preview-art.com · 1525 w 6 th ave vancouver bc 604 428 0903 [email protected]...
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February - March 2018preview-art.com
B A U - X I G A L L E R Y
Thalassa, acrylic on panel, 16 x 16 inches
3045 GRANVILLE STREET VANCOUVER BC V6H 3J9 TEL: 604 733 7011
EXHIBITION ONLINE AT WWW.BAU-XI.COM
F E B 3 - 1 7, 2 0 1 8
V I C K Y C H R I S T O U
1525 W 6TH AVE VANCOUVER BC 604 428 0903 hello @ kimotogallery.com kimotogallery.com
MICHAEL SOLTIS FEB 2 – 24
OPENING RECEPTION FRI FEB 2ND 6 – 9 PM
Image: Categorical Rhythm, 2017, Mixed Media on Panel, 36 × 36 inches
YORKE GRAHAM
REVISIONEDMAR 2 – 24
OPENING RECEPTION FRI MAR 2ND
6 – 9 PM
Image: Coast, 2017, Vintage typewriter parts
& skateboards, 18 × 23 × 8 inches
02/0
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2018
03/0
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FEB MAR 18.indd 7 2018-01-17 1:50 PM
155 West 7th Avenue, Vancouver, BC Canada V5Y 1L8
604 876 3303 denbighfas.com [email protected]
Providing expert handling of your fine art for over thirty years.
Installation Storage Shipping Transport Framing
1525 W 6TH AVE VANCOUVER BC 604 428 0903 hello @ kimotogallery.com kimotogallery.com
MICHAEL SOLTIS FEB 2 – 24
OPENING RECEPTION FRI FEB 2ND 6 – 9 PM
Image: Categorical Rhythm, 2017, Mixed Media on Panel, 36 × 36 inches
YORKE GRAHAM
REVISIONEDMAR 2 – 24
OPENING RECEPTION FRI MAR 2ND
6 – 9 PM
Image: Coast, 2017, Vintage typewriter parts
& skateboards, 18 × 23 × 8 inches
02/0
22018
03/0
2
FEB MAR 18.indd 7 2018-01-17 1:50 PM
6 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018 H OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
Vancouver(see map above)
Bellingham
La Conner
Edmonton
Prince George
Williams Lake
Spokane
Seattle
Bellevue
Vernon
Kelowna
Penticton Nelson
Banff Calgary
Black DiamondKamloops
Whistler
Salmon Arm
Everett
Campbell RiverCourtenay
Qualicum BeachCumberland
Port Alberni
VictoriaFriday Harbor
Port Angeles
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Tacoma
Grand Forks Castlegar
Laxgalts’ap
Prince Rupert
BRITISH COLUMBIA
HAIDAGWAII
Skidegate
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ALBERTA
St. Albert
Medicine Hat
Lethbridge
Pacific Ocean
WASHINGTON
OREGON
Portland
Salem
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Astoria
CoquitlamPort MoodyWest Vancouver
North Vancouver
Maple Ridge
Fort Langley ChilliwackAbbotsfordWhite Rock
Surrey
BurnabyRichmond
Tsawwassen
New Westminster
Vancouver
Deep Cove
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ALBERTA8 Banff, Black Diamond, Calgary13 Edmonton15 Lethbridge16 Medicine Hat, St. Albert
BRITISH COLUMBIA
16 Abbotsford17 Burnaby18 Campbell River, Castlegar19 Chilliwack, Coquitlam, Courtenay Cumberland20 Fort Langley, Grand Forks, Kamloops, Kelowna21 Laxgalts’ap, Maple Ridge, Nanaimo22 Nelson, New Westminster23 North Vancouver26 Penticton, Port Alberni, Port Moody27 Prince George29 Prince Rupert, Qualicum Beach30 Richmond, Salmon Arm, Skidegate, Surrey31 Tsawwassen, Vancouver50 Vernon, Victoria53 West Vancouver54 Whistler, White Rock55 Williams Lake
PORTLAND
55 Astoria, Cannon Beach56 Portland61 Salem
WASHINGTON
61 Bainbridge Island, Bellevue62 Bellingham63 Everett, Friday Harbor, La Conner65 Port Angeles, Seattle68 Spokane, Tacoma
© 1986-2018 Preview Art Media Inc. ISSN 1481-2258 Member of Tourism Vancouver and Visit Seattle.Reproduction in whole or in part is strictly forbidden
EDITORIAL + ADVERTISINGTel 604-222-1883 Toll Free 1-844-369-8988 Email [email protected] Address PO Box 39041, 3695 W 10th Ave. Vancouver, BC V6R 4P1 CanadaPaula Fairweather, PublisherMeredith Areskoug, Listings Editor Trevor Martin, Art & Production ManagerJudith Mazari, Graphic Production Artist
The views, opinions and positions expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the publisher. Please note that all gallery particulars are set out as submitted by clients prior to the date of publication.
Cover: Salish weaving, weaver’s name unrecorded, collected at Fort Langley between 1828 and 1833. Courtesy of Perth Museum & Art Gallery, Perth & Kinross Council, Scotland - 1978.522 Banner Image: Audain Art Museum, Image courtesy of Tourism Whistler, Photo: Justa Jeskova
February - March 2018Vol. 32 No.6
Printed on FSA approved and recycled paper
PREVIEWS & FEATURES 10 Frida Kahlo: Her Photos - Glenbow Museum
11 Alberta Vignettes
12 Works of Peter von Tiesenhausen - Edmonton
15 Magnificent Mountain Imagery - Whyte Museum
21 Gary Pearson: Short Fictions - Kelowna Art Gallery
24 British Columbia Vignettes
27 Exploring South Asian Art - Kamloops & Surrey
29 Beginning with the Seventies - Belkin Art Gallery
32 The Fabric of Our Land: Salish Weaving - MOA
34 Vladimir Kraynyk: Epiphanies - Ian Tan Gallery
38 Takashi Murakami - Vancouver Art Gallery
42 Thomas Kakinuma - West Vancouver Museum
49 Christine D'Onofrio - Deluge
52 Trans Hirstory in 99 Objects - Legacy Victoria
55 Portia Munson: Flood - Disjecta
57 Minor White’s Oregon Photographs - PAM
59 Oregon Vignettes
60 Benedict Heywood - Bellevue Arts Museum
64 Weldon Butler - G.Gibson Gallery
67 Figuring History - Seattle Art Museum
70 Washington Vignettes
73 Catalogues
74 Art Services
76 Alphabetical Index
78 Openings + Events
8 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018 H OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
ALBERTABANFF
Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies111 Bear St &403-762-2291 whyte.orgdaily 10am-5pm. Admission: adults $10, seniors $9, students & locals (Lake Louise to Morley) $4, children under 12 & members free. Feb 3-Mar 8 Part of Exposure 2018 Alberta’s Photography Festival Encounters with the Sublime: Bradford Washburn & Sebastião Salgado. Kluane National Park and Reserve, together with three other protected areas - Wrangell-St. Elias, Glacier Bay and Tatshenshini-Alsek parks - make up a UNESCO World Heritage Site and the largest in-ternationally protected area in the world. This sublime landscape is the inspiration of acclaimed pho-tographers Bradford Washburn and Sebastião Salgado. Exhibition cour-tesy of the Yukon Arts Centre and Parks Canada. Passion & Purpose: Carbon Prints & Photogravures by Jon Goodman. No other pro-
cess of printing black-and-white photographs compares in subtlety and richness with photogravure and carbon print. A continuous-tone pro-cess that produces prints unequaled in luminosity and dimensional definition. Scripted Wilderness: Photographs of Banff from the National Film Board of Canada. Established in 1939, the National Film Board (NFB) Stills Division’s aim was to produce and disseminate a scripted idea of Canadian national identity. This exhibition explores how NFB images of Banff contributed to the national narrative. Ongoing Gateway to the Rockies. This exhibition shares Canadian Rockies history through art, artifacts and archives and library materials.
BLACK DIAMOND
Bluerock Gallery110 Centre Ave W &403-933-5047 bluerockgallery.cadaily 10am-6pm including holidays and by appt. A destination for handmade, one-of-a-kind fine art and craft. We represent close to 200 artists, most of whom live and work within 100 miles of the gallery.
CALGARY
Alberta Craft Gallery Suite 208 - 1721 29th Ave SW &587-391-0129 albertacraft.ab.ca wed-sat 12-6pm. To Mar 17 Uncommon Blends. Sam Knopp, Sean Kunz, Noriko Masuda, Mynthia McDaniel and Juliana Rempel inves-tigate the various routines, rituals, and relationships centered on coffee and tea, and showcases the newly formed relationship of these five artists. Ongoing Spotlight Artists. Presenting new and exciting work of Alberta Craft Council members who may be launching new designs or exploring news themes. (Jan-Mar) Rob Froese and (Mar-Apr) Taygan Crapo.
Alberta Printmakers Gallery and Studio4025 4th St SE &403-287-1056 albertaprintmakers.com wed-sat 11am-4pm, +15 Window, Epcor Centre for the Performing Arts, Arts Commons, 205 8th Ave SE. To Feb 16 Katie Bruce & Christie Kirchner: surface to surface. Opening Feb 23 Jacqueline Leigh Huskisson: Absurd Walls.
LindsayPark
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Prince's IslandPark
Bow River
St. Patrick's Island
CALGARY
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The Collectors' Gallery of Art1332 9th Ave SE &403-245-8300 collectorsgalleryofart.comtue-fri 10am-5:30pm; sat 10am-5pm. To Feb 21 Rotating Group Exhibition. Works by Steve Coffey, Arlene Hobbs, John Hoyt, Asta Dale, Jean Geddes, Jean Richards, John Snow, Bill Parker, Caroline Arm-ington, Colleen O’Brien, Raymond Theriault, Rene Thibault, Thomas Mower Martin, Shelley McMillan and many more. Feb 24-Mar 20 Marga-ret Shelton ASA, CPE (1915-1984). Watercolour, Block Prints, and Oils by this Prominent Alberta Artist.
Contemporary Calgary&403-770-1350 contemporarycalgary.comPlease visit our website for pro-gramming details. For inquiries please email [email protected] or call 403-770-1350.
Esker Foundation4th floor - 1011 9th Ave SE &403-930-2490 eskerfoundation.com
tue-sun 11am-6pm; thu-fri 11am-8pm. Free Admission. Feb 3-May 6 Kapwani Kiwanga: A wall is just a wall (and nothing more at all).In this new and recent body of work, Hamilton-born and Paris-based artist Kapwani Kiwanga delves into disciplinary architecture and decon-structs the physical and psycholog-ical qualities of authoritative built environments including schools, prisons, hospitals, and mental health facilities. Organized and circulated by The Power Plant, Toronto, Esker is pleased to support the production of several major new sculptural works based in part on research into Alberta's institutional legacies. To Apr 29 DaveandJenn: Paradise for an in-between time brings us back to the forest, a landscape often depicted in their earlier work. However, this forest is a mirage; a heartache; an exercise in resilience; as well as a party for the end of the world. It is filled with light, shadows, and reflections layered together to recreate something that is lost and, perhaps, not yet found.
Founders' Gallery4520 Crowchild Trail SW &403-410-2340 founders.ucalgary.ca mon-fri 9am-5pm; sat & sun 9:30am-4pm. Opening Feb 8 Witness: Canadian Art of the First World War. Containing 53 works by 40 of Canada’s best-known artists including AY Jackson, Arthur Lismer, Henrietta Mabel May, Paul Nash, Dorothy Stevens and Frederick Varley. What makes this exhibition truly unique, however, is that it also includes powerful and poignant works by ordinary Canadian soldiers. These works add to the totality of the powerful war record that we will present at the Founders’ Gallery.
HGlenbow130 9th Ave SE &403-268-4100 glenbow.org tue-sat 9am-5pm; sun 12-5pm. Admis-sion: adults $16, seniors & students $11, youth (7-17) $10, family (2 adults & 4 youth) $40, children un-der 6 free, members free. Opening Feb 3 Frida Kahlo: Her Photos. A selection of more than 240
eskerfoundation.art@eskerfoundation
P R O J E C T S P A C E daveandjenn 29 JANUARY - 29 APRIL
3 F E B R U A R Y – 6 M A Y
KAPWANI KIWANGAa wall is just a wall (and nothing more at all)
The exhibition Kapwani Kiwanga, A wall is just a wall (and nothing more at all) is organized and circulated by The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, Toronto. The exhibition is curated by Nabila Abdel Nabi, Assistant Curator, The Power Plant. It was sponsored by TD Bank Group.
Support for the development and production of new works for the exhibition provided by Esker Foundation.
Kapwani Kiwanga: pink-blue. Installation view: The Power Plant, Toronto, 2017. Commissioned by The Power Plant. Courtesy the artist and Galerie Tanja Wagner, Berlin and Galerie Jérôme Poggi, Paris. Photo by Toni Hafkenscheid.
KK_preview_ad_horizontal.indd 1 2018-01-17 6:26 PM
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CALGARY
images from a collection of 6,500 photographs from the archives of Casa Azul (the Blue House) - the residence where Frida Kahlo spent most of her life. The photographs were locked away in a room of the Blue House along with many of Frida’s belongings after her death in 1954. Ongoing Sandra Sawatzky: The Black Gold Tapestry. A de-cade in the making, this 220-foot hand-embroidered tapestry tells the story of how oil has impacted hu-man civilizations around the world. Eye of the Needle. How the humble needle and thread, the shiny bead and sequin, the porcupine quill and tuft of moose hair have been used
in the hands of skilled creators to create objects of incredible beauty.
Herringer Kiss Gallery709A 11th Ave SW &403-228-4889 herringerkissgallery.com tue-fri 11am-5:30pm; sat 11am-5pm. Feb 3-Mar 3 The Photogra-phers (A Group Show). Featuring a collection of photo works by HKG artists which show the broad range of current contemporary photography. Artists include Laurel Johannesson, Eszter Burghardt, Toni Hafkenscheid, David Burdeny, Tia Halliday, Shane Arsenault and invited guest artist/curator, Mitch Kern. Transformation: An exhibition of ACAD. Photography students curated by Mitch Kern in the HK IN-
CUBATOR space. Mar 8-Apr 7 Renee Duval and Ester Burghardt. New Work by Montreal Painter, Renee Duval and New Wool Sculptures by Eszter Burghardt.
llingworth Kerr Gallery Alberta College of Art + Design1407 14th Ave NW &403-284-7633 ikg.acad.ca tue-fri 12pm-6pm; sat 12-4pm. Feb 2-Mar 10 Lisa Lipton: Soon All Your Memories Will Be With Me is a science fiction narrative that explores the nature of human experience in relation to futurist technologies, innovation, virtual communication and space travel. Amy Malbeuf: tensions focuses on the artist’s signature use of tarps as
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ALBERTA ROBIN LAURENCE VIGNETTES
UNCOMMON BLENDS Alberta Craft Gallery, Calgary, To Mar 17 This group exhibition riffs on the many personal delights and social rituals associated with the making and drinking of coffee and tea. A far cry from the plasticized hot drink cups dispensed by beverage chains, the sculptural and functional works created by Sam Knopp, Sean Kunz, Noriko Masuda, Mynthia McDaniel and Juliana Rempel bring a vision of both beauty and playfulness to our daily infusions of caffeine.
KAPWANI KIWANGA: A WALL IS JUST A WALL (AND NOTHING MORE AT ALL) Esker Foundation, Calgary, Feb 3-May 6This provocative exhibition includes an immersive environment, pink-blue; a newly commissioned video work, A Primer, and a sound work, 500 ft., along with recent, research-based sculptures. Hamilton-born, Paris-based artist Kapwani Kiwanga asks viewers to consider the ways in which institutional architecture and design may be used to regulate our moods and control our behaviour. Among the often overlooked elements she explores here are paint colours, fl uorescent lighting and one-way mirrors.
PERCEPTION Newzones, Calgary, Feb 3-Mar 3Manipulation of the photographic image is at the core of this group exhibi-tion. Whether mixing the medium with paint or wax, employing a pinhole camera or Polaroid fi lm, or investigating the many possibilities of digital technology, the artists represented here shift our conventional understand-ing – our perception – of what photography can do and be. Featured artists include Dianne Bos, Franco DeFrancesca, John Folsom, James Holroyd, Joshua Jensen-Nagle, Virginia Mak and Stuart McCall.
