Clock and WatchCollection and Antique Toys.
Schack Art Center2921 Hoyt Ave �425-259-5050 schack.orgmon-fri 10am-6pm sat 10am-5pmsun 12-5pm. Thru Feb 6 CascadeClay Artists, “Anything Goes”, worksby sculptors, hand builders and pot-ters from the Skagit Valley; Feb 12-
26 H'Arts Preview Exhibit, artworkfor the annual art auction benefittingthe Schack Art Center; Mar 5-Apr 11Becky Fletcher, “Essential Ges-tures”, contemporary landscapepaintings.
WaterWorks Gallery315 Argyle Ave �360-378-3060 waterworksgallery.comThru Feb 11 Gallery is closed; Feb12-14 10:30am-5:30pm ValentineExhibition; Feb 15-Apr 16 Galleryclosed for winter hiatus – open byappointment only.
Museum of Northwest Art121 S First St �360-466-4446 museumofnwart.orgGalleries and Museum Store: sun-mon 12-5pm tues-sat 10am-5pm.Admission is free. Thru Mar 11 Adri-anne Smits, “Immersion Redux:Buiten (Outside)”, paintings thatevoke the style of the mystic paintersof the Northwest School of the late1930s and 1940s; Joey Kirkpatrickand Flora C. Mace, “A Tree Is a Kindof Big Flower”, botanical sculpturesand sensitive casein paintings payhomage to the artists’ deep reverencefor the outside world.
� Jansen Art Center321 Front St �360-354-3600 jansenartcenter.orgtues-sat 9am-5pm. Thru Mar 28From Dusk to Dawn: Twilight andNight Skies, works celebrating thebeauty of the morning and nightskies; Thru May 29 Spring JuriedExhibit, works by regional artists;Jennifer Bowman, paintings.
Port Angeles Fine Arts Center1203 E Lauridsen Blvd �360-457-3532 pafac.orgthurs-sun 10am-4pm, Webster's
EVERETT
FRIDAY HARBOR
LA CONNER
LYNDEN
PORT ANGELES
preview-art.com PREVIEW 65
Kyla Bailey, Holi Festival: Jaipur, India(2014), colour photograph [Havana Gallery,Vancouver BC, Mar 5-18]
Woods Art Park: open daily sunriseto sunset. Admission is free. ThruMar 15 Sue Roberts, “Family ofSorts”, ceramic sculptures; Mar 26-May 10 Shannon Weber, “Underwa-ter”, sculptures; Ongoing Art Out-side, new one-year installation ofsculptures in one of the most distinc-tive outdoor art experiences in theNorthwest, more than 100 works onfive acres with many woodland trails.
� Asian Art Museum1400 E Prospect St, Volunteer Park�206-654-3100 seattleartmuseum.orgwed 10am-5pm thurs 10am-9pm fri-sun 10am-5pm. Suggested admis-sion: adults $7, seniors (62 andover), students and military $5, chil-dren 12 & under free, SAM membersfree. First Thurs free admission. FirstFri seniors free. First Sat familiesfree. Thru Apr 5 Live On: Mr.’s
Japanese Neo-Pop, a massive instal-lation made of hundreds of everydayobjects from Japanese life, inspiredby the devastating disaster of theMarch 11, 2011 tsunami and the
nuclear accident afterwards, alsoshowing new paintings and art fromthe past 15 years; Thru Jun 21 Con-ceal/Reveal: Making Meaning inChinese Art, Chinese artists tradi-tionally employ different approachesto construct layered meanings in anindirect but intriguing way – mentallypeel back the layers and reveal theembedded meanings.
� Davidson Galleries313 Occidental Ave S, Pioneer Sq�206-624-7684davidsongalleries.comtues-sat 10am-5:30pm, Feb 5-28Bernar Venet, “Indeterminate LInes”,recent etchings; Feb 17-Mar 14 ErikDesmazières, “Curious Spaces:Inside & Out”, engravings; PhilippeMohlitz, selected engravings; Feb 17-Mar 28 Käthe Kollwitz, “From ManyWounds...”; Upcoming exhibitionsContemporary Japanese Prints;Reginald Marsh; Jose GuadalupePosada; Theophile Alex Steinlen.Visit the website for exhibition dates.
SEATTLE
66 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
moa.ubc.ca / museum of vancouver.ca / musqueam.bc.ca�,c sna? m, the city before the city
MUSEUM OF ANTHROPOLOGY, MUSEUM OF VANCOUVER,MUSQUEAM CULTURAL CENTRE GALLERY, VANCOUVER BC –Jan 25, 2015-Jan 2016 and beyond The focus of this multi-venue exhibition is the village of cə̓snaʔəm, located at what isnow commonly referred to as the Vancouver neighbourhood ofMarpole. First occupied some 5,000 years ago, cə̓snaʔəm grewto become a significant site of seafood harvesting and produc-tion, as well as a burial ground. By the time Jesus Christ wasborn, cə̓snaʔəm was among the largest of the Musqueam vil-lages on the West Coast.
Since European contact, cə̓snaʔəm has undergone a num-ber of name changes: Great Fraser Midden, Eburne Midden,DhRs-1 and Marpole Midden, to name a few. For the past 125years, the area has been poked, prodded and plundered byarchaeologists and treasure hunters. Many important aspectsof its material inventory now reside in museums and privatecollections, locally and abroad. One of the ambitions of thisexhibition is to bring the pieces together again and show themopenly and widely.
