Lorna Mills and Sally McKay
Digital Media Tree this blog's archive OVVLvverk Lorna Mills: Artworks / Persona Volare / contact Sally McKay: GIFS / cv and contact |
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Kristiina Lahde Wheel of Fortune 2006 Ethafoam and hot glue
From the website of the brilliant Hart House Installation Collective (hic)
Pudlo Pudlat
View from the Ice 1979 Acrylic paint, coloured pencil & felt pen on paper, 57 x 76cm
Airplane between two Places 1976 Acrylic paint, coloured pencil & felt pen on paper, 53 x 76cm
Landscape with Ice Floes 1974 felt pen on wove paper, 51.5 x 66.5 cm
Musk ox, Frontal View 1970 felt pen on wove paper, 50.8 x 66.1 cm
Woodlot: The 3rd KW|AG Biennial Kitchener-Waterloo Art Gallery July 11 - September 9, 2007 Ruth Abernethy, Kelly Borgers, Jefferson Campbell-Cooper, Susan Detwiler, Niall Donaghy, Andrika Dubeckyj, Annie Dunning, Fatima Garzan, Lauren Hall, Arnold Jacobs, Janet Morton, Marinko Pipunic, Red, Andrew Wright Guest curator: Sally McKay Exhibition sponsor: The Walter Fedy Partnership Opening: Wednesday, July 11, 7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. Curator’s Talk with Kelly Borgers and Arnold Jacobs: Thursday, July 12, 7:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. This group exhibition celebrates visual art practice in the Region of Waterloo and the Counties of Wellington, Brant, Oxford and Perth. Guest Curator Sally McKay brings together the work of 14 artists in the 3rd installment of the eagerly anticipated KW|AG Biennial. Representing the emerging and established, Woodlot offers a focused look at contemporary art production in the region. Southwestern Ontario is not a wilderness. It is a cultivated landscape of agriculture and industry, dissected by major highways and pressured by the sad tedium of urban sprawl. And yet, for anyone who has spent time in the region, the experience of nature runs deep and strong. In spring, the rivers Nith and Grand swell and threaten to overflow their banks. Killdeer and meadowlarks stake their claim on summer fields while red-tailed hawks circle the sky, striking fear into the hearts of tiny mammals down below. Mourning doves dot the telephone wires, and usher in the evenings with soft sad hoots. In autumn, the woodlots explode in dazzling colour, and the wide white fields of winter are laced with the shadowy tracks of rabbits and coyotes. As humans, we have come to a point when our responsibility for climate change simply cannot be ignored. In this context, the concept of "regional artist" carries much more importance than a postal code. Woodlot is not an overtly political exhibition, and yet all of the artists, in their own way, are deeply engaged with the reciprocal relationship between humans and the natural world. Some of the works are joyful, some are scientific, some are angry, some are funny, some are sad, and some are telling stories. Together, the artists in this diverse exhibition probe at the role of art in expressing an historic, cultural, and spiritual sense of place. – Sally McKay An online publication featuring a curator’s essay and images of the works in the exhibition will be available at www.kwag.on.ca Kitchener-Waterloo Art Gallery 101 Queen Street North Kitchener, ON Canada N2H 6P7 Tel: 519.579.5860 Fax: 519.578.0740 Email: mail@kwag.on.ca Web: www.kwag.on.ca |
My ten questions for simpleposie have been posted.
The subject is the web site VVORK.
Male, six years old, 110 pound Labrador love magnet.
(his ears are like velvet)
HAPPY CANADA DAY EVERYONE!