MARK DICEY: EACH PAINTED DOCUMENT Nickle Galleries, Calgary, To Apr 7 Mark Dicey creates colourful gestural abstractions that speak to his interest in the ways art may reveal the fi ltering and reconfi guring of memory. He is also absorbed in the spontaneous properties of his medium and the ways forms may evolve and reveal themselves. This exhibition tracks the artist’s movements into and out of his studio and includes works on canvas and paper, sketchbooks and a wall collage. It also includes Grant Poier’s textual installation, created in response to Dicey’s paintings.
WES BELL: ON THE LINE Esplanade Art Gallery, Medicine Hat, To Mar 10Wes Bell built a successful career as a fashion photographer in New York, London and Milan before returning to his Medicine Hat home to pursue fi ne art photography. His black-and-white prints, shot on a traditional analogue camera and meticulously developed in a darkroom, imbue his seemingly ba-nal subjects – a shredded plastic bag caught on a barbed wire fence, a tree entangled with wire, weathered signage – with both drama and emotional resonance.
SAM KNOPP, CUP AND TRIANGLE PLATE, 2017
KAPWANI KIWANGA, PINK-BLUE, 2017 INSTALLATION: THE POWER PLANT
PHOTO: TONI HAFKENSCHEID
VIRGINIA MAK, OF ONE’S OWN II-4, 2017
MARK DICEY, 2481-VII-17, 2017COURTESY OF THE ARTIST
WES BELL, SNAG - 11TH AVENUE N.E., MEDICINE HAT, AB, CANADA, 2015
12 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018 H OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
CALGARY an artistic material. Mundane, indus-trial, colourful, accessible, utilitarian: tarps bring elements of reality and the quotidian into Malbeuf’s work. Newzones730 11th Ave SW &403-266-1972 newzones.com tue-fri 10:30am-5pm; sat 11am-5pm. Free Admission. Feb 3-Mar 3 Perception. Running concurrently with Exposure 2018: Alberta's Pho-tography Festival. Perception is an exciting presentation of Newzones' process-driven and photo-based
artists, curated to showcase the methods that are employed in their creative process. With the photograph at the core, it will explore artwork that is manipulated in many fashions. With these varying methods, it's up to the viewer to determine how the photos are cre-ated. Featuring: Dianne Bos, Franco DeFrancesca, John Folsom, James Holroyd, Joshua Jensen-Nagle, Virginia Mak, Stuart McCall, Sarah Nind. Opening Mar 17 Michael Batty & Kristofir Dean: Line and Colour: A 2 Person Exhibition. While the works by of these artists are stylistically different, both Batty
and Dean's paintings deal with the interplay of coloured lines. While Batty employs the use of negative space, Dean takes the opposite approach and saturates the canvas with bright colours.
Nickle Galleries University of Calgary410 University Court NW &403-220-7234 nickle.ucalgary.ca mon-fri 10am-5pm. Feb 1-Apr 7 Mark Dicey: Each Painted Docu-ment is a visual manifest of Dicey's travels into and out of his workplace. It features recent large works on
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canvas, mid-sized works on paper, a 'Swarm', a wall collage of 'nota-tions', a site-specific installation, and a suite of vitrines housing his dedicated sketch-book-works. Feb 1-Apr 28 Walter May: Look Again, mixed media.
The New Gallery (TNG)208 Centre St SE &403-233-2399 thenewgallery.org tue-sat 12-6pm. To Feb 10 Aislinn Thomas: Dup-boug-a-dad, a video installation that is curious about different ways of being in the world. Its form and content address the body, and some of the many ways of being bodied. In parts intervention, documentary, document and music video, it fea-tures David Gunn, a young man who has a physical and an intellectual disability. Feb 23-Mar 31 Kotama Bouabane: We'll Get There Fast and Then We'll Take it Slow. Photography and sculpture meet in an installation exploring the artists interest in a vintage Kodak colour printing manual. A still life of coconuts is re-imagined to explore the relationship between object and image in relation to tropes found in travel photography, commodification through advertising and imagined landscapes.
TRUCK Contemporary Art in Calgary2009 10th Ave SW &403-261-7702 truck.catue-fri 11am-65pm; sat 12-5pm. Free Admission.
To Mar 3 William Robinson: Duet. Created in collaboration with Erin Schwab, Shane Brown, and Joel Waddell, it combines and distorts the Canadian and USA national an-thems through compositional re-ar-rangement and redaction. Peter von Tiesenhausen: Reservoir. In late May of 2017, Peter von Tiesenhau-sen commissioned sound artists Jen Reimer and Magnus Tiesenhausen to record an improvised collabo-rative work within the Saddleridge reservoir in Northeast Calgary, and cinematographer Dave McGregor to capture the visual space. The resulting fleeting images and sounds comprise Reservoir. Reservoir is presented in collaboration with and was commissioned by The City of Calgary as part of the Water shed+Dynamic Environment Lab.
EDMONTON Alberta Craft Gallery 10186 106th St NW &780-488-6611 albertacraft.ab.ca mon-sat 10am-5pm; thu 10am-6pm. To Apr 21 Process; thinking through. An exhibition about the stages of making, providing insight into the complex and multi-layered methods of how artists work and create while nurturing the organic nature of creativity. Featuring 17 artists. To Feb 24 Allison Tunis: Acceptable Bodies Tunis's works feature embroidered portraits of
persons who shun outdated and constricting notions of what are considered "acceptable" bodies in our society and who celebrate their differences and diversity. Jamie Kroeger: Chronicles of a Contem-porary Dirtbag: Trans-discipli-narity and the things you think of when fixing a fence. A career with Parks Canada as a resource technician, avalanche technician, and twenty years of traveling in the backcountry lends to the conceptual content that embodies Jamie's work. She looks to art, science, and human experience as a means of creating a relatable connection to the complex systems that make up ecology and as a means of finding our humble place within them.
Art Gallery of Alberta2 Sir Winston Churchill Square &780-392-2468 youraga.catue & fri 11am-5pm; wed-thu 10am-8pm; sat-sun 10am-5pm. Admis-sion: adults $12.50, seniors (65+)/students $8.50, children under 6 free, children 7-17 $8.50, family (up to 2 adults + 4 children) $26.50, members free.. Ongoing Peter von Tiesenhausen: Songs for Pythag-oras. Addressing ideas of time, life, nature and re-generation, this new exhibition also engages audiences with important issues related to extraction, production and our im-pact on the environment. To Feb 19 Faye HeavyShield: Calling Stones (Conversations) Faye HeavyShield’s multi-disciplinary work is inspired by
www.exposurephotofestival.com
February1-28
Photography FESTIVAL
AlbertaCANADA
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EDMONTON
stories of the Kainai people and the landscape of southern Alberta. To Mar 25 WordMark: A New Chap-ter Acquisition Project features works by contemporary Indigenous artists recently acquired for the AGA collection. Undaunted: Canadian Women Painters of the 19th Century. Celebrating women born in the 19th century who overcame the barriers of their time prescribed by their gender to achieve success and acclaim as professional artists. RBC WORKROOM To Feb 19 Dara Humniski and Sergio Serrano: Monument. Artists/Designers Hum-niski and Serrano explore tradition, artifacts, ruins, utopias and the space between art and design.
HBugera Matheson Gallery10345 124th St NW &780-482-2854 bugeramathesongallery.comFeb: by appt. Mar: tue-fri 11am-5:00pm; sat 10 am-5:30pm. Feb BMG is expanding the gallery prem-ise to better serve our customers. We are open by appointment during renovations. Mar 1-14 Linda Crad-dock: Levitas. Bugera Matheson Gallery is opening its newly ex-panded space with an exhibition by Alberta artist Linda Craddock. Lev-
itas takes a nostalgic look at Banff National Park with a wholly, unique perspective. Linda's work has been widely collected privately and in public collections including the Al-berta Foundation for the Arts and the Edmonton Art Gallery (now the AGA). Peter Robertson Gallery12323 104th Ave NW &780-455-7479 probertsongallery.com tue-fri 11am-5pm; sat 10am-5pm. To Feb 28 Peter von Tiesenhausen. is a multi-media Canadian artist whose work has lead him through journeys both real and imagined. Based in the Alberta Peace country, Demmitt specifically, he has exhibited across Canada, in Europe and the United States. This latest exhibition includes photographs and new work. Feb 16-Mar 10 Giuseppe Albi, Scott Cumberland, Alice Teichert: Abstract 3 Ways. Three different artists exploring abstraction in their own way come together in one space. Albi is driven by drawing and material, Cumberland explores perspective and motion, Teichert evokes poetry and music. Join us for an exhibition to awaken the mind and spirit. Opening Mar 15 Julian Forrest: This Is Not A Century For Paradises skillfully rendered paint-ings explore open-ended narratives
of migration, alienation, industry and landscape, social constructions of masculinity, and mythic notions of the (Wild) West. Iconic costumes and characters, film references, modern architectural spaces, and historic and pop cultural figures populate his loaded canvases. "I am interested in capturing a catalytic event shortly before/after an increase in tension. Each painting is a scene interrupted" - JF.
Scott Gallery10411 124th St NW &780-488-3619 scottgallery.comtue-sat 10am-5pm. Feb 3-24 5 Artists 1 Love. Featuring works by Shoko César, Trevor Peters, Adanna Onuekwusi, Jay Dontae and Fetsum Teclemariam. Jesse Thomas: Keystone Confederates.
The Front Gallery10402 124th Street &780-488-2952 thefrontgallery.com tue-fri 11am-5pm; sat 10am-5pm. Feb 8-Mar 8 Steve Coffey: New Oils and Fallen Star Cars. Coffey has been an integral part of the Canadian art and music scene for many years. His far-flung travels resulted in him being 'visually exhausted and spiritually inspired' and longing to return to the 'intricate nuances and swirling 116 S
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ART GALLERY OF ALBERTA
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beauty' of the Canadian landscape. Opening Mar 22 Robert Lemay: Big Screen TV. In this new series Lemay uses his grid technique to highlight the digital. These days oil paintings often compete for wall space with big screen TVs and this series plays with that reality.
Udell Xhibitions Fine Art Gallery10332 124st NW &780-488-4445 udellxhibitions.com Established in 2017 by Andrew Udell and Melissa Lavoie. Udell Xhibitions is an Edmonton gem.
Exhibiting incredible and unique works of art. Each year, the gallery hosts a number of exhibitions, programs, and events that help bring the public closer to the won-derful world of art. See website for updated exhibition information.
LETHBRIDGE Southern Alberta Art Gallery601 Third Ave S &403-327-8770 saag.catue-sat 10am-5pm; thu 10 am-7pm;
sun 1-5pm. Admission: general $5, students/seniors $4, groups $3 per person, members & children under 12 free. Opening Feb 2 Yvonne Lammerich, Ian Carr-Harris: Voic-es: artists on art. The present is hollow without a future aware of its past. Voices: artists on art presents a series of deeply insightful interviews that open a door into 51 studios of artists currently working across Canada in 2017, while also remind-ing us how powerfully expressed were the thoughts of those 51 artists in 1967. Postcommodity, Scott Benesiinaabandan, Danis
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LETHBRIDGE Goulet, Kent Moneyman: 2167. imagineNATIVE, in partnership with TIFF, Pinnguaq and the Initiative for Indigenous Futures (IIF), present 2167, an innovative virtual reality and media project. Four Indige-nous filmmakers and artists have been commissioned to create four VR works in the context of 2017, Canada's sesquicentennial, with each artist asked to set their work an additional 150 years in the future. Visualizing Agriculture. The growing field of Data Visualization is situated at the fertile intersection of art and science. It explores the symbiotic coupling of these seem-ingly disparate disciplines, by finding connection among the distinct goals, methodologies, and contexts of each pursuit. The artwork that emerges from this investigation explores the potential that lies within scientific inquiry when strict standards for fact and method are probed through an expanded perspective.
MEDICINE HAT Esplanade Art Gallery401 First St SE &403-502-8793 esplanade.ca mon-fri 10am-5pm; sat & holidays 12-5pm. To Mar 11 Wes Bell: On the Line. Bell, a successful New York fashion photog-rapher, recently returned to Medicine Hat, shows his fine art photography skill with these emotionally resonant images, shot and printed using
traditional analogue processes rath-er than digital. Plastic bags caught on fences and trees entangled with wire are rendered in richly textured black and white prints, of which The Washington Post's Director of Pho-tography, MaryAnne Golon, writes: "There is beauty, loss and poetry in every frame." Dianne Bos: The Sleeping Green. Travelling through France and Belgium in 2014, Calgary photographer Dianne Bos used a variety of vintage and pinhole cameras to photograph the land a century after the Great War. During printing, she scattered objects from the battle sites - such as rocks, leaves, and a bullet - over the paper, as well as dodging, burning, and overlaying maps of stars, to produce layers of imagery that convey the emotional depth of these extraordinary landscapes.
ST. ALBERT HArt Gallery of St. Albert#100, 6D Perron Street (temporary location) &780-460-4310 artgalleryofstalbert.ca tue-sat 10am-5pm; thu 10am-8pm. Feb 1-Mar 31 Retinal Circus features an eclectic array of artists working across a variety of mediums: painting, ceramics, fibre arts, printmaking, and more. Subject matters are far-ranging and this optically stimulating exhibit broad-casts loudly and proudly that all community members benefit from having full access to the arts.
BRITISH COLUMBIAABBOTSFORD
Kariton Art Gallery & Boutique2387 Ware St &604-852-9358 abbotsfordartscouncil.com tue-fri 12-5pm; sat 9:30am-4:30pm; sun 11am-4:30pm. Feb 10-Mar 13 Transparency & Deterioration. Taking inspiration from nature and our ever shifting landscape Andrew Booth and Fiona Haworth have cre-ated works depicting their abstract feelings of our earth, the ether and the hard to understand. Opening Mar 17 Poetry of Art. The Graphics guild presents a collaboration of poetic images combined with poetry itself to create a beautiful and thought provoking combination of words and images to inspire.
The Reach Gallery Museum Abbotsford32388 Veterans Way &604-864-8087 thereach.catue, wed, fri 10am-5pm; thu 10am-9pm; sat & sun 12-5pm. Admission by donation. Ongoing Mark Neufeld: The Projectionist. Video, painting, performance, and objects from The Reach's historical collections exploring cinematic histories, settler narratives, gender roles, and muse-um collections as sites of contested value and values, as well as the role played by museum artifacts in the construction of identities. Erica Grimm: Salt Water Skin Boats. We are metaphorically skin boats sustained by, and insepara-ble from, a dangerously changing global ocean. An inter-arts project by Erica Grimm in collaboration with Sheinagh Anderson and Tracie Stewart. This large-scale installation and experimental soundscape draws analogies between human bodies and the global ocean. Chris Friesen: Search by Image. Recent paintings based on the ubiquity and circulation of imagery from the Western art historical canon. Using landscape paintings by French artist Jean Baptiste Camille Corot (1796-1875) as a point of departure, he explores notions of influence, quotation, and authorship in the age of digital
May 25—Sept. 3, 2017
The Reach GalleryMuseum Abbotsford
604.864.8087 | thereach.ca
Image credit: Sonny Assu and Brendan Tang, Ready Player Two (detail), 2016, digital graphic
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reproduction. Marjatta Itkonen: Touch. Itkonen life and artwork are inseparable. In her recent work she creates paper sculptures that recall her relationship with her mother, who remained in Finland when she immigrated to Canada. To Mar 11 Joy Kinna: Art on Demand 4.1. Se-lected paintings that remind viewers that Abstract Expressionism is very much still alive in recent paintings by Joy Kinna. Though the movement is nearly 80 years old, Kinna revives its physicality and aesthetic appeal while reclaiming a style that has historically been associated with male artists.