According to co-curator Terry Point, “Visitors to c̓əsnaʔəm,the city before the city will learn it is part of a landscape, and willdiscover aspects of Musqueam heritage, culture and knowledgethat have never before been shared with the public.”
The parts of the exhibition that are at the Museum ofAnthropology and the Musqueam Cultural Centre Gallery
will be up for a year. The part at the Museum of Vancouver will be up for five years.Michael Turner
Bird pendant (date unknown), carved bone[Museum of Anthropology, Vancouver BC,Jan 25, 2015-Jan 2016]
e eErik Desmazières, Two Days of Printmaking inSeattle (2001) etching [Davidson Galleries,Seattle WA, Feb 17-Mar 14]
preview-art.com PREVIEW 67
� Foster/White Gallery220 3rd Ave S, Pioneer Square�206-622-2833 fosterwhite.comtues-sat 10am-6pm. Feb 5-28 DavidAlexander, “Land We Have Not Syn-thesized”, oil paintings on canvas –mountainous landscapes and water-scapes convey rugged natural sur-roundings and reflective moments inthe Northwest wilderness; Mar 5-28Sheri Bakes, “Even in the Dark”, oilpaintings on canvas – ethereal wind-swept scenes mark the tensionbetween our physical landscape andthe world of the mind.
� Frye Art Museum704 Terry Ave �206-622-9250 fryemuseum.orgtues-sun 11am-5pm thurs 11am-7pm. Admission is free. Feb 21-May3 Pan: A Graphic Arts Time Capsuleof Europe 1895-1900, graphic workspublished in the journal Pan, whichrecorded the transition from Modernforms of representation in the 19thcentury to the emergence of Abstrac-tionism and Expressionism in the20th century; 1900: Adornment forthe Home and Body, over 150objects by renowned artists andarchitects of the fin de siècle; ThruApr 26 Future Ruins: Rodrigo Valen-zuela, a large-scale installation com-prising photography, projections andsculpture by the Seattle-based artist.
� G. Gibson Gallery300 S Washington St �206-587-4033 ggibsongallery.comwed-sat 11am-5pm, tues by appt.Thru Feb 28 Doug Keyes, “Portrait”,new photographs; Mar 5-Apr 18Gala Bent and Blake Haygood, newpaintings and drawings; Brandt,Calderón, Cunningham, Lartigue,Michals, Modica, Steichen andWolcott, black and white portraitphotographs.
� Gallery 110110 3rd Ave S �206-624-9336 gallery110.comwed-sat 12-5pm. Feb 5-28 5th Annu-al Juried Exhibition, works byemerging and established artists in allmedia; Mar 5-28 FRONT GALLERYSonya Stockton, “Objects of Suste-nance”, things that represent the liter-al aspects of sustenance are mergedwith everyday objects to create worksthat become representative of ourneed for the more metaphorical sus-
tenance provided by our materialworld; BACK GALLERY Pascale Lord,“Metamorphosis”, using the nudefemale form to explore the inevitableact of aging.
� Greg Kucera Gallery212 3rd Ave S �206-624-0770 gregkucera.comtues-sat 10:30am-5:30pm. Thru Feb14 In the absence of… , curated byKlara Glosova and Sierra Stinson;Concinnatis: Prints by Physicistsand Mathematicians, published byParasol Press; Feb 19-Mar 28Joseph Goldberg, “Sky and Stone".
� Henry Art GalleryUniversity of Washington �206-543-2280 henryart.orgwed 11am-4pm thurs-fri 11am-9pmsat & sun 11am-4pm. Admission:adults $10, seniors $6, members,children under 13, UW students, fac-ulty, staff, high school and collegestudents with ID free, thurs 11am-8pm free. ALL GALLERIES Thru Apr 26Ann Hamilton: the common S E N S E,large-scale, newly commissionedinstallations using materials and rep-resentations of animals gatheredfrom local public collections; willevolve and change throughout the
68 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015
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BLACKFISH
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couch*a Tanya Horn gallery
Henry Art Gallery Presents SEATTLE ART EVENTThu, Feb 26, 20157pm - 8:30pm
Admission is free with a reserved ticket
INCITE•INSIGHT A lecture by KRISTAN KENNEDY, artist, curator andeducator, who for the last decade has focused on commissioning new workby international emerging artists in the form of large-scale, site-specificinstallations and solo projects. In addition to presenting the plastic arts,she organizes music, performance art, publications and new media projects.
Purchase tickets at: shop.henryart.org/products/incite-insight-kristan-kennedy
Henry Art Gallery, University of Washington, 15th Ave NE & NE 41st St, henryart.org, 206-543-2281
preview-art.com PREVIEW 69
V I G N E T T E S • February/March 2015Washington aLLyn cantoR
DOUG KEYES: PORTRAIT G. Gibson Gallery, Seattle, Jan 23-Feb 28Doug Keyes uses layered photographic imagery to capture impres-sions that evoke the difference between seeing and perceiving. In thisseries, he turns to portraiture, using multiple exposures to create sin-gle images. The compositions move beyond the static, portrayingwhat the mind actually sees over time. These luminous personifica-tions include Chuck Close, Rembrandt, Warhol and other iconicartists. The more anonymous pieces, such as Humans of New York, areamong the most intriguing in the series.
LIVE ON: MR.’S JAPANESE NEO-POP Asian Art Museum, Seattle, Nov22-Apr 5 Born in 1969, the Japanese artist known as Mr. is a protégéof Takashi Murakami, internationally acclaimed icon of Japanese PopArt. This is the first major American museum retrospective of Mr.’sart. He combines anime characters, graffiti elements and candy-coat-ed colours in busy, fantasy-driven compositions with dystopianundertones. Central to the exhibit is a massive installation made ofeveryday objects that Mr. created as a response to the aftermath ofthe 2011 tsunami and Fukushima nuclear accident.
BAM BIENNIAL 2014: KNOCK ON WOOD Bellevue Arts Museum,Bellevue, Oct 31-Mar 29 This third installment of BAM’s biennialseries focuses on wood in a survey of works by Pacific Northwestartists and craftspeople. These 39 jury-selected artists vary greatly intheir creative pursuits. The broad scope of pieces presented hereshowcases examples of both immaculate technical ability and amaz-ing innovation – ranging from exquisite carvings, skilled turnings andcontemporary furniture designs to off-beat sculptural parodies.
GEOMETRIC ABSTRACTION Prographica Gallery, Seattle, Feb 21-Mar28 This three-person exhibit includes artwork by David Brody,Robert Perlman and Chris Watts, all of whom work non-objectively,sharing the visual imperatives of Geometric Abstraction. That move-ment, around since the early twentieth century, propelled theremoval of recognizable subject matter as a central concern of pre-senting illusion – in effect, laying a foundation for the contemporaryvisual canon of non-representational art. Here, Perlman uses colour-ful painterly methods, while both Brody and Watts use repetition andsequence to arrive at tight formal compositions.
CHRISTINE SHARP: VIEWS FROM THE BYWAYS Lisa Harris Gallery,Seattle, Feb 5-Mar 1 Christine Sharp’s oil paintings explore theNorthwest landscape through semi-representational scenes that cap-ture the essence of place. In this exhibit, she focuses on the byways ofOregon, Washington and Montana, inspired by her travels throughthese regions. Her distinct style combines realism and abstraction:landscape elements are reduced into bold, flat sections of vibrantcolour and simplified interlocking forms. Sharp’s puzzle-likearrangements of relaxed biomorphic shapes offer a contemporaryvision of landscape painting filtered through the lens of personalexpression.
Doug Keyes
Christine Sharp
Mr.
David Brody
June Sekiguchi, BAM Biennial
six-month run. Hamilton has createda set of poetic relationships thatinvite the viewer to consider thecloseness, the distance and the inter-dependence between human andnon-human animals.
� Lisa Harris Gallery1922 Pike Place �206-443-3315 lisaharrisgallery.common-sat 10:30am-5:30pm sun 11am-4pm. Feb 5-Mar 1 Christine Sharp,“Views from the Byways”, paintingsof Northwest landscapes focusing onthe byways of Washington, Oregonand Montana; Mar 5-29 KarenKosoglad, “Contour, Gesture, and theFigure”, recent mixed-media paint-ings bridge figuration and abstractionwith gestural elements and intensified
line; Victoria Johnson, “Color Narra-tives”, nonrepresentational worksfeature refined, dynamic forms thatembrace energy, motion and the slip-periness of perception.
� Platform Gallery114 Third Ave S �206-323-2808 platformgallery.comwed-fri 11am-5pm. Thru Feb 14Tyson Skross, “The Losers”, workson panel; Feb 26-Mar 28 ThomasAlbdorf, “Former Writer: Colour onSurface”, photographs.
Prographica Gallery3419 E Denny Way �206-322-3851 prographicadrawings.comwed-sat 11am-5pm, tues by appt.Thru Feb 14 Chester Arnold, David
Bailin, Darlene Campbell, KennyHarris, Ira Korman and Tim Lowly,“New to Seattle”, works by artistsfrom Koplin Del Rio Gallery, our affili-ate in Los Angeles; Feb 21-Mar 28David Brody, Robert Perlman andChris Watts, “Geometric Abstraction".
� Seattle Art Museum1300 First Ave �206-654-3100 seattleartmuseum.orgSAM hours: wed 10am-5pm, thurs10am-5pm, fri-sun 10am-5pm. Sug-gested admission: adults $15, sen-iors (62 and over) and military (withID) $12, students $9, children 12 &under free, SAM members free.Olympic Sculpture Park (2901 West-ern Ave) hours: open daily, opens 30minutes prior to sunrise, closes 30
70 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015 � OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
fryemuseum.org�
Future Ruins: Rodrigo ValenzuelaFRYE ART MUSEUM, SEATTLE WA – Jan 31-Apr 26, 2015 Seattle-based Rodrigo Valenzuela is a Chileanartist who received a BFA from the University of Chile in Santiago, and his MFA from the Univer-sity of Washington in 2012. In the last few years, his work has gained national attention, bringingValenzuela several awards and residencies. He works in photography, sculpture, video and installa-tion, often creating pseudo-biographical narratives in which he blurs the line between fiction anddocumentary.
This first solo museum exhibit features site-specific pieces commissioned by the Frye. HedonicReversal is a large-scale architectural installation composed of an amalgam of photographic depictionsand sculptural “ruins” that offer a haunting yet inviting presence. The artist is exploring the aestheticnotion of ruins unto themselves, with the social stigma of economic failure removed from the equa-tion of seeing and feeling. Valenzuela’s installations have a certain push and pull effect, the result of hisshowing the same sub-ject through both pho-tography and sculpture.This creates an envi-ronment of disillusionand suspended realitythat is oddly appealing.