S'eliyemetaxwtexw Art Gallery University of the Fraser Valley33844 King Rd &604-504-7441 sag-ufv.ca mon-fri 10am-6pm. Free Admission.. To Feb 2 BFA Silent Auction. All proceeds will go to the BFA Grad Exhibitions and VA Scholarship. Feb 6-26 David Evans: Invisi-ble Horizons. While we live in a
given time and in a particular place, our awareness is often, but not necessarily, limited by that specific moment or site. The selection of jux-taposed images and sound address-es the unexpected ways in which associations and memories are generated. Mar 1-15 pARTicipate Poster Competition. Theme of the 5th pARTicipate Poster Competition: Yes to the Arts and Humanities! Run-ning biannually since 2009 with the aim to foster imagination, criticality, visual thinking, graphic design skills and promote social awareness and activism. Opening Mar 19 Visual Arts Diploma Show. The UFV Visual Arts Diploma exhibition presents a diverse selection of inventive works including 2D and 3D, conceptual, inter-disciplinary, new media and multimedia practices.
BURNABY
Burnaby Art Gallery6344 Deer Lake Ave &604-297-4422 burnabyartgallery.ca
tue-fri 10am-4:30pm; sat & sun 12-5pm. Admission by donation.To Apr 8 LOWER GALLERY Molly Lamb Bobak: Talk of the Town. Molly Lamb Bobak (1922-2014), a Cana-dian national treasure, was famous for her wildflower watercolours and crowd scenes, painted in oil. This exhibition explores a third thematic within her work; architectural views and city panoramas, primarily from the 1940s to the 1960s. UPPER GALLERY Julie McIntyre: Travel Stories. Vancouver printmaker Julie McIntyre incorporates a variety of domestic objects as the ground for a series of work that captures the complexities of one woman’s extraordinary life journey.
Deer Lake Gallery Burnaby Arts Council 6584 Deer Lake Ave &604-298-7322 burnabyartscouncil.org tue-sat 12-4pm. Admission is free. Feb 8-Mar 10 Constructed Abstraction. Featuring the work of Mark Bowen, Jay Lyonns, and Monique Motut-Firth. The mental
6344 Deer Lake Avenue, Burnaby | burnabyartgallery.ca | burnabyartgallery | @BurnabyArtGall | bbyartgallery
MOLLY LAMB BOBAKTALK OF THE TOWNOn until April 8, 2018
This exhibition explores street views and city panoramas by Molly Lamb Bobak (1920-2014), primarily from the 1940s to the 1960s.
Lecture: Sunday, February 25, 2pmJoin curator, Dr. Hilary Letwin as she examines contemporary and historical artistic in� uences that inspired Bobak’s work.
Molly Lamb Bobak, Oslo (detail), 1960, conté wash on paper, 41.8 x 54.7 cm, Collection of the Vancouver Art Gallery, Purchased with the financial support of the Canada Council Joint Purchase Award and the Vancouver Art Gallery Women’s Auxiliary, VAG 61.39, Photo: Rachel Topham, Vancouver Art Gallery
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BURNABY
space where disparate ideas converge can resonate at a high frequency within the body. Synapses fire as ideas light up and your mind attempts to deconstruct information, compile common properties, and contrast dichotomies, to paint an overall encompassing image of a place of understanding. Construct-ed Abstraction is a collection of works that visualize this process in addressing the thematic meeting point of urban spaces, industrializa-tion, natural elements, and social identity represented through digital prints, woodcut prints, neon, and collage. The layers of imagery are bold and colourful, almost as you would imagine as an idea held in the forefront of your mind’s eye. Open-ing Mar 17 Luminescence III, cele-brates its 3rd year as a diverse and unique cultural experience. An event for the whole family. Experience the artwork by 20+ notable artists from varying disciplines, which present the many ways that the essence of light has inspired them.
Nikkei National Museum6688 Southoaks Crescent &604-777-7000 nikkeiplace.org tue-sun 11am-5pm. Admission by donation. Opening Feb 10 Kelty Miyoshi McKinnon: BETA VUL-GARIS: The Sugar Beet Projects explores the relationship between the seemingly innocuous material of sugar and Japanese Canadian his-tory in Western Canada (specifically, British Columbia and Alberta). Within the sugar beet, contrasts emerge between the expression of sugar's purity, genericity, and neutrality and its history and conditions of labour.
SFU GalleryAQ 3004-8888 University Dr &778-782-4266 sfu.ca/gallery Check website for hours. Ongoing Focusing on research, collections, publications, projects, and talks. Rather than presenting continuous exhibitions, it will operate as a research centre for art and ideas that connect to SFU Galleries' many activities.
CAMPBELL RIVER
Campbell River Art Gallery1235 Shoppers Row &250-287-2261 crartgallery.ca tue-sat 12-5 pm. The Campbell River Art Gallery exhibits the con-temporary art of professional artists from across Canada in our main exhibition space, as well as in our three satellite cases.
CASTLEGAR
Kootenay Gallery of Art, History & Science Society120 Heritage Way &250-365-3337 kootenaygallery.comtue-sat 10am-5pm. Admission by donation. To Feb 23 Regional Exhibition. An exhibition of work by artists from the Columbia Basin who work in a variety of mediums. Opening Mar 2 Paul Walde: Alaska Variations. The exhibition was con-ceived as an "album'of performative sound and music compositions responding to the Alaskan landscape with scores that combine scientific experimentation and observation
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with experimental sound and music practices. Jill Pelto: Glaciogenic. Pelto has created stunning pieces in which she has layered actual scientific research and data with painted images resulting in powerful statements about climate change and our ever changing ecosystems.
CHILLIWACK
The O'Connor Group Art GalleryChilliwack Cultural Centre 9201 Corbould Street &604-392-8000 chilliwackculturalcentre.ca/facility/art-gallery wed-sat 12-5pm. Free admission. To Feb 17 Patricia Peters & Kathleen Menges: Kindred Spirits - A Fusion in Wax. Patricia Peters and Kathleen Menges are teaming up again to share their talents and art featuring works uniquely created with the ancient medium of wax. Both artists have worked in the luscious and temperamental encaustic medium. Hot wax requires heat as a solvent to move paint around and fuse the
layers together. Encaustic painting can have a spectacular transparent polish or depth. Feb 2- Mar 31 Donna Hitchens (Donya): Feelings of Colour. A Visionary Artist, another term for self taught, works with acrylic on canvas. She uses bright images, using abstract areas to ex-plore feelings expressed by means of colour.
COQUITLAM
Art Gallery at Evergreen Cultural Centre 1205 Pinetree Way &604-927-6550 artgalleryatevergreen.comwed-sat 12-5pm; sun 12-4pm. Free admission. To Feb 18 Emerging Talent 21. Since 1998, The Gallery has annually featured Emerging Talent, with works by senior art students from School District 43. Each artist selected for this juried exhibition have dedicated themselves to pursuing their passion for the arts into post-secondary education. These artists exemplify the diversity of artistic talent right
here in the Tri-Cities. Opening Mar 3 Gailan Ngan. Solo Exhibition.
COURTENAY
COURTE Brian Scott Studio and Gallery8269 N Island Hwy &250-337-1941 brianscottfineart.com by appt only. Expressionist oil and acrylic paintings of West Coast themes. Current subjects: contrasting distortions of harbour scenes and man-made forms (geometric) with organic forms (irregular) caused by tidal action.
CUMBERLAND
Cumberland Museum & Archives2680 Dunsmuir Avenue &250.336.2445 cumberlandmuseum.camon-sat 10am-5pm; sun 12-5pm. Admission: adult $5, youth (12-18) and senior $4, children under 12 free. Ongoing The Cumberland
6344 Deer Lake Avenue, Burnaby | burnabyartgallery.ca | burnabyartgallery | @BurnabyArtGall | bbyartgallery
From upper left, clockwise: Nautical Quilt, lithograph, paper, thread, 60.0 x 60.0 cm, Courtesy of the Artist, Photo: Julie McIntyre; Nautical Log, lithograph, laser print, paper, millboard, gel transfer, metal ring, 28.0 x 22.0 x 2.0 cm, Courtesy of the Artist, Photo: Julie McIntyre.
Julie McIntyreTravel StoriesOn until April 8, 2018
Vancouver print and bre artist Julie McIntyre incorporates a variety of domestic objects as the ground for a series of work that captures the complexities of her grandmother’s life journey.
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CUMBERLAND
Museum and Archives hosts a variety of permanent exhibits of interest including a replica mine shaft, interactive kiosks, a labour history hall, as well as cultural and community displays. There is also a temporary exhibit space which features rotating exhibits. Feb 17 The Cumberland Museum is open by donation in celebration of Heritage Day. Visit the exhibits, and witness the blessing of the Kumugwe mask by K’omoks and Kwakwaka’wakw artist Karver Everson at 11am. Make a day of it at the Museum, Heritage Faire and Lantern Festival!
FORT LANGLEY
Barbara Boldt Original Art Studio25340 84th Ave &604-888-5490 barbaraboldt.com please call ahead. In-home studio gallery of Barbara Boldt, located 5 km outside of Fort Langley, featuring local landscapes, forest and garden scenes in oils and soft pastels, and her signature EarthPatterns paintings of sand-stone formations found on Galiano Island. Copies of biography Places of Her Heart: The Art and Life of Barbara Boldt, by Barbara Boldt with K. Jane Watt, are available at the studio and various bookstores. For directions to the studio, see map on website or call.
The Fort Gallery9048 Glover Rd &604-888-7411 fortgallery.ca wed-sun 12-5pm. Free Admission. To Feb 4. Winter Sol-stice Group Show. A group show in honour of the solstice. Works will encompass a variety of different styles and interpretations of what Winter Solstice and the promise to come represent to the contributing artists. Featuring Gallery Artists: Susan J Falk, Alex Burton, Deborah Colvin, Don Portelance, Marguerite MacIntosh and Kristin Krimmel. Feb 7-Mar 4 There is a crack in everything. That's how the light gets in. The title of this show is from Leonard Cohen's "Anthem". Recent news is peppered with dire warn-ings-climate change, drug issues, human rights abuse and violence... Are we entering a "dark age" with mounting intolerances, ignorance and zealotism? With a new year beginning, members of The Fort Gallery reflect on this quote in their own way and media. Opening Mar 7 TWU Student Honours Exhibition.
GRAND FORKS
Gallery 2, Grand Forks and District Art and Heritage Centre524 Central Ave &250-442-2211 gallery2grandforks.catue-fri 10am-4pm sat 10am-3pm. Opening Feb 3 Shelley Ross: Inner Rain Forest. Barbara Languid,
Megan Dill and Rick Cepella: Uncultivated Ground. Nathalie Daoust: Korean Dreams.
KAMLOOPS
HKamloops Art Gallery101-465 Victoria St &250-377-2400 kag.bc.ca mon-sat 10am-5pm; thu 10am-9pm; closed stat holidays. To Mar 31 Re Present: Photography from South Asia, is a landmark exhibi-tion, the first of its kind in Western Canada to present a diverse range of the rich and varied histories of photographic media from the Indian subcontinent. THE CUBE To Mar 24 Garnet Dirksen: Social Studies. Dirksen works in photography, opting to shoot with film for its attachment to a history of documen-tary photography. He looks at shifts in trade and industry, their effects on local economies and the human element within built environments.
KELOWNA
Geert Maas Sculpture Gardens and Gallery250 Reynolds Rd &250-860-7012 geertmaas.org mon-sat 10am-5pm; sun by chance.Internationally acclaimed artist Geert Maas invites the public to visit his exceptional sculpture gardens and indoor gallery, with one of the largest collections of bronze sculpture in Canada; changing exhibitions, Maas creates distinctive, rounded, semi-abstract figures, architectural structures and installa-tions in a wide variety of materials, including bronze, stainless steel, aluminum, wood and stoneware. The great diversity of outdoor art is complemented in the gallery by an overwhelming number of paintings, serigraphs, medals, reliefs and sculptures in various media.
HKelowna Art Gallery1315 Water St &250-762-2226 kelownaartgallery.com tue-sat 10am-5pm; thu 10am-9pm; sun 12-4pm. Admission: adults $5, seniors/students $4, family $10,
Call to artisans and artistsCalling all creative artists, residing on Vancouver Island, the Gulf Islands, and beyond. If you like to create from recycled, up-cycled, re-fashioned or re-used materials, then Undeniably Art and Comox Valley Arts want you for a juried found objects art show called Once Upon a Time.
Object d’arts may be 2D or 3D, as long as 80 per cent of the artwork is created from re-cycled materials or objects. They also must be able to fit through a regular doorway and are fashioned from materials that have zero emissions.
Online submission form: https://www.comoxvalleyarts.com/onceuponatimeSubmission Deadline: April 12, 2018 Show dates: April 27-29, 2018
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group of 10 or more $40, members free, thu free. To Mar 18 Gary Pear-son: Short Fictions. Featuring a focused selection of works on paper and canvas from the last fifteen years, providing the opportunity to examine and reflect upon his mature work. To Apr 1 Joice M. Hall: GWAII HAANAS – Islands and Sacred Sites. A painting installation inspired by 1600 digital photographs that she took during a two-week artist res-idency in Haida Gwaii in 2016. The 18 foot installation is a panoramic landscape that celebrates the ocean, forest, and marine life she saw while being guided around Gwaii Haanas by Parks Canada resource officers. SATELLITE SPACE YLW (Kelowna In-ternational Airport), To Feb 18 Myron Campbell: Ghosts of Robert Lake, considerations of the animals and birds associated with Robert Lake, near the UBC Okanagan campus in Kelowna.
LAXGALTS’AP
Nisga'a Museum810 Highway Dr &250-633-3050 nisgaamuseum.catue-sat 10am-5pm. Admission (+GST): adults (19-59) $8, children (6-18) $5, preschool, senior & Nisga'a citizens free, families (2 adults with up to 4 children) $22. Ongoing Anhooya'ahl Ga'angigat-gum'-The Ancestors' Collection features Nisga'a masks, bentwood boxes, charms, headdresses, regalia, rattles, and other treasures. Visit our website for more information.
MAPLE RIDGE
The ACT Art Gallery11944 Haney Pl &604-476-4240 theactmapleridge.orgtue-sat 10am-4pm. Free Admission. To Mar 3 Roger Luko: LINE PAINT CLAY. Luko has spent decades cre-
ating an extensive body of sculpture, paintings and drawings that are in-formed by largely by nature and the human figure. All work in this com-prehensive exhibition was created within the last two years. Opening Mar 3 Bettina Matzkuhn: AN EX-TENDED OUTLOOK. Matzkuhn, who is well known in the textile world for her contemporary, intelligent, and often humorous embroidery art, will focus largely on the theme of 'weather' for this exhibition.
NANAIMO
Nanaimo Art Gallery150 Commercial St &250-754-1750 nanaimoartgallery.comtue-sat 10am-5pm; sun 12-5pm. Admission by donation. To Mar 3 Landfall and Departure: Epilogue (Listening to the Sea). Our history of the sea is a record of misunder-
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NANAIMO
standing the cries of whales and the whispers of waves. But, as sea levels rise and fish stocks dwindle, being attuned to what the ocean is telling us is now more important than ever. Landfall and Departure: Epilogue endeavours to listen to the sea through contemporary visual art, sound works, presentations, and performances. Featuring: Michele Di Menna, Ayesha Hameed, Lili Huston-Herterich, Dawn John-ston, Eleanor King, Orca Lab, Gary Manson, Colter Harper and Liz Park with Marcus Rediker, Genevieve Robertson, Jenni Schine and Jay White, Fiona Tan, Willie Thrasher and Linda Saddleback.
Nanaimo Museum100 Museum Way &250-753-1821 nanaimomuseum.ca mon-sat 10am-5pm. Admission: adult $2,student/senior $1.75, Child (5-12) $0.75, Kids under 5 Free. Opening Feb 9 Extension BC – Divided in Soli-darity. The community of Extension grew up around a coal mine started in the late 1890s by infamous BC coal family the Dunsmuirs. Extension was diverse and included residents with Italian, British, Finnish, eastern European, American and Chinese backgrounds. Churches, stores, hotels, a school, cultural halls and a Chinatown were part of the commu-nity. Surprising stories include the connection of acclaimed Canadian
artist, EJ Hughes, to Extension, Afri-can American coal mining families and a group of Communists. Featur-ing artifacts, photos and maps from museums, archives, art galleries and public collections.