El Sísifo is a three-channel video projec-tion that was also com-missioned by the Fryefor the exhibit. Thepiece is about workerswho remove debris.Valenzuela has dubbedthem the “13th Man.”With a nod to Seattlesports fans (known asthe “12th Man”), this video work poignantly directs our attention to the invisible workers who pick upgarbage after sporting events.
Concurrent with this museum show is a March exhibition at Upfor Gallery in Portland, Ore-gon, which represents Valenzuela’s artwork in the Pacific Northwest. Allyn Cantor
Rodrigo Valenzuela, still from El Sísifo (2014), digital video with audio [Frye Art Museum, Seattle WA, Jan31-Apr 26]
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Exhibition Catalogues of InterestJOCK MACDONALD: EVOLVING FORM was produced in conjunction with theexhibition of the same name, organized by the Vancouver Art Gallery, the RobertMcLaughlin Gallery and the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria. A pioneer of Canadianpost-war abstraction, Macdonald was also an influential teacher in Vancouver,Calgary, Banff and Toronto. Through essays, reproductions, letters and diaryexcerpts, this publication covers Macdonald’s development from commercialdesign through Group of Seven influenced landscapes and Kandinsky-esquewatercolours to gestural abstraction.Softcover, 208 pages, $37.95 CAD. Available through the Vancouver Art Gallery Store,604-662-4706
KIM DORLAND accompanies the solo show organized by the McMichaelCanadian Collection, recently seen at Contemporary Calgary, and scheduled toappear this fall at the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria. Born in Alberta and based inToronto, Dorland creates highly charged and often confrontational paintings thatinvestigate the nature, history and icons of Canadian landscape painting. Thebook features more than 100 full-colour reproductions, studio and installationphotos, and essays by Katerina Atanassova, Robert Enright and Jeffrey Spalding. Hardcover, 176 pages, $45 CAD. Available through Contemporary Calgary’s website:contemporarycalgary.com
JURGEN PARTENHEIMER: THE ARCHIVE marks four coordinated exhibitions ofthis acclaimed German artist’s work – three in Europe and the most recent at Van-couver’s Contemporary Art Gallery. Partenheimer’s oeuvre includes drawings,prints, paintings, sculpture, ceramic vessels, installations and text. It is marked bya philosophical approach to both representation and abstraction, a lyrical hand-made-ness and an acute awareness of place. In English and German, with 19essays by international scholars and curators, including the CAG’s Nigel Prince. Hardcover, 368 pages, $50 CAD. Available at the Contemporary Art Gallery, 604-681-2700or contemporaryartgallery.ca/shop
MICHAEL KENNA: FRANCE is a beautiful monograph featuring both well-known images and previously unpublished material selected by the artist him-self. Kenna has been photographing France since the early 1980s. Among hisnotable subjects: Mont Saint-Michel, André Le Nôtre’s gardens, the Calais lacefactories and the Château Lafite Rothschild wine estate. The book contains 275duotone plates of Kenna’s elegant imagery, housed in a case of dyed burgundysilk cloth. Introduction in French and English by renowned historian and cura-tor Jean-Claude Lemagny. Edited by Jo-Anne Birnie DanzkerHardcover, slipcased, 312 pages, $85 USD. Available at G. Gibson Gallery, 206-587-4033
PAN GONGKAI: WITHERED LOTUS CAST IN IRON was published by the FryeArt Museum in conjunction with its exhibition of the same name. This was thefirst museum exhibition in the United States of the work of distinguished Chi-nese artist Pan Gongkai (b. 1947). A contemporary master of ink painting, PanGongkai created a large-scale, site-specific ink painting that extended the entirelength of the museum’s largest gallery. An essay by Frye Director Jo-AnneBirnie Danzker and 25 illustrations reveal the artist’s early influences and thesignificance of the withered lotus.Softcover, 23 pages, $5 USD. Available at http://fryemuseumstore.goodsie.com
Prices may be subject to additional charges for postage, handling and taxes.
minutes after sunset. Free to thepublic. Feb 12-May 17 IndigenousBeauty: Masterworks of AmericanIndian Art from the Diker Collec-tion, featuring more than 122 mas-terworks representing tribes acrossthe North American continent; ThruFeb 16 City Dwellers: ContemporaryArt from India, through photographyand sculpture, the artists negotiatediverse ideas and influences on con-temporary Indian society; Thru Mar1 Visual Vertigo, showing 12 worksfrom the central desert region ofAustralia; Thru Apr 19 Nature andPattern in Japanese Design, paint-ings and textiles using flora and fau-na motifs; Thru May 17 Seattle Col-lects Northwest Coast Native Art, 60Northwest Coast Native works drawnfrom local private collections, in con-junction with Indigenous Beauty;Thru Aug 1 From Abstract Expres-sion to Colored Planes. Early in the1940s, artists in New York began todevelop an expressive, abstract styleof painting, inspired in part by theaesthetic vocabulary of Surrealismand a growing interest in psycho-analysis and the unconscious;OLYMPIC SCULPTURE PARK Thru Mar 8Sol LeWitt: Seven Cubes, “SevenCubes with Color Ink Washes Super-imposed (1997)”, wall drawing con-ceived for the Seattle Art Museum;Ongoing Jaume Plensa, “Echo”,monumental head of the mountainnymph of Greek mythology, situatedon the shoreline of the park whereEcho looks out over Puget Sound inthe direction of Mount Olympus;Doug Aitken, “Mirror Mirror”, instal-lation for the facade of SAM, anurban earthwork that changes in realtime in response to the movementsand life around it.
� Shift Gallery312 S Washington St, Tashiro KaplanBldg shiftgalleryseattle.orgfri & sat 12-5pm or by appt. Feb 5-28Jodi Waltier; Mar 5-28 Daya Bon-nie; Carolyn Gracz.
SPAC GallerySeattle Pacific University3 W Cremona �206-281-2079 spu.edu/depts/viscommon-fri 9am-5pm. Thru Feb 27Alumni Show, recent works by Seat-tle Pacific University graduates inVisual Communication Design, Stu-dio Art and Illustration/New Pictures.
Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture2316 W First Ave �509-456-3931 509-363-5304northwestmuseum.orgMuseum: wed-sun 10am-5pm, firstfri 5-8pm. Admission: adults $10,seniors (60+) $7.50, students (withID) $5, kids 5 and under and MACmembers no charge. Campbell HouseTours: included in admission price.Thru Jun 28 The Artist's Palette, artfrom the MAC collection in conjunc-tion with The Artist's Palette, high-lighting the beauty of the palette andthe artists themselves; Thru Jan 31,2016 100 Stories: A Centennial Exhi-bition, objects from museum collec-tions tell the stories of the past 100years of Spokane and eastern Wash-ington history; Ongoing CampbellHouse Tours, hourly: wed-sun 12-4pm, beginning at CAMPBELL HOUSEACTIVITY CENTER located in the CarriageHouse; Inland Northwest Narrative:Crossroads and Confluence, onlineintroduction to the Inland Northwestexperience from past to present, withselected museum collection images.
Museum of Glass1801 Dock St �253-284-4750 museumofglass.orgwed-sat 10am-5pm sun 12-5pm 3rd
thurs 10am-8pm. Admission: mem-bers free, adults $15, seniors (62+),military and students (13+) $12,groups of 20+ $12, groups of 50+$10, children 6-12 (under 6 are free)$5, every 3rd thurs from 5-8pm free.Opened Jan 17 Kids Design GlassToo, 31 artistically captivating piecesdesigned by children and created atthe museum; Feb 14-Jul 12 LyndaLowe, “Patra Passage”, exploringthe cultural connection of art andcommunity; Mar 1-May 10 ChihulyDrawings, first major retrospectivefeaturing over 100 pieces; Mar 1-Jun30 Celebrating Lino Tagliapietra;Ongoing MAIN PLAZA REFLECTING POOLMartin Blank: Fluent Steps, monu-mental glass sculpture spans theentire length of the 210-foot-longreflecting pool and rises from waterlevel to 15 feet in height; CappyThompson, “Gathering the Light”,installation of the story of MOGreverse-painted on glass in the gri-saille technique.
Tacoma Art Museum1701 Pacific Ave �253-272-4258 tacomaartmuseum.orgwed-sun 10am-5pm, 3rd thurs 10am-8pm, free on 3rd thurs from 5-8pm.Admission: members free, adults$10, students/military/seniors (65+)$8, family $25 (2 adults + up to 4 chil-dren under 18), children 5 and underfree. Mar 1-Jun 7 Eloquent Objects:Georgia O’Keeffe and Still-Life Art inNew Mexico, featuring more than 60paintings by O’Keeffe and her con-temporaries who recorded theirchanging impressions of the harshlandscape of the Southwest and theregion’s evocative objects; Thru Fall2015 Art of the American West: TheHaub Family Collection at TacomaArt Museum, 140 works exploringthemes of the West spanning morethan 200 years; Northwest in theWest: Exploring Our Roots, exploringthe distinct identity of Northwest artand how it has adopted, adapted andreacted against its Western roots;Ongoing Dale Chihuly at Tacoma ArtMuseum, permanent collection ofChihuly glass, including more than 30sculptures. Visitors can access theEar for Art: Chihuly Glass Tour any-time from anywhere by downloadingthe STQRY app on your phone. �
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Jason Walker: On the River, Down the RoadBELLEVUE ARTS MUSEUM, BELLEVUE WA – Oct 3, 2014-Mar 1, 2015 This first solo museum exhibitionby ceramic artist Jason Walker highlights the artist’s ongoing interest in the inherent dichotomy betweennatural and man-made creations. On the River, Down the Road is a site-specific installation of meticuloussculptures created from painted porcelain. In these highly detailed pieces, Walker depicts a surreal envi-ronment where animals that have absorbed the residue of industrial and urban life are shown as evolvedhybrid life forms.
The Washington artist uses elementsof fantasy to expose the progressive impactof humanity on the landscape. Walker’swild and domesticated animal forms arerendered with colourfully painted surfacesthat articulate witty yet sombre scenesbased on the decline of the natural worldand the increase of technological develop-ments. These somewhat playful andhumorous creatures speak of theinescapable influence of civilization overwilderness in telling narratives that ques-tion our current perceptions of nature. Inone of Walker’s sculptures, a redtail deerclad with caution stripes carries a roadwayon his side and cars on his back as hestands among a cluster of dwarfed citybuildings.