NELSON
Oxygen Art Centre3-320 Vernon St (Alley Entrance) &250-352-6322 oxygenartcentre.org wed-sat 1-5pm. To Feb 11 at Touchstone Nelson. Upstream Benefits Artist Run Culture in the Kootenays - Courtney Andersen, Su-san Andrews Grace, Amy Bohigian, Brent Bukowski, Boukje Elzinga, Ian Johnston, Maggie Shirley, Natasha Smith, Deborah Thompson and Rachel Yoder. Curators Arin Fay and Miriam Needoba. Exhibition is a co-production between Oxygen Art Centre and Touchstones Nelson.
HTouchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History502 Vernon St &250-352-9813 touchstonesnelson.cawed-sat 10am-5pm; tue & sun 11am-4pm; thu 10am-8pm. Admission: adults $8, seniors/students $6, youth $4, children and members free, thu 5-8pm by donation. To Feb 11 Upstream Ben-efits. Art Deco in Modern Times. Opening Feb 22 Paul Seesequasis: Indigenous Archive Photo Project. An exhibition curated from his multiyear project via Facebook and Instagram of sourcing and sharing
images of Indigenous people from across the country. The result of this project has been to emancipate images from obscurity and let them see the light and be seen - and im-portantly named and acknowledged. Opening Mar 8 She. We. They: The Women Show is a community curated exhibition and a partner-ship between Touchstones and The Nelson and District Women's Centre. Two very important facets of this exhibition will be a 60 ft long timeline and a 'wall of women' portrait display (100+). The intent of this historical and collaborative exhibition is to frame feminism from many perspectives - illustrate the past - celebrate community and acknowledge the cultural currents which continue to be addressed.
NEW WESTMINSTER
Amelia Douglas Gallery Douglas College700 Royal Ave &604-527-5723 douglascollege.ca/about-douglas/groups-and-organizations/art-gallerymon-fri 10am-7:30pm sat 11am-4pm. To Feb 24 past present future. A group show by Douglas College students and employees. Opening Mar 1 Alex Wang: Life-lines, ink-wash portraits.
The Gallery at Queen's ParkCentennial Lodge, Queen's Park &604-525-3244 acnw.cawed 1-8pm; thu-sun 1-5pm. Free Admission. Feb 7-25 Manuel Axel Strain, seeks to explore the ontology of contemporary First Nations identity. Through the appropriation of euro-centric art, Strain simultaneously accepts these legacies and rejects them. His purpose is to redefine his indigeneity and break the cycle of inaccurate generalizations. Strain intends to move beyond the binary opposition of the colonizer and the colonized to establish new ontologies for the First Nations identity. Mar 3-25 Iris Mes-Low: Eulogy on the Family Home. A series of paintings and computer manipulated giclées based on houses in New Westminster. Addressing the affordability crisis in Metro Vancouver, Mes-Low explores the idea of what is a possibility for some is a pipe dream for many and
VLADIMIR KOLOSOV FINE ART STUDIOtel: (604) 466-2577 (Studio)
E-mail: [email protected], www.artofvk.com
...PAPER ... WORKSFebruary - March, 2018
Contact to visit studio gallery
Woman Enjoys MartiniCharcoal on paper, 15”x18”
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a reality for few. Mes-Low's subjects are represented in a whimsical manner that express the uniqueness of the houses in the area, placed in reverse and in a fantasy setting.
HNew Media Gallery Anvil Centre, 777 Columbia St, 3rd Flr &604-875-1865 newmediagallery.ca tue-sun 10am-5pm; thu 10am-8pm. To Apr 8 Corpus. One in a series of New Media Gallery exhibitions that ex-plore ontological states of being: the process of becoming more or less human in a world increasingly trans-formed by new technologies. It is the first of two exhibitions to explore the future of the human body.
NORTH VANCOUVER
HCaroun Art Gallery1403 Bewicke Ave. &778-372-0765 caroun.net tue-sat 12-8pm. Feb 3-24 Winter Group Exhibition. Works by Armin Masoumabadi, Arvin Bigdeli, Banaf-sheh Behzadian, Leyla Mohammadi, Maryam Akbari, Nafiseh Saadati and Zohreh Hamraz. Mar 10-11 North Shore Art Crawl 2018. Hours: 10am-5pm. Works by: Armin Ma-soumabadi, Arvin Bigdeli, Banafsheh Behzadian, Fatemeh Javadi, Kaveh Rasouli, Leyla Mohammadi, Maryam Akbari, Masoud Soheili, Mohammad Harooni, Nafiseh Saadati, Saeid Momany and Zohreh Hamraz. Mar 15-29. Painting Exhibition by: Fatemeh Javadi. Feb Virtual Exhibi-tion Venus Arastoo Nejd.
CityScape Community Art Space, North Vancouver Community Arts Council335 Lonsdale Ave &604-988-6844 nvartscouncil.ca CityScape Community Art Space: mon-wed & fri 12-5pm, thu 12-8pm sat 12-5pm; District Foyer Gallery, North Vancouver District Hall: mon-fri 8am-4:30pm; District Library Gallery, Lynn Valley Main Library: mon-fri 9am-9pm sat 9am-5pm; City Atrium Gallery: mon-fri 8:30am-5pm. CITYSCAPE COMMUNITY ART SPACE Opening Feb 8 19th Birthday Party. An exhibition that continues
the growing awareness about the enormous challenges that youth in care face as they transition to adulthood at 19 years old. A part-nership with Housing Matters Media Project. Opening Mar 15 Photobase (working title). This exhibition aims to share personal stories through traditional photography, digital imag-es, collage & assemblage, and photo transfer. The use of family photos and the manipulation of them is the unifying factor of the show. DISTRICT FOYER GALLERY, 355 West Queens Road. To Mar 5 Karen Massier & Margaret Campbell. Photographs of nature, penguins, elephant seals, old abandoned Norwegian whaling stations and rusty equipment offer a glimpse of Massier's experience with the wild-ness of Antarctica. While Campbell finds inspiration and beauty in the wide variety of colour and unique-ness that soapstone can represent. Each stone is selected based on size, quality, and colour and is a celebration and expression of the human form. Opening Mar 7 Kathy Daley and Guy Hollington. DISTRICT LIBRARY GALLERY, 1277 Lynn Valley Road. To Feb 12 Cele-bration: Youth Art is an exhibition showcasing artwork created by talented young artists between 3-12 years of age. Themes of still life, composition, portraits, replicas of masterpieces, landscapes, and fictional scenery will be on display. Opening Feb 14 The Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators. Eight members of the
SCBII show a range of styles and media that explore the fun, whim-sical themes that can be found in children’s literature. CITY ATRIUM GALLERY, 141 W 14th Street. To Feb 26 Bev Ellis: Togeth-er:Broken. A collection of individu-ally carved and slab built multi-fired pieces reminiscent of a birch forest. Her distressed and carved surfaces express a metaphor for the human condition and nature, where beauty is found in brokenness. Opening Feb 28 The Art of Caring | Family Services of the North Shore. Over 140 children came together for an afternoon of art to talk about the needs of children, youth and families and how the community can support and care for one another. Three large panels with all the artwork will be on display.
Gordon Smith Gallery of Canadian Art2121 Lonsdale Ave &604-998-8563 gordonsmithgallery.cawed-sat 12-5pm closed holidays and holiday weekend Saturdays. Admission by donation. To Apr 7 Memory • History • Story is an exploration of our indigenous art-ists, their perspectives and voices, through the lens of Indigenous principles of learning. This exhibi-tion brings together pieces from Aboriginal and Inuit artists from the AFK permanent collection, including George Littlechild, Jane Ash Poitras, Xwalacktun, Kenojuak Ashevak, Rob-ert Davidson, Beau Dick and others.
Chief Dan George:Actor and ActivistUntil April 29, 2018
North Vancouver Museum209 West 4th Street,North VancouverThursday - Sunday, 12 - 5 pmFree Admissionnvma.ca 604.987.5612 Photo: Courtesy of the UBC Museumof Anthropology Archives
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BRITISH COLUMBIA
ERICA GRIMM: SALT WATER SKIN BOATS The Reach Gallery Museum,Abbotsford, To May 5Working in collaboration with sound artist Sheinagh Anderson and arbor-ist-artist Tracie Stewart, Erica Grimm looks at our deep and abiding con-nection with the world’s oceans. Grimm’s installation comprises sculptural forms that are inspired by ancient water-going vessels. Made of a range of materials, including willow, dogwood, cheesecloth, bathymetric maps, beeswax, binder twine and LED lights, these forms are suspended in the dimly lit gallery and are complemented by an evocative soundscape.
MOLLY LAMB BOBAK: TALK OF THE TOWN Burnaby Art Gallery,Burnaby, To Apr 8Featured in this exhibition are paintings and drawings of crowd scenes, urban panoramas and architectural subjects by the late Molly Lamb Bobak, mostly created in the 1940s, 50s and 60s. Raised in Burnaby, Lamb Bobak studied with Jack Shadbolt at the Vancouver School of Art, then enlisted in the Canadian Women’s Army Corps, becoming the fi rst female offi cial Canadian war artist. Her street scenes range from bombed-out buildings and faceless people to lively crowds conveying energy and optimism.
BETA VULGARIS: THE SUGAR BEET PROJECTS Nikkei National Museum,Burnaby, Feb 10-May 27Kelty Miyoshi McKinnon creates a sculptural installation entirely out of molten, burnt and sculpted sugar. With visual allusions to a Japanese rock garden and a fi eld of sugar beets, Beta Vulgaris calls up our country’s shame-ful wartime history. During this period, Japanese Canadians were displaced from the British Columbia coast and interned, many of them then forced to labour on sugar beet farms on the Prairies. The installation includes videoprojections of historic images and a koto soundscape by Keri Latimer.
LANDFALL AND DEPARTURE: EPILOGUE Nanaimo Art Gallery, To Mar 10This ambitious group exhibition considers resources distributed upon and extracted from the sea while also alerting us to our misunderstanding of the sea’s creatures and currents. As expressed in its media release, Landfall and Departure “endeavours to listen to the sea through contemporary visualart, sound works, presentations and performances.” Perspectives range from those of citizen scientists monitoring salmon stocks in the Broughton Archipelago, to workers on a cargo ship plying international waters.
NORTH VANCOUVER The Polygon Gallery, North Vancouver, To Spring 2018The gallery’s inaugural exhibition brings together existing and commis-sioned artworks that take North Vancouver as their subject. Refl ecting on the municipality’s history, geography and cultures, they range from weav-ings and cedar sculptures by contemporary Coast Salish artists to large-scale photographs and video installations by non-Indigenous artists. Of special note is Myfanwy MacLeod’s The Butcher’s Apron, a one-eighth scale model of Captain George Vancouver’s ship, HMS Discovery.
ERICA L. GRIMM IN COLLABORATION WITH TRACIE STEWART AND SHEINAGH ANDERSON,
LIFEBOAT 3, 2017PHOTO: SHARON HUGET
MOLLY LAMB BOBAK, OSLO, 1960PHOTO: RACHEL TOPHAM
KELTY MIYOSHI MCKINNON, LANDSCAPE WAGASHI COURTESY OF THE ARTIST
FIONA TAN, DEPOT, 2015, HD VIDEO
MYFANWY MACLEOD,THE BUTCHER’S APRON, 2017
preview-art.com PREVIEW 25
ROBIN LAURENCE VIGNETTESMARCIA PITCH: ABOUT FACE City Hall Galleria, Richmond, To Mar 5 Vancouver-based artist Marcia Pitch is best known for her small assemblages of found objects, often toys, and their play with the odd and the grotesque. Featured here, however, are recent collages that employ the deconstructed and reconstructed human face to address body politics, genetic manipula-tion, and the impact of pollution and climate change on natural evolution. Installed at Richmond City Hall, Pitch’s show is part of the Richmond Art Gallery’s community outreach program.
BRENT WADDEN: TWO SCORES Contemporary Art Gallery, Vancouver, To Mar 25Acclaimed for his large-scale weavings that function as abstract paintings, Brent Wadden launched his career in Europe while living in Berlin. Now based in Vancouver, he has fi lled both of the gallery’s exhibition spaces, from fl oor to ceiling, with an ambitious installation of textile assemblages. A self-taught weaver, working with used yarn reclaimed from found blankets and garments, Wadden creates process-driven work that is described as “explor-atory, laborious and purposefully naïve.”
ENN ERISALU Gallery Jones, Vancouver, Feb 1-28This exhibition of text-based paintings by the late Enn Erisalu calls ourattention to one of Vancouver’s most thoughtful, accomplished and un-der-appreciated artists. Essentially an abstractionist, Erisalu began experi-menting with painted language at mid-career, laying words, numbers and chemical formulas on washy grounds. Many of these works allude to the processes, materials and scale employed in their own making, or to the am-biguous nature of language as it relates to the painted image.
FORM AS MEANING: FIRST NATIONS PRINTS FROM THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, Victoria, To Apr 29Co-curated by a team of artists and scholars - including Marcia Crosby, lessLIE, Lou-ann Neel, Alana Sayers and India Young, this exhibition spot-lights First Nations prints from the gallery’s permanent collection. The curators have selected works illuminating the ways in which each may com-municate meaning, similar to written language or oral history. Analysis and interpretation of formal elements reveal cultural narratives and highlight the works’ importance to an understanding of Indigenous communities.
STONE AND SKY: CANADA’S MOUNTAIN LANDSCAPEAudain Art Museum, Whistler, To Feb 26 Complementing the museum’s displays of its permanent collection, this temporary show of paintings, photographs, prints, drawings and water-colours feeds our national fascination with mountain landscapes. Each artist has taken on the challenge of representing a vast and at times overwhelming subject. Stone and Sky spans 150 years of creative pro-duction and includes works by Emily Carr, Lawren Harris, Kenojuak Ashevak, Takao Tanabe, Ann Kipling and Edward Burtynsky.
MARCIA PITCH, FACE 14, 2017COURTESY OF THE ARTIST
BRENT WADDEN, UNTITLED, 2017 COURTESY OF THE ARTIST
AND MITCHELL-INNES & NASH
ENN ERISALU, TROMPE L’OEIL, 1993
SUSAN POINT, FULL CIRCLE, 1994
JOCK MACDONALD, THE BLACK TUSK,GARIBALDI PARK BC, 1932PHOTO: RACHEL TOPHAM
BRITISH COLUMBIA
ERICA GRIMM: SALT WATER SKIN BOATS The Reach Gallery Museum,Abbotsford, To May 5Working in collaboration with sound artist Sheinagh Anderson and arbor-ist-artist Tracie Stewart, Erica Grimm looks at our deep and abiding con-nection with the world’s oceans. Grimm’s installation comprises sculptural forms that are inspired by ancient water-going vessels. Made of a range of materials, including willow, dogwood, cheesecloth, bathymetric maps, beeswax, binder twine and LED lights, these forms are suspended in the dimly lit gallery and are complemented by an evocative soundscape.
MOLLY LAMB BOBAK: TALK OF THE TOWN Burnaby Art Gallery,Burnaby, To Apr 8Featured in this exhibition are paintings and drawings of crowd scenes, urban panoramas and architectural subjects by the late Molly Lamb Bobak, mostly created in the 1940s, 50s and 60s. Raised in Burnaby, Lamb Bobak studied with Jack Shadbolt at the Vancouver School of Art, then enlisted in the Canadian Women’s Army Corps, becoming the fi rst female offi cial Canadian war artist. Her street scenes range from bombed-out buildings and faceless people to lively crowds conveying energy and optimism.
BETA VULGARIS: THE SUGAR BEET PROJECTS Nikkei National Museum,Burnaby, Feb 10-May 27Kelty Miyoshi McKinnon creates a sculptural installation entirely out of molten, burnt and sculpted sugar. With visual allusions to a Japanese rock garden and a fi eld of sugar beets, Beta Vulgaris calls up our country’s shame-ful wartime history. During this period, Japanese Canadians were displaced from the British Columbia coast and interned, many of them then forced to labour on sugar beet farms on the Prairies. The installation includes videoprojections of historic images and a koto soundscape by Keri Latimer.