These visually captivating artworks are both stunning in their skill and execution and effective intheir ability to provoke thoughtful dialogue. For Walker, they represent “what it means to be human inthe present time” – a response he had after realizing that we exclude ourselves from the very definitionof the word nature. Allyn Cantor
Jason Walker, Redtail (2014), stoneware, porcelain, china paint, underglazeand concrete [Bellevue Arts Museum, Bellevue WA, Oct 3-Mar 1]
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76 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015
221A 32Access Gallery 32Alberta Craft Council Gallery 15Alberta Printmakers Gallery and Studio 8Alcheringa Gallery 48Allied Arts of Whatcom County 64Alternator Centre for Contemporary Art 22Amelia Douglas Gallery, Douglas College 26Art Beatus 32The Art Emporium 32Art Gallery at Evergreen Cultural Centre 20Art Gallery of Alberta 15Art Gallery of Greater Victoria 49Art Gallery of St. Albert 17The Art Gym at Marylhurst University 55Art Works Gallery 32ARTE funktional – The Factory 22Artemis Gallery 27Arts Off Main 33Artspeak 33ArtStarts Gallery 33Ashpa Naira Gallery & Studio 48Asian Art Museum 66Audain Gallery 33Avenue Gallery 49Bainbridge Island Museum of Art 62Barbara Boldt Original Art Studio 21Bau-Xi Gallery 33Beaty Biodiversity Museum 33Bellevue Arts Museum 64Bill Reid Gallery 34Blackfish Gallery 55Blue Sky Gallery 55Bluerock Gallery 8Britannia Art Gallery 34Buckland Southerst Gallery 52Bugera Matheson Gallery 16Burnaby Art Gallery 19Burnaby Arts Council (Deer Lake Gallery) 19Campbell River Art Gallery 20Cannon Beach Gallery 54Cannon Beach Gallery Group 54Caroun Art Gallery 27
Catriona Jeffries Gallery 34Centre A 34Chali-Rosso Art Gallery 34Charles A. Hartman Fine Art 56Charles H. Scott Gallery 34Chazou Gallery 22Chilliwack Visual Artists Association 20Chinese Cultural Centre Museum and Archives 35Choboter Fine Art 35Christine Klassen Gallery 8Circle Craft Gallery 35CityScape Community Art Space, North Vancouver Community Arts Council 27Coastal Peoples Fine Arts Gallery 35The Collectors’ Gallery of Art 10Contemporary Art Gallery 35Contemporary Calgary (C) formerly Art Gallery of Calgary 10Contemporary Calgary (C2) formerly Museum of Contemporary Art 10couch* – a Tanya Horn gallery 49Craft Council of BC Gallery 35CSA Space 38Daffodil Gallery 16Davidson Galleries 66Deer Lake Gallery, Burnaby Arts Council 19Deluge Contemporary Art 49Doctor Vigari Gallery 38Douglas F. Cooley Memorial Art Gallery 56Douglas Reynolds Gallery 38Douglas Udell Gallery 16DRAW Gallery 30Dundarave Print Workshop and Gallery 38Eagle Spirit Gallery 38Elissa Cristall Gallery 38Elizabeth Leach Gallery 56Emily Carr Alumni Gallery 38English Bay Gallery 38Equinox Gallery 38Esker Foundation 10Esplanade Art Gallery 17The Fazakas Gallery 38
Federation Gallery 38Ferry Building Gallery 52Firehall Arts Centre Gallery 38The Fort Gallery 21Foster/White Gallery 67Founders’ Gallery 10The Foyer Gallery, Squamish Public Library 31Fragrant Wood Gallery 38Framagraphic Custom Picture Framing 38Frye Art Museum 67G. Gibson Gallery 67Gage Gallery 49The Gallery @ Artisan Square 19Gallery 2, Grand Forks and District Art and Heritage Centre 21Gallery 110 67Gallery 1710 32Gallery Gachet 38Gallery in the Oak Bay Village 50Gallery Jones 39Gallery of BC Ceramics 39Geert Maas Sculpture Gardens & Gallery 22Gibsons Public Art Gallery 31Glenbow 10Goldmoss Gallery 32Gordon Smith Gallery of Canadian Art 29The Graffiti Co. Art Studio/Gallery 29Greg Kucera Gallery 67grunt gallery 39Hallie Ford Museum of Art 62Hambleton Galleries 23 Havana Gallery 39Heffel Fine Art Auction House 39Henry Art Gallery 67Herringer Kiss Gallery 12hfa contemporary 39Hill’s Native Art 39Hot Art Wet City Gallery 40Howe Street Gallery 40Ian Tan Gallery 40Il Museo, Il Centro, Italian Cultural Centre 40Illingworth Kerr Gallery 12
Alpha listing of galleries in this issue
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Initial Gallery 40Inuit Gallery of Vancouver 40Jansen Art Center 65Jennifer Kostuik Gallery 40Kafka’s Coffee & Tea 40Kamloops Art Gallery 22Kariton Art Gallery & Boutique 18Katherine McLean Studio 42Kelowna Art Gallery 23Kimoto Gallery 42Kootenay Gallery 20Kwantlen Art Gallery 32Landing Gallery Artists’ Co-op 32Lattimer Gallery 42Laura Russo Gallery 59Legacy Art Gallery Downtown 50Legacy Maltwood at the Mearns Centre & McPherson Library 50Leighdon Studio Gallery 42Lisa Harris Gallery 70The Lloyd Gallery 29Lookout Gallery 42Madrona Gallery 50Maple Ridge Art Gallery 23Marion Scott Gallery/Kardosh Projects 42Martin Batchelor Gallery 50Masters Gallery 42Michael Parsons Fine Art 59Miriam Aroeste Fine Art 42Monny's Art Gallery 42Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery 42Mountain Galleries at Fairmont Chateau 53Museum of Anthropology, UBC 42Museum of Contemporary Craft 59Museum of Glass 72Museum of Northern BC 30Museum of Northwest Art 65Museum of Vancouver 44Musqueam Culltural Centre Gallery 44Nanaimo Art Gallery 26The New Gallery (TNG) 12New Media Gallery 26Newzones 12
Nickle Galleries 14Nikkei National Museum 20Nisga’a Museum 21Northwest By Northwest Gallery 54Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture 72The Old School House Arts Centre 31Open Space Arts Society 50Or Gallery 44Oregon Jewish Museum 59Oxygen Art Centre 26Pacific Wave Glass Art 44Paul Kuhn Gallery 14Pendulum Gallery 45Peninsula Gallery 31Penticton Art Gallery 30Petley Jones Gallery 45Place des Arts 21Platform Gallery 70Polychrome Fine Art 51Port Angeles Fine Arts Center 65Port Moody Arts Centre 30Portland Art Museum 62Pousette Gallery 45Presentation House Gallery 29Prographica Gallery 70The Reach Gallery Museum Abbotsford 18Red Art Gallery 51Rennie Collection 45Republic Gallery 45Richmond Art Gallery 31Salmon Arm Art Gallery 31Satellite Gallery 45Schack Art Center 65Seattle Art Museum 70S’eliyemetaxwtexw Art Gallery (formerly Visual Arts Gallery) 19Seymour Art Gallery 29Shift Gallery 72Sidney and Gertrude Zack Gallery, Jewish Community Centre 45Silk Purse Arts Centre 53Simon Fraser University Gallery 20Slide Room Gallery 51
Southern Alberta Art Gallery 16SPAC Gallery 72Spirit Gallery 53Spirit Wrestler Gallery 45Squamish Lil’wat Cultural Centre 53Station House Gallery 54Stride Art Gallery Association 14Surrey Art Gallery 32Tacoma Art Museum 72Teck Gallery 46Toni Onley Estate 46Touchstones Nelson: Museum of Art and History 26Tumbleweed Gallery and Framing 30Two Rivers Gallery 30UNIT/PITT Projects 46Unitarian Church of Vancouver 46University of Lethbridge Art Gallery 17Uno Langmann 46Upfor Gallery 62Urban Aboriginal Fair Trade Gallery 46Vancouver Art Gallery 47Vancouver Holocaust Education Centre 47Vancouver Maritime Museum 47Vernon Public Art Gallery 48Visual Arts Gallery (now S’eliyemetaxwtexw Art Gallery) 19Wallace Galleries 15WaterWorks Gallery 65Wendel Gallery 48West End Gallery, Edmonton 16West End Gallery, Victoria 51West Vancouver Museum 53Western Gallery 64Whatcom Museum 64White Bird Gallery 55White Rock Gallery 53Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies 8Wil Aballe Art Projects 48Winchester Galleries 52Winsor Gallery 48Xchanges Gallery 52
Alpha listing of galleries in this issue
78 PREVIEW � FEBRUARY/MARCH 2015
GALLERY OPENINGS + EVENTSFebruary 5 Thursday6:30-8:30pm Opening reception: PhilipeGadenne, Dramatic Skies, an interpretation of theworld around us regarding global warming and itseffects on our environment; Nancy Cramer,pottery inspired by spiritual beliefs of primitivesocieties and rustic art forms. DISTRICT FOYERGALLERY, DISTRICT HALL OF NORTH VANCOUVER, 355 WQueens Rd, North Vancouver BC.
February 6 Friday6-9pm Opening reception: Michael Soltis,Refinement, new paintings. KIMOTO GALLERY, 1525 W6th Ave, Vancouver BC.
February 7 Saturday5-8pm Opening reception: Exhibition of NewWork by Karel Doruyter, 3-D paintings. MOUNTAIN
GALLERIES AT THE FAIRMONT CHATEAU, 4599 Chateau Blvd,Whistler BC.
7-9pm Opening reception: Gillian Redwood,Energetic Universe, large acrylic paintings oncanvas. MARTIN BATCHELOR GALLERY, 712 Cormorant St,Victoria BC.
February 12 Thursday5pm Gala reception and PechaKucha 5:(Paradigm) Connections: Doing what we love!,projects showcasing design, community buildingand typography, 6:30pm PechaKucha 5 – 15creative professionals sharing 20 slides in 20-second presentations. Tickets free – register:http://pechakucha.ca/. S'ELIYEMETAXWTEXW ART GALLERY,University of the Fraser Valley, 33844 King Rd,Abbotsford BC.
5-7pm Opening reception: Brian Fisher, Mandalasand Beachscapes; Collector's Choice, a curatedcollection of works. WINCHESTER MODERN, 758Humboldt St, Victoria BC.
February 14 Saturday2pm Opening reception: Elapsed; North: AnExhibition for the 2015 Canada Winter Games.TWO RIVERS GALLERY, 725 Canada Games Way, PrinceGeorge BC.
February 14 Saturday (cont’d)2-4pm Opening reception: Leef Evans, worksincorporating found or household materialsinspired by interesting compositions found ineveryday life. DISTRICT LIBRARY GALLERY, LYNN VALLEYMAIN LIBRARY, 1277 Lynn Valley Rd, NorthVancouver BC.
7pm-9pm Opening reception: Tracey Emin,Tracey Moffatt, Pipilotti Rist, Nicolas Provost,R. Luke DuBois, Matthias Muller & ChristophGirardet, Jillian McDonald, Brendan Van Hekand Angela Washko, Amour Fou (mad or anti-social love), works exposed in all their messy,destructive glory chart an obsessive journey tolove gone wrong. NEW MEDIA GALLERY, ANVIL CENTRE,777 Columbia St, 3rd Flr, New Westminster BC.