LANDFALL AND DEPARTURE: EPILOGUE Nanaimo Art Gallery, To Mar 10This ambitious group exhibition considers resources distributed upon and extracted from the sea while also alerting us to our misunderstanding of the sea’s creatures and currents. As expressed in its media release, Landfall and Departure “endeavours to listen to the sea through contemporary visualart, sound works, presentations and performances.” Perspectives range from those of citizen scientists monitoring salmon stocks in the Broughton Archipelago, to workers on a cargo ship plying international waters.
NORTH VANCOUVER The Polygon Gallery, North Vancouver, To Spring 2018The gallery’s inaugural exhibition brings together existing and commis-sioned artworks that take North Vancouver as their subject. Refl ecting on the municipality’s history, geography and cultures, they range from weav-ings and cedar sculptures by contemporary Coast Salish artists to large-scale photographs and video installations by non-Indigenous artists. Of special note is Myfanwy MacLeod’s The Butcher’s Apron, a one-eighth scale model of Captain George Vancouver’s ship, HMS Discovery.
ERICA L. GRIMM IN COLLABORATION WITH TRACIE STEWART AND SHEINAGH ANDERSON,
LIFEBOAT 3, 2017PHOTO: SHARON HUGET
MOLLY LAMB BOBAK, OSLO, 1960PHOTO: RACHEL TOPHAM
KELTY MIYOSHI MCKINNON, LANDSCAPE WAGASHI COURTESY OF THE ARTIST
FIONA TAN, DEPOT, 2015, HD VIDEO
MYFANWY MACLEOD,THE BUTCHER’S APRON, 2017
26 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018 H OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
NORTH VANCOUVER
Griffin Art Projects1174 Welch St & 604-985-0136griffinartprojects.ca sat 12-5pm, or by appt. To Apr 9 Modernism in Iran: 1958-1978. Griffin Art Projects is honoured to present Modernism in Iran: 1958-1978, curated by Pantea Haghighi and drawn from private collections across the continent. Presenting significant works from some of the most influential artists of this period, this exhibition brings a contempo-rary lens to this important period of experimentation and innovation.
North Vancouver Museum and Archives 209 W 4th Street &604-987-5612 nvma.ca thu-sun 12-5pm. Ongoing Dan George: Actor and Activist. Explore the life and legacy of Tsleil-Waututh Chief Dan George--leader, writer, performer, and advocate for First Nations people.
Polygon Gallery101 Carrie Cates Court &604-986-1351 thepolygon.ca tue-sun 10-6pm. To Apr 29 For its inaugural exhibition, The Polygon Gallery presents N. Vancouver, which brings together works by artists hailing from the region, and features newly com-missioned works specifically for the occasion. N. Vancouver engages the
imaginative possibilities of visual art in discourse with the landscape, histories, and cultures that surround The Polygon Gallery’s new home.
Seymour Art Gallery4360 Gallant Ave &604-924-1378 seymourartgallery.comtue-sun 10am-5pm. Free Admission. To Feb 24 Steve Baylis: Manifestation of Inten-tion. Bold and intricate large-scale wax and oil paintings. Drawing on a personal meditativepractice, Baylis' work is informed by his own intuition, memory, expe-rience, and feeling. Opening Mar 3 Susannah Montague: Of Things I Can't Unthink. Ceramic sculptor Susannah Montague's highly sym-bolic and eerily beautiful sculptures at once draw you in, and repel you. In this body of work, Montague uses symbols such as fading flowers, bubbles, skulls, and insects to represent death and the transient nature of life.
PENTICTON
The Lloyd Gallery18 Front St &250-492-4484 lloydgallery.common-sat 10am-5:30pm. Estab-lished in the early 1980's, The Lloyd Gallery has provided the Okanagan Valley BC with an exceptional selection of quality original art by Canadian artists. Situated on Pent-icton's downtown colourful Front Street, The Lloyd Gallery welcomes you to view their salon-style gallery showcasing 40 Canadian artists, ranging in style from contemporary landscapes in oils and acrylics, or life-size horses and wildlife to figurative bronze sculpture.
Penticton Art Gallery199 Marina Way &250-493-2928 pentictonartgallery.comtue-fri 10am-5pm; sat & sun 11-4pm. To Mar 18 Noll C. Derriksan: TOUSSOWASKET. Noll C. Derriksan is one of the earliest professional visual artists from the Okanagan Nation drawing his inspiration from his childhood teachings, archetypal characters and the native species
of the Okanagan including tadpoles, frogs, porcupines, skunks and geese. Noll has worked in many me-diums, synthesizing and articulating his ancestral heritage through an impressive body of work including graphics, original paintings, pottery and silver. REsilience #597: An-nual En'Owkin Student & Alumni Exhibition. Our annual exhibition featuring the work of the students along with selected alumni from Penticton's renowned En'owkin Centre.
PORT ALBERNI
DRAW Gallery4529 Melrose St &250-724-2056 &1-855-755-0566drawgallery.com thu-fri 12-5pm and by appt. Gallery Beyond Walls offers contemporary Canadian West Coast Art in an intimate setting. Celebrating the diversity and talent of local and regional artists. Works by gallery artists can be viewed and purchased online or on location by appointment.
PORT MOODY
HPort Moody Arts Centre2425 St Johns St. &604-931-2008 pomoarts.camon, wed, fri 12-8pm; tue, thu 10am-8pm; sat-sun 10am-4pm closed holidays. Free Admission. To Feb 15 MODU Korean Collective Participating artists: Ysabella Choung, Ly won, Sung-Eun Park, Sung Ah Cho, Eunyul (Lena) Han, Amanda Kim, Maria Heo, Yohan Ko, Heejeong Kim, Monica Baek, Jongkook Kim, Julia Lee, Kyung-Ah Hwang. The artist’s work in an eclectic variety of mediums in a search to find innovative ways to combine Korean art forms with their diverse experiences in the Vancouver area. Feb 22-Mar 22 April Lacheur and Jim Johnson: Our Roots Exposed. April Lacheur’s vibrant paintings symbolize human roots and human transparency, with a goal of encouraging viewers to expose and celebrate their own roots and stories. Her work paired with Jim Johnson’s delicately turned wood pieces reveals the inspiration
Edmund Adler, Mother and Child Representing Rural Life To Feb 28th
Uno Langmann Limited
preview-art.com PREVIEW 27
and intimate connection that each artist has within nature’s world of trees. Sarah Ronald: Spirits from the Woods. With her unusual portraits and statistic based artwork, Sarah questions the role of art in re-gards to wild animal protection and conservation, and identifies that it can indeed help protect animals that are at risk due to increasing overex-posure to humans. Amy Li Chuan
Chang: Industrial Revolution. Ceramic works that fuse organic elements with industrial parts allow Chaun to explore a fantasy where machines are integrated into our natural environment.
PRINCE GEORGE
Two Rivers Gallery725 Canada Games Way
&250-614-7800 tworiversgallery.camon-sat 10am-5pm; thu 10am-9pm; sun 12-5pm. To Apr 1 Fences - Artists from across BC. Featur-ing: Shirley Babcock, Emilie Crewe, Samantha Dickie, Lori Goldberg, Betty Kovacic, mary mottishaw, Susan Neilson, Perry Rath, Michael Rees, Rachel Rozanski. Mitchell Wiebe: Bad Magic. Rainbows, unicorns and other figures populate
28 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018 H OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
TRANSPORTATION
STORAGE
PACKING
CRATING
INSTALLATION
TORONTO MONTREAL VANCOUVER416 754 0000 514 334 5858 604 444 0808
www.PACART.ca [email protected]
preview-art.com PREVIEW 29
PRINCE GEORGE
this Halifax artist's paintings. As wry embodiments of humour and kitsch, they declare the artist’s deep commitment to the imagination. To Spring 2018 David Jacob Harder: Standing Split, My place, out of my place, An installation in the Sculpture Court that transposes the forest into an urban environment.
PRINCE RUPERT
Museum of Northern BC100 First Ave W &250-624-3207 museumofnorthernbc.comtue-sat 9am-5pm. Admission: adults $6, teens (13-19) $3, children (6-12) $2, children under 5 $1, members free. To Mar 31 Clovis – The Caribou Hunters. A great archeofantastic adventure for the
whole family. Clovis transports us 12,000 years back in time in the tundra to discover the first nomads to have roamed the south-east of Canada to hunt caribou. Through the discovery of archaeological evidence, including fluted points and stone tools, archaeologists interpret and illustrate the lifestyle of these first occupants. Ongoing permanent exhibits of Northwest Coast history, art, and culture. Kwinitsa Railway Station Museum and Tsimshian Dance Longhouse: exhibits, art, and performances.
QUALICUM BEACH
The Old School House Arts Centre 122 Fern Rd W &250-752-6133 theoldschoolhouse.orgmon-sat 10am-4:30pm. Admission
by donation. To Feb 18 30 Years of Arts: First 15 Years. A group of hard working artists with the help of the community of Qualicum Beach renovated an old school house and established a fledgling arts centre. A unique concept was to include working studios, this first of two exhibitions celebrating the 30th an-niversary will feature the pioneering artists and many of the artists who have worked in the building since it opened in 1988. Feb 19-Mar 17 30 Years of Arts: Second 15 Years. A group show featuring many artists who have exhibited in the arts cen-tre since 2003. TOSH presents about 36 exhibitions per year featuring art-ists of varying mediums, techniques and skill levels. This exhibition is a reunion of the many exceptional art-ists that have brought their exciting works to our three galleries.
30 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018 H OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
RICHMOND
Richmond Art Gallery180-7700 Minoru Gate &604-247-8300 richmondartgallery.org mon-fri 10am-6pm; sat & sun 10am-5pm. Admission by donation. To Mar 18 Aimée Henny Brown, Saskia Jetten, Ross Kelly, Colin Lyons and Kathleen Ritter: TRANSFERENCE. The exhibition investigates digital technolo-gy's influence on contemporary print-making. Each artist engages the challenges and opportunities digital methods present to the func-tion and process of the medium and its contribution to the conceptual construction of artworks. Underlying the works is the notion of image transfer as well as the transference of meaning supported and some-times led by new digital innovations. Curator: Hannamari Jalovaara. CITY HALL GALLERIA To Mar 5 Marcia Pitch: About Face. About Face explores this fascination through the deconstruction and reconstruction of images. This series brings forth a mixture of feelings deep in the gut: anxiety and repulsion, but also intrigue and delight.
RICHMOND
Vancouver Lipont Art Centre4211 No. 3 Rd &604-285-9975 lipont.com daily 9am-5pm closed holidays.
To Feb 4 UNLOCKING THE CODE - Retrospective Exhibition of Joseph Synn Kune Loh. Loh is a visual artist, a published poet, a design consultant, and interna-tional speaker on the evolution of consciousness. His career spans from the 70’s to present and from Hong Kong, China, USA and to Canada. Mar 1-30 Group Exhibition featuring Enda Bardell, Alison Keenan, Hai-ping Lee, Joseph Synn Kune Loh, James Liu, Jenny Wang, and June Yun.
SALMON ARM
Salmon Arm Arts Centre70 Hudson Ave NE &250-832-1170 salmonarmartscentre.catue-sat 11am-4pm. To Feb 24 18, open community mosaic of 18x18 artworks. Opening Mar 3 Formation Inspiration, an exhibition by BFA students from Thompson Rivers University.
SKIDEGATE
Haida Gwaii Museum2 Second Beach Rd &250-559-4643 haidagwaiimuseum.cadaily 10am-6pm. Admission: adults $16, seniors $15, students $10, chil-dren 6-12 $5, children under 5 free. Committed to using art as a means of facilitating creative dialogue that encourages a holistic and critical
exploration of the multiple, diverse ways to understand Haida Gwaii. The museum serves the popula-tion of Haida Gwaii and is both a regional and community museum where the rich and diverse stories of Haida Gwaii are kept and told for people of today, as well as for future generations. On now Gidansda’s Moon and Mountain Goat Chest, and Chief’s Settee. On loan from the American Museum of History, the lineage of the Moon & Mountain Goat chest spans back at least seven generations of Hereditary Leaders from the Gakyals KiiGuwaay clan of Skedans.
SURREY
Arbutus Gallery at Coast Capital Savings Library Kwantlen Polytechnic UniversityD126-12666 72nd Ave &604-599-2219 kpu.ca/arts/fine-artsmon-thu 7:30am-11pm; fri 7:30am-9pm; sat 10am-4pm; sun 12-7pm. The Arbutus Gallery is dedicated to exhibiting works in a variety of media produced by fine art students, alumni, faculty and professional visiting artists.
Arnold Mikelson Mind & Matter Art Gallery 13743 16th Ave &604-536-6460 mindandmatterart.com daily 12-6pm. Feb Mary Stevenson, textile. Darrel Hancock, pottery. Val Eibert, fused glass. Bob Askew, wood turning. Irene Shelver, mixed media. Elizabeth Carefoot, acrylic. Georgia Hunt, acrylic. Mar Arnold Mickelson, wood sculpture. Bette Hurd, acrylic. Gunilla Lindgren, watercolour. Elmer Gunderson, bark wood art. Gordon Little, wood turn-ing. David Kirpatrick, soapstone carving. Thelma Newbury, textile. Mary Mickelson, oil painting.
HSurrey Art Gallery13750 88 Ave, (at King George Blvd) &604-501-5566 surrey.ca/artgallerytue-thu 9am-9pm; fri 9am-5pm; sat 10am-5pm; sun 12-5pm (closed mon & holidays).
SCAsocietyofcanadianartists.com
Open Call for Submission
50th SCA International Juried Exhibition
Papermill Gallery, Todmorden Mills Museum, Toronto, OntarioJuly 23 - August 20, 2018
Open International Juried SCA Online Exhibition, March 15th - June 15th
Call: MarCh 1 | DeaDline: June 1
Elected Membership Applications Due March 31, 2018
Become a Member of the SCA!
preview-art.com PREVIEW 31
To Feb 4 Canada, eh! Fraser Val-ley Quilters’ Guild, traditional and contemporary quilts with Canadian themes. To Feb 18 Meera Margaret Singh: Lalbagh, a three-channel video made in Bangalore, India ex-plores the boundary between theatre and real life. Opening Feb 10 Art by Surrey Elementary School Stu-dents. Opening Feb 24 Jim Bizzoc-chi: Ambient Landscape, evocative video landscapes simulate a natural environment. To Mar 25 Many Visions, Many Versions: Art from Indigenous Communities in India, close to 90 paintings by 24 artists showcasing works from the Gond and Warli communities of central India, the Mithila region of Bihar, and the narrative scroll painters of West Bengal. URBANSCREEN, projecting art after dark daily (exterior of Chuck Bailey Recreation Centre 13458-107A Ave, surrey.ca/urbanscreen) To Apr 29 Alex McLeod: PHANTAS-MAGORIA, newly created showcase of fantastical 3D landscapes and the characters which inhabit them.
TSAWWASSEN
Gallery 17101710 56th St &604-943-3313 southdeltaartistsguild.comthu-sun 11am-4pm. Feb 8-Mar 4 Through Fresh Eyes, come and see what inspires our members this year. Mar 8 - Apr 1 Embracing South Delta II, a members show with local Delta area paintings.
VANCOUVER
Art Beatus (Vancouver) Consultancy Ltd.108-808 Nelson St &604-688-2633 artbeatus.common-fri 10am-6pm. Opening Mar 2 Tony Yin Tak Chu: Ebb and Flow. A solo exhibition of works by Vancouver-based artist, Tony Yin Tak Chu, are inspired by the Chinese pictogram for water. Mixed media paintings and an installation of delicate mixed media drawings on tracing paper will be featured.
The Art Emporium 2928 Granville St &604-738-3510 theartemporium.ca mon-sat 10am-6pm or by appt. Exceptional inventory of paintings by Canadian, American, and French masters of the 20th century, as well as all members of the Group of Seven and several of their con-temporaries. Featuring J.P. Riopelle, Lawren Harris, Tom Thomson, and Emily Carr.
Art Works Gallery1536 Venables Street &604-688-3301 artworksbc.common-fri 9am-6pm; sat 10am-6pm; sun 12-5pm. Art Works represents some of British Columbia’s most dynamic artists. Working with corporations, movie studios, and many of Vancouver’s leading in-terior designers and architectural firms, Art Works has developed a distinct and unique aesthetic vision, complementing and creating value within residential and commercial spaces. Visit our website for infor-mation on upcoming exhibitions.