February 19 Thursday5-8pm Opening reception: David Rifat & OtherArtists, expressive life drawings by featured artistRifat and new works by gallery artists. COUCH* – A
TANYA HORN GALLERY, 1010 Broad St, Victoria BC.
February 20 Friday8-11pm Opening reception: Jacqueline HoangNguyen, Space Fiction & the Archives, adocumentary about Canada’s first UFO landing padjuxtaposed with current day immigration policies.THE NEW GALLERY (TNG), 208 Centre St SE, Calgary AB.
February 21 Saturday1-3pm Opening reception: Robert V. Harms, Artin Harms Way, large oil paintings and watercoloursketches. CHILLIWACK VISUAL ARTISTS ASSOCIATION,CHILLIWACK ART GALLERY, Chilliwack Cultural Centre,9201 Corbould St, Chilliwack BC.
February 27 Friday7-9pm Opening reception: Emmanuelle Jacques,The Creation of the Universe. ALBERTA PRINTMAKERS
GALLERY AND STUDIO, 4025 4th St SE, Calgary AB.
February 28 Saturday2-5pm Opening reception: Rosalyn Gale Powell:Garden Path; Raymond Gendreau, photographs;Jenny Fillius, Nia Michaels, Deborah Paul,Kathy Ross, Loran Scruggs and Nan Wonderly,“Cut & Bent”, tin art. BAINBRIDGE ISLAND MUSEUM OF ART,550 Winslow Way E, Bainbridge Island WA.
March 3 Tuesday7-9pm Opening reception: Ross Penhall,paintings. GORDON SMITH GALLERY OF CANADIAN ART, 2121Lonsdale Ave, North Vancouver BC.
Art Walks + ToursPortland Alberta Street: 3rd Thursdays, 6-8pmSeattle Pioneer Square: 1st Thursdays, 6-8pmSeattle Uptown: 3rd WednesdaysTacoma: 3rd Thursdays, 5-8pm
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GALLERY OPENINGS + EVENTSMarch 5 Thursday7-9:30pm Opening reception: Rachael Ashe,Anyuta Gusakova, Mehran Modarres, ConnieSabo and Joseph Wu, Paper Art Exhibition, large-scale installations, sculptures, drawings, origamiand 2-D and 3-D paper cuts. CITYSCAPE COMMUNITY
ART SPACE, NORTH VANCOUVER COMMUNITY ARTS COUNCIL,335 Lonsdale Ave, North Vancouver BC.
March 6 Friday6-9pm Opening reception: Scott Sueme, Arena,new paintings; Mel Yap, Ka-bloom! newphotographs. KIMOTO GALLERY, 1525 W 6th Ave,Vancouver BC.
7-10pm Opening reception: The Right to Remain,showcasing artwork and documentation fromworkshops guided by Downtown Eastside artistswho engaged their community in dialogue abouthuman rights. GALLERY GACHET, 88 E Cordova St,Vancouver BC.
March 7 Saturday2-4pm Opening reception: Carrie Walker, TheEffect of Space, pen and ink drawings. ELISSACRISTALL GALLERY, 2239 Granville St, Vancouver BC.
March 12 Thursday5-8pm Opening reception: Emerson Schreiner,Michael den Hertog and Jonathan Gleed, Trio,abstracts, portraits, cityscapes and landscapes.COUCH* – A TANYA HORN GALLERY, 1010 Broad St,Victoria BC.
March 14 Saturday7-9pm Opening reception: Natalie Shumka,Offspring! modern oil paintings created under theinfluence of her progeny. GAGE GALLERY, 2031 OakBay Ave, Victoria BC.
March 15 Sunday11am-2pm Drawing Station + Workshop: SarahLeavitt will lead a Graphic Novel DrawingWorkshop. Hands on – create your own shortautobiographical comic. Cost: general $85, gallerymembers $75. CAMPBELL RIVER ART GALLERY, 1235Shoppers Row, Campbell River BC.
March 19 Thursday6-8pm Opening reception: Okanagan PrintTriennial, an evening of art, music, food andrefreshments. Admission by donation. Event opento the public. VERNON PUBLIC ART GALLERY, 3228 31stAve, Vernon BC.
March 24 Tuesday12:15pm Artist's talk: Catherine Nicholls willdiscuss her large-scale hand-crafted textile pieces,inspired by spring and cherry blossoms. CITY ATRIUMGALLERY, 141 W 14th St, North Vancouver BC.
March 27 Friday7-10pm Opening reception: Radix: the hiddenessence of trees, Bill Stewart, sculpturalinstallation, and Shannon Browne, photographs –archival inkjet prints. ARTEMIS GALLERY, 104C-4390Gallant Ave, North Vancouver BC.
We Draw the Line HereMARCH 5-17Exhibition in celebration of International Women's Day
18 artists present works based on topics that make theirblood boil, including women's issues, environmentalconcerns and international problems.
Curated by Betty Meyers and Joan McHardy, the exhibitionis at both the Main Gallery and the Café Gallery of theCommunity Arts Council, Cedar Hill Recreation Centre.
Artists include Susan Point, Eva Campbell, Michael Lewis,Phyllis Serota, Rande Cook and Trish Shwart.
March 8, 2-4 pmOpening Ceremony
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS: Elizabeth May, MP Saanich-Gulf IslandsJanet Rodgers, poet
COMMUNITY ARTS COUNCIL CEDAR HILLRECREATION CENTRE3220 Cedar Hill Road, Saanich, BC
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