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32 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018 H OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
VANCOUVER
Arts Off Main GalleryNEW LOCATION 1704 Charles Street &604-876-2785 artsoffmain.ca tue-sun 11:30am-5:30pm. Mar 3 Arts off Main Gallery is RELOCAT-ING! After 14 years at the Main Street location, our thriving artists collective is moving to Commercial Drive. On March 3rd we will open for business at 1704 Charles Street. We will continue to carry a wide variety of unique and affordable Fine Art (all mediums), Jewelry, Pottery, Sculpture, Textiles and more. We will showcase our 9 partners' work including: Eileen Mosca, Tom Antil, Lee Sanger, NormaJean McCallan, Cindy-Wynne Kolding, danielle-louise
ArtStarts Gallery808 Richards St. &604-336-0626 artstarts.com/gallery tue-sat 10am-4:30pm. Ongoing Beyond Words: Stories of Our Time. ArtStarts Gallery is the only free, public gallery dedicated to young people's art in Canada. Beyond Words showcases artwork created by students from schools across BC exploring Indigenous ways of knowing and learning in this moment in Canadian history. From bentwood boxes to hip hop music videos, Indigenous and non-Indig-enous students alike access the power of art, to express what their words alone cannot.
Audain GallerySFU Goldcorp Centre for the Arts, 149 W Hastings St, SFU Woodward's
&778-782-9102 sfugalleries.catue, wed, sat 12-5pm; thu, fri 12-8pm. To Feb 3 Richard Ibghy and Marilou Lemmens: When the Guests Are Not Looking. is a new installation and performance project by Richard Ibghy and Marilou Lemmens that examines audience expectations towards artists, art-works and art institutions. In their collaborative multidisciplinary prac-tice, Ibghy and Lemmens investigate the material, affective and sensory dimensions of experience, and the ways in which the logic of economy infiltrates the most intimate aspects of our lives. Feb 14-Mar 3 Naufus Ramírez-Figueroa: Corazón del espantapájaros (Heart of the Scarecrow) is the third iteration ofa serial project that explores the his-torical reverberations of Guatemalan playwright Hugo Carillo's 1962 script and its oblique interpretation
preview-art.com PREVIEW 33
by students at El teatro de la Univer-sidad Popular de Guatemala, 1975. The students' highly stylized satirical portrayal of juridical archetypes provoked one of the most severe censorships of the arts during the Guatemalan Civil War (1960-1996).
Bau-Xi Gallery3045 Granville St &604-733-7011 bau-xi.com mon-sat 10am-5:30pm; sun 11am-5:30pm. MAIN GALLERY Feb 3-17 Tom Burrows: The Curve of Time, is inspired by the journal of the same name by M. W. Blanchet. Blanchet’s lyrical accounts of the fifteen summers spent cruising along the timeless British Columbia coast, Burrows continues his exploration of cast pigment polymer resin focusing on colour fields, which play with opacity and surface texture to give the illusion of a panel lit from within. Mar 3-17 Jamie Evrard: New Paintings. A suite of new paintings of florals in bloom by Vancouver painter Jamie Evrard using oil paint and watercolours. UPPER GALLERY Feb 3-17 Vicky Christou: Undertone.
An inaugural exhibit showcasing the artist’s process-driven practice with a contemporary minimalist aesthetic. Her chosen medium of acrylic paint accumulates line by line, layer upon layer, shrinking and expanding at different rates, a visual record of human breath. With dozens of painted marks repeated, the artist creates highly textured surfaces resulting in a sculptural effect that disrupts traditional distinctions be-tween painting, sculpture and craft. Christou’s process-oriented practice is both organic and artificial, medita-tive and calculated.
Beaty Biodiversity MuseumUBC Vancouver | 2212 Main Mall &604-827-4955 beatymuseum.ubc.catue-sun 10am-5pm. Admission: adults $14, seniors 55+/students/youth 13-17 $12, children 5-12 $10, children under 5 free. To Feb 18 Angela Gooliaff: Life in Colour. Colour your way through nature on a giant mural that showcases ecosystems from BC and around the world. Explore keystone species
in both the terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, employing feminine symbology of peace and wisdom, and story through a giant interactive colouring book mural. Opening Mar 17 David Ellingsen: Life: As We've Known It. As our planet enters another mass extinction period, only the sixth in its 4.5 billion year history, the photographs in this exhibition respond to this anthropogenic event of unprece-dented scale. Ellingsen's solarized Polaroid negatives were produced in partnership with the Beaty Biodi-versity Museum and this series of 132 images emerged through seven years of research and practice.
Bill Reid Gallery of Northwest Coast Art639 Hornby St &604-682-3455 billreidgallery.caGallery closed until Spring of 2018 for a transforming renovation. Satellite Gift Shop at the SFU Bookstore in Harbour Centre at 555 West Hastings Street, Vancouver. This location features an array of
DAVID HAUGHTON 40+ VIEWS OF MOUNT BAKER – HOMAGE TO HOKUSAI110 Third Avenue S, Seattle WA, 98104 | www.gallery110.comMARCH 1–31, 2018 – NOON TO 5:00 THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
VIEW PAINTINGS AT WWW.HAUGHTON-ART.CA
Haughton - Preview 1/2H - JJA17_Haughton_1/2H_JJA17.qxd 2018-01-09 12:22 PM Page 1
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VANCOUVER
expertly curated gifts including jewelry, printwork, sculptures, books, accessories and more.
Brian Scott Studio and Gallery 2227 Granville Street &250-337-1941 brianscottfineart.com daily 10am-6pm. Expressionist oil and acrylic paintings of West Coast themes. Current subjects: contrast-ing distortions of harbour scenes and man-made forms (geometric) with organic forms (irregular) caused by tidal action.
Catriona Jeffries274 E 1st Ave &604-736-1554 catrionajeffries.com tue-sat 11am-5pm. To Mar 3 Reb-beca Brewer, Rochelle Goldberg, Chairman Johnson, Christina Mackie: Nature. Opening Mar 16 Julia Feyrer, solo exhibition.
Centre A, Vancouver International Centre for Contemporary Asian ArtNEW LOCATION: 268 Keefer St &604-683-8326 centrea.org tue-sat 11am-6pm. Centre A has moved to a 3300 sq ft space on the 2nd floor of the Sun Wah Centre in Vancouver’s Chinatown. This move more than doubles the size of their current facilities. With a renewable 10+10+10-year lease on this new space, Centre A will make its home at 268 Keefer for the next genera-tion. Check website for upcoming program information.
HChali-Rosso Art Gallery549 Howe Street &604-733-3594 chalirosso.com mon-sat 10am-7pm; sun 12-5pm. Ongoing exhibition of works by historical masters Pablo Picasso, Joan Miró, Salvador Dalí, Marc Chagall, Henri Matisse, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Vassily Kandinsky, Jean Cocteau, Max Ernst, Robert Motherwell, Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, and Damien Hirst.
Chinese Cultural Centre Museum555 Columbia St &604-658-8880 cccvan.com tue-sun 11am-5pm. Admission by donation. Ongoing From Generation to Generation – History of Chinese Canadians in British Columbia, permanent photo exhibition. Check website for current exhibition information.
Choboter Fine Art23 Alexander St &604-688-0145 choboter.com mon-sat 12-6pm. Ongoing presen-tation of new mixed-media, three dimensional paintings and older figurative abstract paintings by local artist Don Choboter.
Circle Craft Gallery1-1666 Johnston St, Granville Island &604-669-8021 circlecraft.net daily 10am-7pm. Circle Craft is a unique BC Artist Cooperative dedicated to providing opportunities for craftspeople to connect with the community.
preview-art.com PREVIEW 35
Formed in 1972, Circle Craft utilizes a ‘direct from the artist’ approach, and our Granville Island Shop & Gal-lery features the work of over 130 artists from British Columbia.
Coastal Peoples Fine Arts Gallery200-332 Water St, Gastown &604-684-9222 coastalpeoples.com daily 10am-6pm. Specializing in museum-quality contemporary Northwest Coast Native, Inuit and Plains artwork. Showcasing an impressive and diverse collection in
various mediums from prominent First Nations artists from across Canada.
Contemporary Art Gallery555 Nelson St &604-681-2700 contemporaryartgallery.catue-sun 12-6pm. Free Admission. To Mar 25 Brent Wadden: Two Scores. A solo exhibition of ambi-tious new work by Vancouver-based artist Brent Wadden, his first in a public institution. Presented across both spaces, Two Scores is dominated by singular woven
statements upon the floor and walls. In their dramatic scale and graphic simplicity, they mark a point of departure for the artist, but might also be said to reveal both an unseen structure and a complex set of tensions that quietly anchor Wad-den's ongoing practice as a whole.
Craft Council of BC Gallery1386 Cartwright St, Granville Island &604-687-7270 craftcouncilbc.cadaily 10:30am-6pm. CCBC Gallery
MICHAEL ABRAHAMLUMINARIES – NEW IMAGES OF LOVE AND SERENDIPITYGallery 110, 110 Third Avenue S, Seattle WA, 98104 | gallery110.com
MARCH 1-31, 2018 - NOON TO 5:00, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
36 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018
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38 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018 H OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
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features fine quality, contemporary and traditional craft. The exhibitions rotate every 6 weeks and feature a broad range of contemporary craft.
Douglas Reynolds Gallery2335 Granville St &604-731-9292 douglasreynoldsgallery.common-sat 10am-6pm; sun 12-5pm. Specializing in contemporary and historical Northwest Coast Native art, a wide selection of artwork is offered by leading First Nations artists including Bill Reid, Robert Davidson, Don 0 and Phil Gray. Artwork includes carved wood masks, cedar bentwood boxes, totem poles, paddles, bronze and glass works, baskets, prints, and handcrafted gold and silver jewelry. The gallery also offers
custom commissioned projects for individual and corporate clients.
Dundarave Print Workshop + Gallery1640 Johnston St., Granville Island, &604-689-1650 dundaraveprintworkshop.comwed-sun 11am-5pm. To Feb 4 Mid-century Landscapes: a Betty Jean Drummond Retrospective. Betty Jean was a member of Dundarave Print Workshop from 1979 until her passing in 2004. Her printmaking drew from nature and her memory, working in rich colours and textures through etchings and collographs. Although not all of the work is mid-century much of it has that feel through colour, line and texture and will grab your attention to this fascinating time period. Feb 5-Mar 4 Anthony Zdansky: past, present and future, no illusions
it's all the same. Zdansky's exhi-bition, which was partly completed at The Millwood Artist Residence in Pesky Krumlov, Czech Republic, is an exploration of his Czech heritage. He also examines what happens to an artist's (famous or not) work after their death. Opening Mar 7 Lone Tratt: Under the Microscope. A collection of cell like images, presented in multiplate and collaged prints showing the beauty in small worlds.
Eagle Spirit Gallery1803 Maritime Mews, Granville Island &604-801-5277 &1-888-801-5277 eaglespiritgallery.comtue-sat 11am-5pm or by appt. Specializing in Northwest Coast First Nations and Inuit art. Featur-ing museum-quality hand-carved
masks, panels, bentwood boxes, totem poles, argillite carvings, button blankets, glass sculp-tures, and Inuit stoneworks.
Elissa Cristall Gallery2239 Granville St &604-730-9611 cristallgallery.comtue-fri 11am-6pm; sat 11-5pm. To Feb 24 Pictures at an Exhibition (part two). A group show exploring current themes and innovations in contemporary art. Featuring Me-gan Hepburn (Vancouver), Jessica Korderas (Halifax), Mara Korkola (Toronto), Suzanne Nacha (Toronto), Brennan Stalford (Chicago) and Randall Steeves (Vancouver).
English Bay Gallery103-1535 Johnston St, Granville Island &604-688-3006 EnglishBayGallery.com daily 10am-6pm. Paintings by Ted Seeberg, photo collages by Bill Frampton, and photographs by Yoshi Yamamoto.
Federation Gallery1241 Cartwright St, Granville Island &604-681-8534 artists.camon-sun 10am-5pm. To Feb 4 Works on Paper. An entire show dedicated to the substrate of paper. Feb 6-18 Artists' Choice. Without the set restrictions of theme, all participating artists can produce personally meaningful artwork in any style. Feb 20-Mar 4 Canvas Unbound spotlights the raw, cre-ative energy that emanates from an unframed painting. As if fresh from the studio, these artworks are free from the confinement, or boundaries of a frame. Mar 6-17 Abstracted. Abstraction abandons representation of the external reality. Instead it communicates through visual language of colour, value, space, shape, line, texture and form. Opening Mar 30 Success! The annual celebration of member art-ists who have progressed to either Associate or Senior Signature status.
Firehall Arts Centre Gallery280 E Cordova St &604-689-0691 firehallartscentre.cawed-sat 1-4pm and one hour before evening performances. Opening Feb 9 Cath Hughes: Things We Found at the Lake. At first glance Hughes’
depictions of lake scenes appear to be archetypal views of our west coast summers at mountain lakes and creeks. On closer inspection, however, the viewer encounters incongruous hybrid characters, animals, and figures from British folklore and European mytholo-gy. She draws upon her personal history as a British immigrant to Canada and reflects upon the conflation of cultural traditions and histories from her dual nationalities to create otherworldly composi-tions with a surreal aesthetic.
Gallery at The Cultch1895 Venables St &604-251-1766 thecultch.com/venues/gallerymon-sat 12-4pm. To Feb 24 Works by Gordon Hughes and Gillian Richards. Mar 5-31 Works by Heather MacNeil and Lan Yao.
Gallery Gachet9 W Hastings St &604-687-2468 gachet.org tue-sat 12-6pm. To Feb 25 MAD CITY: Legacies of MPA recreates the Mental Patients As-sociation,s legendary Drop-In, circa 1976, a place of creativity, support, and political action. The exhibition welcomes visitors to consider how community was mobilized through participatory democracy, peer support, a passion for social change. Mar 9-18 Sketchbook Exhibition. Gallery Gachet and WePress will bring together diverse participants from the Downtown Eastside, con-nect them with professional artists to make sketchbooks filled with artwork, and share that work and their stories during a public exhibition.
Gallery Jones1-258 E 1st Ave &604-714-2216 galleryjones.comtue-fri 11am-6pm; sat 12-5pm and by appt. Feb 1-28 Enn Eri-salu, text-based painting. “These ‘word-images’ can function as traditional picture structure and bridge, the ambiguous nature of language as a mirror to image. These are paintings about painting.” Mar 2-31 Chaki. Montreal artist Yehouda Chaki’s bold, colourful, and luscious landscape paintings.
Gallery of BC Ceramics1359 Cartwright St, Granville Island &604-669-3606 galleryofbcceramics.comdaily 10:30am-5:30pm. Feb1-17 Jinny Whitehead: The Guiding Hand. Feb 22-Mar 10 Dirty Pots and Dirty Pictures: It's Raining Men. Artists: Ethan Barry, Link Leisure, David Robinson, Jaik Puppyteeth. Mar 15-31 PGBC Members: Form & Function.
Goldmoss Satellite1338 Franklin St &604-886-1968 goldmoss.common-thu 2-9pm; fri 2-10pm; sat 1-10pm; sun 1-8pm. To March 31 FORMATION. Artists explore the show title in painting, pho-tography and reclaimed industrial materials. Featuring: Lee Roberts, Bon Roberts and Jonathan Dy.
grunt gallery116-350 E 2nd Ave &604-875-9516 grunt.catue-sat 12-5pm. To Feb 17 Derya Akay and Filaria Akay: Ghost Spring. This mother and son look at funeral practices within their own family in Turkey, passing down information from one generation to the next. They re-creates the rituals around death for some lives who are not considered grievable. Opening Feb 21 Naufus Ramíres-Figueroa: The Corpus Cycle. A series of documented video performances by Guatemalan artist Naufus Ramírez-
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Michael Morris Vertical Parallels and Tonality Series, 2009
presented by Winchester Galleriesat Pendulum Gallery
40 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018 H OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
VANCOUVER
Figueroa. This series is based on interrelated performances and was produced for the camera in different places. Commissioned by Corpus Network and headed by If I Can Dance Amsterdam the series fea-tures the artist working solo or with an ensemble in an ethereal series of performances.
Havana Gallery1212 Commercial Dr &604-253-9119 havanarestaurant.camon-thu 11am-11pm; fri 11am-midnight; sat 10am-midnight; sun 10am-11pm. To Feb 7 Oksana Gaida ( • ) Emily Gray ( • ) Carmen Loretta ( • ): Tripple Nipple, por-traits, nature and collages. Opening Feb 8 Calli to Graff: TKS.SKR.ENH! Calligraphy. Calli to Graff will be the last show at Havana Gallery until we re-open from renovations. Please check our website for updates.
Heffel Fine Art Auction House2247 Granville St &604-732-6505 &1-800-528-9608 heffel.common-fri 9am-5pm sat 10am-5pm. Feb 1-22 Online Auction, Fine The Beaver Hall Group Works by David Blackwood. Jan 4-25 Online Auction, Conceptual Art Canadian Post-War & Contemporary Art.
hfa contemporary320-1000 Parker St &604-876-7606 hodnettfineart.com by appt. Feb 2-Apr 13 Noel Hodnett: Now Here This. A selection of new and existing work informed by current affairs.
Ian Tan Gallery NEW LOCATION: 2342 Granville St &604-738-1077 iantangallery.com mon-sat 10am-6pm; sun 12pm-5pm. Feb 3-28 Vladimir Kraynyk: Epiphanies. Kraynyk’s process originates in digitally sculpting sur-realistic structures, a technologically driven practice of chance-based mark making. He then realizes the forms in paint, in doing so producing lavish, twisting orgies of baroque design that allude as readily to street art as they do to Italian Fu-turism. The undulating intersecting surfaces of metallic liquid, fabric, gas and colour evoke a materialistic byproduct of the digital age. Mar 3-31 Gallery Artists Group Show.
Il Museo, Il Centro, Italian Cultural Centre3075 Slocan St &604-430-3337 italianculturalcentre.ca tue-sat 10am-5pm. To Apr 5 Venus Rising. In this exhibition 14 artists study and reinterpret this painting. For 15 months these artists have contemplated, examined and
recast this monumental artistic achievement. In the process they have reflected deeply on its impact on the history of art, feminism, and popular culture. How has this paint-ing shaped our notions of physical beauty, they ask?
Inuit Gallery of Vancouver206 Cambie St, Gastown &604-688-7323 &1-888-615-8399 inuit.com mon-sat 10am-6pm sun 11-5pm. To Feb 16 Small Treasures. This annual offering of small Inuit sculpture is a delight of art works from various regions in the arctic and in a wide variety of media including serpentine stone, marble, bone and ivory. Feb 23-Mar 15 Nin-giukulu Teevee Drawings. Original works on paper by a renowned Inuit graphic artist. Known for her depiction of Inuit mythology and her love of pattern and design. Inuit Sculpture by Kelly Etidloie and Joanasie Manning. Inuit sculpture in serpentine stone from two Cape Dorset artists. Etidloie is known for his dynamic composition and finely sculpted carvings of arctic wildlife. His contemporary, Manning is well known for his charming sculp-ture of his favorite subject, owls. Opening Mar 16 Jennifer Walden. A collection of new paintings by Canadian artist Jennifer Walden. Jennifer’s distinctive style explores Northern life through people, wildlife and topography. Her contemporary expressionistic paintings are rich in texture and vibrant colour. String and rope are blended with acrylic media to create the deep and dynamic three dimensional relief that is her signature.
Katherine McLean Studio1-1359 Cartwright St (rear), Granville Island, in Railspur Alley opposite Agro Cafe &604-684-8452 katherinemclean.comfri-sun 11am-5pm or by appt. Mar 2-31 Impressions of Energy. Encaustic paintings of the wild plac-es, the roadsides and the hill sides. Lush florals are painted as found in neglected gardens. Colourful carved ceramic pieces can be combined to form new sculpture compositions.
H: Tuesday–Saturday 10:00AM–5:00PM
3075 Slocan Street, Vancouver, BCwww.italianculturalcentre.caTel: (604) 430-3337
January 23–April 5, 2018Professional artist groupAnna Dubois • Sandrine Pelissier
V R
Venus Preview Ad-P1-Press
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S O U T H G R A N V I L L E G A L L E R Y A S S O C I AT I O N
WWW.SGGA.CA
GALLERY ROW1 UNO LANGMANN LIMITED 2117 Granville St 604.736.8825 langmann.com
2 KIMOTO GALLERY 1525 W 6th Ave 604.428.0903 kimotogallery.com
3 ELISSA CRISTALL GALLERY 2239 Granville St 604.730.9611 cristallgallery.com
4 PETLEY JONES GALLERY 2245 Granville St 604.732.5353 petleyjones.com
5 HEFFEL FINE ART AUCTION HOUSE 2247 Granville St 604.732.6505 heffel.com
6 IAN TAN GALLERY 2342 Granville St 604.738.1077 iantangallery.com
7 DOUGLAS REYNOLDS GALLERY 2335 Granville St 604.731.9292 douglasreynoldsgallery.com
8 MARION SCOTT GALLERY 2423 Granville St 604.685.1934 marionscottgallery.com
9 KURBATOFF ART GALLERY 2435 Granville St 604.736.5444 kurbatoffgallery.com
10 THE ART EMPORIUM 2928 Granville St 604.738.3510 theartemporium.ca
11 BAU-XI GALLERY 3045 Granville St 604.733.7011 bau-xi.com
42 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018 H OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
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Kimoto Gallery1525 W 6th Ave &604-428-0903 kimotogallery.com tue-thu 10am-6pm; fri 12-5pm; sat 10am-6pm. Feb 2-24 Michael Soltis. A mix between hard-edged colour field, contemporary collage & typography, this show marks his 5th solo with the gallery. The series represents over of a year of the artists most personally focused and explorative artwork to date. In approaching each piece, the goal was to not edit, but to create with complete inhibition, to follow his intuition and ignore the impulse to question. Mar 2-24 Yorke Graham: Revisioned. Using a variety of collected and discarded materials, Yorke Graham reimagines them into engaging and fine works of art.
Lattimer Gallery1590 W 2nd Ave &604-732-4556 lattimergallery.com mon-sat 10am-5:30pm; sun 11am-5pm; holidays 12pm-5pm. Original works of art by First Nations artists, including gold and sterling silver jewellery, masks, panels, bentwood boxes, totem poles, argillite, sculp-tures, paintings, and limited edition prints.
Libby Leshgold Gallery Emily Carr University of Art + Design520 East 1st Avenue &604-844-3809 libby.ecuad.ca daily 12-5pm. Free Admission. Opening Feb 2 QULLIQ: In Dark-ness, Light a solo exhibition of new work by Maureen Gruben. The QULLIQ is a traditional oil lamp that was once the heart of the home. It was used to heat, cook and bring continuous light in the darkness of the Arctic winter. The new work in this exhibition explores notions of
light and transparency related to the light of the oil lamp as well as the translucence of ice.
Lookout Gallery Regent College, UBC 5800 University Blvd &604-224-3245 lookoutgallery.camon-fri 8:30am-5pm; sat 12-4pm. Free Admission. To Feb 15 Hfour Studio: The Garden of Unearthly Delights. Employing an ethereal aesthetic, these mixed and new me-dia installations present the findings of a specimen collector's expedition into the other. Feb 21-Mar 22 Jes-sica Morgun: Water from Stone. How much can an inanimate object say? And what is the role of the artist/perceiver in allowing objects to speak? Morgun's body of sculptural, installations and drawing work considers these questions through simple materials and minimal ges-tures, transforming objects through light, shadow, and refraction.
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B A U - X I G A L L E R Y
Alexandria, polymer resin, 48 x 48 inches
3045 GRANVILLE STREET VANCOUVER BC V6H 3J9 TEL: 604 733 7011
EXHIBITION ONLINE AT WWW.BAU-XI.COM
F E B 3 - 1 7, 2 0 1 8
T O M B U R R O W S
44 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018 H OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
VANCOUVER
Marion Scott Gallery/ Kardosh Projects2423 Granville St &604-685-1934 marionscottgallery.com tue-sat 10am-6pm. Now in its 42th year of operation, the Marion Scott Gallery/Kardosh Projects has a long history of showcasing the best of contemporary art from the Canadian North. Specializing in both new and historical expressions from the Arctic in a range of media, the Gallery is committed to positioning the work of Canada’s Inuit artists
within a national and international contemporary artistic framework. Please see our website for exhibition information.
Monny's Art Gallery2675 W 4th Ave &604-733-2082 envisionoptical.ca mon-sat 11am-6pm. Long-time col-lector Monny's permanent collection of artwork, as well as rotating exhibitions of works by local artists Andrea Gower, Kerensa Haynes, Ted Hesketh, Sonia Kobrahel, and Stanimir Stoylov.
Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery, University of British Columbia1825 Main Mall &604-822-2759 belkin.ubc.ca tue-fri 10am-5pm; sat - sun 12-5pm, closed holidays. Free Admis-sion. To Apr 8 Beginning with the Seventies: GLUT. Celebrating the excessive abundance of the archive, GLUT is concerned with language, depictions of the woman reader as an artistic genre and the potential of reading as performed resistance.
Museum of Anthropology at UBC6393 NW Marine Dr &604-822-5087 moa.ubc.ca daily 10am-5pm; thu 10am-9pm. Admission: adults $18, students & seniors 65+ $16, family $47, children 6 and under free, UBC staff, students & faculty free with ID. thu 5-9pm: $10. To Apr 15 The Fabric of Our Land: Salish Weaving. In collaboration with Salish weavers, The Fabric of Our Land will take visitors on a journey through the past 200 years of Salish wool weav-ing from the early 1800s through to today’s vibrant Renaissance, showcasing one of the world’s largest collections of intricately designed blankets on loan from contemporary weavers, as well as museums in Europe and the eastern United States. To Spring 2019 In a Different Light: Reflections on Northwest Coast Art, examines historical masterworks through the diverse perspectives of Indigenous community members.
HMuseum of Vancouver1100 Chestnut St, Vanier Park &604-736-4431 museumofvancouver.ca mon-wed & sun 10am-5pm, thu 10am-8pm, fri 10am-9pm, sat 10am-9pm. Admission: adults $18, seniors & students $15, youth 5-18 $8, family $40, children 4 and under - free. Last thu of the month by donation.. Award winning exhi-bitions and a provocative collection of extraordinary national treasures. To Feb 18 City on Edge: A Century of Vancouver Activism, a visually stunning photo-based exhibition exploring how protest demonstra-tions have shaped Vancouver’s
SAMEMORELOK HIM FUNG
VIRIDIAN GALLERYOPENING: MARCH 1, 2018 6PM - 9PMMARCH 1, 2018 - MARCH 21, 2018
OF THE
1570 Coal Harbour Quay, Vancouver, BC
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identity. Ongoing Neon Vancouver, get a glimpse of Vancouver’s big city lights of the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. History Galleries, explore Vancouver’s rich and vibrant history from the turn of the 20th Century. ćəsna?əm, the city before the city, ground breaking exhibition digging deep into local First Nations history. Shop local at our artisan gift store. Musqueam Cultural Centre Gallery4000 Musqueam Ave &604-263-3261 &1-866-282-3261 musqueam.bc.ca/musqueam-cultur-al-centre-gallery by appt. Admission: $5. ćəsna?əm, the city before the city, focusing on the sophistication of Musqueam knowledge and tech-nology, past and present, and featur-ing soundscapes, oral histories,and community interviews; curated by Leona M. Sparrow, co-curated by Terry Point and Jason Woolman.
Or Gallery555 Hamilton St &604-683-7395
orgallery.org tue-sat 12-5pm. To Feb 3 Germaine Koh and Aron Louis Cohen: Afterlives considers tech-nologies and their communicative properties, contemporary disconnec-tion from material realities amidst globalization and digitization, and the afterlives of materials once designat-ed as ‘waste.’ Feb 23-Mar 24 Sarah Dobai. Curated by Kathy Slade.
HPendulum Gallery885 W Georgia St (HSBC Building) &604-250-9682 pendulumgallery.bc.ca mon-wed 9am-5pm; thu-fri 9am-9pm; sat 9am-5pm; Feb 11-Mar 3 Canadian Abstraction: Works on Paper. Winchester Galleries of Victoria presents a powerful collection of works on paper by the great Canadian abstractionists: Jean Paul Riopelle, Rita Letendre, Jean McEwen, Yves Gaucher, Harold Klunder, William Perehudoff, Ronald Bloore, Ann Kipling, Ray Mead, John Meredith, Michael Morris, Harold Town et al. Opening Mar 19 Juno Awards :Music From Far & Wide. A
fascinating retrospective photog-raphy exhibition showcasing the past 40 years of Canadian music, Including a selection of photos from the JUNO Awards’ 40th Anniversary book, Music from Far and Wide. Planned to coincide with the Juno awards celebration taking place in Vancouver in 2018.
Peter Kiss Studio and Gallery1327 Railspur Alley, Granville Island &604-696-0433 peterkiss.com tue-sun 10:30am-5:30pm. A constantly changing collection of sculpture, mixed-media prints, and jewellery that boldly combines materials, social commentary, and humour.
Petley Jones Gallery1554 W 6th Ave &604-732-5353 petleyjones.common-sat 10am-6pm. Art Dealers in Contemporary and Historical Art. In addition to sales, purchas-es, art rentals and consignment we offer services in conservation framing, restoration, appraisals,
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historical and contemporary works are continuously acquired - come see what's new or visit our web-site for exhibition information.
Poly Culture Art Center#100-905 W Pender St &604-564-5766 polyculture.us/ tue-sat 10am-5pm. Free Admission. Opening Feb 20 Zisha Teapot Exhibition. Tea wares made from Zisha have been prized as tea vessels for centuries and the high percentage of clay quartz and iron in Zisha from Yixing is consid-ered to be 'perfect', resulting in tea-pots that have a high permeability and perfectly allow the appreciation of the color, smell and flavor of tea. This exhibition will feature hundreds of wares from the hometown of Zisha teapots: Yixing.
Republic Gallery732 Richards St, 3rd Flr &604-632-1590 republicgallery.comtue-sat 10am-5pm and by appt. To Feb 24 Oliver Husain. The films of Toronto artist Oliver Husain consistently play with cinematic languages and visual codes. Drawing from theatre, dance, puppetry, and animation, with unique costume and set sensibilities, Husain employs his seductive tactics in ways that both absorb viewers and shock them into an awareness of their role as spectators within the greater apparatus of film.
Sidney and Gertrude Zack Gallery Jewish Community Centre of Greater Vancouver 950 West 41st Ave &604-638-7277 jccgv.com/content/jcc-cultural-arts Please consult website for hours. Free Admission. To Feb 23 Lauren Morris: Dressed in Colour new works, florals in oil and acrylics on canvas. "Painting is a completely different mental process. It trans-forms me to the point where I have no thoughts. I'm attracted to strong, simple subject matter that reflects the beauty and mystery of the landscape and still life. I love juxta-position of color and find the natural world to be infinitely inspiring. I paint from images remembering the con-nection to the place, or the mem-ory of the mood. My work keeps evolving as the changing nature of life itself." Opening Mar 1 Ava Lee Millman Fisher: I See Music. The artist has been involved in both the aural and visual arts for as long as she can recall. She is convinced that her 'visual voice' is embedded and embodied within her art work. Synaesthesia is at play, for Ava Lee is able to 'hear' colour and to 'see' sound. When creating, she considers her art work in musical terminology - tempo, timbre, tessitura, tonality, etc. She delights in painting both Judaic and secular motifs.
Skwachàys Lodge Aboriginal Hotel and Gallery29/31 W Pender St &604-558-3589 skwachays.com daily 10am-6pm. Free Admission. Original works of art by Indigenous artists including carvings, paintings, limited edition prints and jewelry. Members of the Authentic Indige-nous Arts initiative which provides a effective way to identify and protect Indigenous art. The gallery is located on the Lobby Level of Skwachays Lodge with the proceeds funding housing for artists. Look for our new website coming soon.
South Main Gallery279 E 6th Ave &604-565-5622 southmaingallery.comdaily 11am-6pm. To Feb 13 Kevin Flood, Meyvis Araniva & Tristesse Seeliger: Urban Land-scapes. In Urban Landscapes, abstract brushstrokes, layers of paint, and meticulously cut out maps are exhibited side by side, in a reinterpretation of imaginary territories. Feb 16-Mar 6 Marion Landry: Passage, oil paintings.
Spirit Wrestler Gallery101-1669 W 3rd Ave &604-669-8813 &1-888-669-8813 spiritwrestler.comtue-sat 10am-5pm; sun 12-5pm or by appt. Spirit Wrestler Gallery is a leading contemporary fine art gallery representing master Inuit,
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Exhibition Venue 展览地点Poly Culture Art Center 温哥华保利艺术馆
#100-905 West Pender Street, Vancouver
Organizers 主办单位Poly Culture Group Corporation Limited 保利文化集团股份有限公司
Yixing People’s Government 宜兴市人民政府
Co-organizers Co-organizers 承办单位Beijing Poly Art Center Limited 北京保利艺术中心有限公司
Poly Culture North America Investment Corporation 保利文化北美投资有限公司
Yixing County Ceramic Guild Association 宜兴市陶瓷行业协会
Dingshu City People’s Government 丁蜀镇人民政府
February 17, 2018 - May 31, 2018 2018年2月17日 - 2018年5月31日
ESSENCE IN ZISHAEASTERN INTANGIBLE CULTURAL HERITAGE OF YIXING STONEWARE
宜兴紫砂艺术温温哥华特展
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Northwest Coast and Maori artists. The gallery focuses on exhibitions that showcase contemporary di-rections in aboriginal art, including cross-cultural communication, the use of new materials (such as glass and metal), and modern interpre-tations of shamanism, environ-mental concerns, and other issues pertaining to the changing world.
Teck Gallery515 W Hastings St &778-782-4266 sfu.ca/gallery open daily during
campus hours. To Apr 28 Cathy Busby: WE CALL, composed of se-lections from the Truth and Reconcil-iation Commission of Canada’s (TRC) 94 "Calls to Action." This document accompanies the 500-page report that synthesizes the TRC’s inquiry into the inter-generational legacy of Canada’s Indian Residential School System. Busby’s selections highlight the ways that governmental, educational, and cultural institutions are called on by the TRC to cultivate Indigenous leadership, stewardship, and participation within structural systems.
Toni Onley Estate&604-263-8980 tonionley.comRepresenting the Estate: in Victoria, Winchester Galleries; in Calgary, Wallace Galleries.
Ukama Gallery1802 Maritime Mews, Granville Isl &778-379-0666 ukama.ca daily 11am-5pm. Free Admission. Dominic Benhura, Lovemore Bonjisi, Rearson Chiwawa, Sylvester Mubayi, IceBear, Joe Mutasa, Karen Bagay-awa, Halin de Repentigny, Catherine Gerus, Monica Gewurz, Russell Kereama, Mina Martini, Nicola Mor-gan, April Ponsford, Thibault Sendra, and Jason York.
Unitarian Church of Vancouver949 W 49th Ave &604-261-7204 vancouverunitarians.casun 10am-1:30pm or phone for hours. Opening Mar 1 Joanne Brown, Jackie Conradi-Robertson and Mary Bennett: Elemental Journeys. The theme of this group show is approached in a variety of ways. Joanne Brown, printmaker, will show her Four Elements se-ries. Jackie Conradi-Robertson's acrylic paintings are inspired by nature scenes either here at home or in her travels around the world. Mary Bennett's mixed-media pieces explore materiality through colour, texture and layers.
Uno Langmann Limited2117 Granville St &604-736-8825 &1-800-730-8825langmann.com tue-sat 10am-5pm; or by appt. Feb 1-28 Representing Rural Life. Includes paintings by Bernard J. de Hoog, Michael Therkildsen, Hermann Kern, John A. Puller, Frederik Rohde, Viggo Ped-ersen, and Edmund Adler. Showing alongside this exhibition is a rotating selection of museum quality paint-ings, objet d’art, and antiques from Europe and North America. Mar 1-31 Destination: The Poetic North. Includes works by Thomas Horold Beament, John A. Hammond, Freder-ic Marlett Bell-Smith, Eric Riordon, Belmore Browne and Thomas Mow-er Martin. Showing alongside this exhibition are a rotating selection of museum quality paintings, objets d’art, and antiques from Europe and North America.
LiL Chr z a nt o wa r d s l i g h t
Gibsons PubLiC art GaLLeryJ a n u a r y 18 - Fe b r u a r y 12 , 2018
reCePtion: saturday, January 20 • 2-4 pm
GPaG • 431 Marine Drive, Gibsons6 04 - 886 - 0531 • in fo @ g p a g . c a
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Vancouver Art Gallery750 Hornby St &604-662-4719 (24-hr info line) vanartgallery.bc.ca daily 10am-5pm; tue 10am-9pm. Admission: adults $24, seniors (65+) $20, students (with valid ID) $18, children 6 to 12 $6.50, children 5 and under free, members free. Reference Library mon-thu 1-5pm. Feb 3-May 6 Takashi Murakami: The Octopus Eats Its Own Leg is a major retrospective exhibition of the monumental paintings of Takashi Murakami, one of the world's most influential artists. From his earliest work to new, never-before-seen paintings and selected sculptures, the fifty-five works in this exhibition reflect Murakami's exquisite level of craft, his insightful engagement with history and the consistent, universal themes that have guided
his practice over the past three decades. Mar 3-Jun 17 BOMBHEAD. Drawn primarily from the Vancouver Art Gallery's permanent collection, the exhibition is guest curated by John O'Brian. BOMBHEAD is a thematic exhibition that explores the emergence and ongoing impact of the nuclear age as represented by artists and their art. Strongly associated with obliteration and destruction, nuclear technologies have made a profound cultural and ecological impact since their emer-gence and proliferation beginning in the mid-20th century. Mar 3-May 21 Living, Building, Thinking: art and expressionism uses the German Expressionist collection of the McMaster Museum of Art as the jumping off point to explore the development of
expressionism in art from the early 19th century to the present day. The exhibition includes 100 works in all mediums ranging from 16th century European to contemporary Canadian works. Offsite 1100 W Georgia St. To Apr 15 Asim Waqif , new site-spe-cific installation by New Delhi-based artist Asim Waqif, which combines architecture with a strong contextual reference to contemporary urban design.
HVancouver Maritime Museum 1905 Ogden Ave &604-257-8300 vanmaritime.common-sun 10am-5pm; thu 5-8pm by donation. Admission (+GST): $11 adults, $8.50 students, seniors, youth, $30 family, 5 and under free. To Mar 25 The Lost Fleet, an
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exhibition about the world of the Japanese-Canadian fishermen in BC following the bombing of Pearl Harbor by Japan in 1941. The show examines how deep-seated racism played a major role in the seizure and sale of Japanese-Canadian property and the internment of an entire people. The exhibition showcases photographs and several models of Japanese-Ca-nadian-built fishing vessels in the museum's collection, made by the late model shipbuilder Doug Allen.
Z Gallery Arts102-1688 W 1st Ave &604-742-2001 zgalleryarts.com wed to sat 11am-5pm and by appt. Feb 1-Mar 10 Jasmine Wallace: Urban Narratives. Jasmine Wallace, a Canadian artist, finds her inspira-tion in the city, in its colours and its lines. The underground spaces dug by the people to shelter from the cold (metro, underground galleries) and the way they have been adapt-ing their infrastructure fascinates her. This impulse of life we get from concrete, and the constructions and deconstructions appearing and disappearing inspire the motivations of the artist. By Sandra Barre, critic. Mar 6-Apr 30 International Collab-oration Project Artist Francisco Diaz + Deb Young: The Lost Boys. Francisco Diaz and Deb Young developed their photomontage series as a simulacrum of real life,
with random photographs they put together to create a metaphorical story of growing up as a subversive act of life. The Lost Boys project starts as a conceptual artistic idea that talks about the process of becoming an adult, and it continues their interest in how childhood speaks so profoundly on who we become as adults. By Drazenka Jalsic Ernecic, critic.
VERNON
Vernon Public Art Gallery3228 31st Ave &250-545-3173 vernonpublicartgallery.common-fri 10am-5pm; sat 11am-4pm. To Mar 1 Briar Craig: Words on Paper (and other things). An exhibition of text-based artwork including UV screen prints, video and interactive text panel. To Mar 9 Kevin Spetifore: what’s around the corner. A mural painted directly on the gallery wall and a suit of collages inspired by formal design elements. Sage Sidley: Planes of View. Drawing on the gallery walls and performance. Appropriation. Kama? Creative Aboriginal Arts Col-lective. A group exhibition of works produced by First Nations artists of Syilx heritage. Opening Mar 8 Sean Caulfield: Active Workings. Through installation, sculpture and printmaking Sean Caulfield’s work considers the ways our environment is transformed by forces of urban and industrial
growth. The visual images and envi-ronments he creates blur boundaries between the biological and the technological, the organic and the mechanical, and challenge viewers to consider the implications of this merging. Opening Mar 17 SD#22 Elementary Schools: Art From the Heart.The artwork in the annual exhibition by elementary students from School District #22 delights viewers with their creations, under the guidance of their art teachers.
VICTORIA
arc.hive gallery2516 Bridge Street &250-480-8197 arc-hive.weebly.comsat & sun 12-5 pm. Mar 10-25 Dave Ziedstra: 802.11. A sound installation which plays on interac-tions between the realms of physical material and wireless digital net-working. The installation transpar-ently vibrates its host architecture with the area's wifi traffic in real time. In doing so, 802.11 creates a new way for visitors to experience the otherwise 'immaterial' digital environment.
HArt Gallery of Greater Victoria1040 Moss St &250-384-4171 aggv.catue-sat 10am-5pm; thu 10am-9pm; sun 12-5pm. To Apr 29 Form as Meaning: First Nations Prints from
Nicholas Bott March 17 - 31606 View St. Victoria • www.madronagallery.com • 250 380 4660
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the Pacific Northwest. Explore the language, history and current state of First Nations prints with our team of co-curators: Marcia Crosby, less-LIE, Lou-ann Neel, and Alana Sayers.
Deluge Contemporary Art636 Yates St &250-385-3327 deluge.ws wed-sat 12-5pm. To Feb 24 Christine D’Onofrio: Real Tears. D’Onofrio complicates the real and synthetic effects of media as applied in dialogue with social and political struggles of power, liberty, exploita-tion and humiliation. In this, her most recent work, the artist uses art historical references, filmic tropes and commercial aesthetics to tease out social codes of subjectivity and consider how they affect freedoms and power. Mar 16-Apr 7 The State of Things (in two parts). James Lindsey. Apr 12-May 7 Lance Austin Olsen. A continuation and evolution of their 2016 exhibition Hide In Plain Sight.
Gage Gallery Arts Collective2031 Oak Bay Ave &250-592-2760 gagegallery.catue-sat 11am-5pm. To Feb 10 Intangible States. Artists Sherry
Tompalski, Kirsten Brand and Shelby Assenheimer capture on canvas the ephemeral qualities of the everyday. Sherry Tompalsai: Sex and the Single Seagull. Tompalski with the help of her husband Graham Thompson working undercover, has delved into the now unknown world of Seagull Internet Dating. Several profiles have been unearthed and will be exhibited with paintings in a tell-all expose titled ‘Sex and the Single Seagull'. Feb 27-Mar 10 Frances Beckow: Playlist. Like a playlist of favorite songs, each piece has its own story to tell and a melody to do the telling. Paintings and drawings in this collection are original ‘songs’ sung in colour, texture and line using a variety of tools and mediums. Mar 13-Mar 24 Arden Rose: Petals and Portraits. As humans, we often forget to take the time to find our joy. I believe joy can be found in the simple things in life. In the exquisiteness of the soul of another person or in a stroll through a flower garden. I would like my art to remind people to think about what brings them joy. I want my images to stir the soul, see the beauty in a face, wonder what experiences lay behind the presence we show the world, walk in a garden
alone or with another soul. What do we see? What do we smell? What do we feel? Opening Mar 27 James Dodd: Backroads of France. Water-colours, Inks and acrylics inspired by Jim’s extensive travels in France.
Gallery in the Oak Bay Village2223A Oak Bay Ave &250-598-9890 theoakbaygallery.common-fri 10am-5pm; sat 10am-3pm. Featuring original artwork by leading local artists Kathryn Amisson, Sid Barron, Andres Bohaker, Jeffery Boron, Janice Bridgman, Robert Genn, Caren Heine, Harry Heine, Jennifer Heine, Mark Heine, Keith Hiscock, Evguenia Ioganov, Shawn A. Jackson, Brian R. Johnson, David Ladmore, Ernest Marza, Joane Moran, Allan Myndzak, Paul Paquette, Nicholas Pearce, Natasha Perk, Kim Pollard, Deirdre Roberts, Sandu Singh, and Linny D. Vine.
Legacy Art Gallery Downtown, University of Victoria630 Yates St, 2nd location: Legacy Maltwood (at the Mearns Centre and McPherson Library), 3800 Finnerty Rd &250-721-6562 legacy.uvic.caLegacy Downtown: wed-sat 10am-4pm; Legacy Maltwood: library
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ESQUIMALT
52 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018 H OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
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hours. Free Admission. DOWNTOWN To Mar 29 Trans Hirstory in 99 Objects: The Transgender Archives meets the Museum of Transgender Hirstory & Art (MOTHA). Brings together art and archival material material from UVic's world-renowned Transgender Archives to narrate an expansive and critical history of transgender communities. It is the third iteration in a multi-exhibition, multi-venue project organized by Chris E. Vargas, Executive Director of the Muse-um of Transgender Hirstory & Art (MOTHA). In Search of Innocence: Innocence: West Coast Art and Artists Through a Visitor's Eyes. Curated by graduate student Nellie Lamb with supervision by Williams Legacy Chair Dr. Carolyn Butler Palmer, UVic. Léonard Forest’s film
In Search of Innocence (1963) pres-ents Vancouver and the West Coast as embodying the utopian ideals of innocence, abundance, creative freedom and connection to nature. This exhibition presents Forest’s film and works by artists featured in it: Jack Shadbolt, Margaret Peterson, Roy Kiyooka, Fred Douglas, bill bissett, Joy Long, Sing Lim, Al Neil, and Donald Jarvis. MALTWOOD
To May 13 Landmarks: The Art of the Malahat Review. The Mala-hat Review one of Canada’s most iconic and long-standing literary journals. In its fifty-year run, its pages have featured the work of established writers, emerging talent and critical essays on both literature and the visual arts.
Madrona Gallery606 View St &250-380-4660 madronagallery.com
tue-sat 10am-5:30pm; sun & mon 11am-5pm. Feb 3-17 Corrine Wolcoski: Rivers Inlet. Wolcoski's latest collection focuses on the River Inlet on BC's coast. She has an end-less fascination with the beauty and drama of the sky and how it inter-acts with the mountains and water. Mar 17-31 New Works by Nicolas Bott. This solo show features new works by the artist documenting the dramatic landscapes of Canadian mountains, forest and coastline.
Open Space Arts Society510 Fort Street &250-383-8833 openspace.ca tue-sat 12-5pm. Ongoing Garry Neill Kennedy: CORRECTIONS. The grandfather of conceptual art in Canada he will cre-ate a site-specific treatment for the main stairwell of Open Space that highlights the history of the space and calls attention to the work still
preview-art.com PREVIEW 53
to come going forward. For COR-RECTIONS he will use the colours associated with street construction, and spray paint an overall chaotic, but instructive, environment that will greet visitors throughout the year.
Slide Room GalleryVancouver Island School of Art, 2549 Quadra St &250-380-3500 slideroomgallery.common-fri 9am-5pm; sat & sun by appt. To Feb 12 Kreye Residency Artists. Participating artists: Eliz-abeth Charters, Alyssa Ellis, Emily Harrison, Anna Heywood-Jones. Exhibition will highlight the work done by the 2017 Kreye Residency participants. Feb 16-Mar 12 Ira Hoffecker, Cornelia van Voorst and Ulrik Walker: History as Personal Memory. An exhibition that includes the work of three artists of German ancestry who address WWII through their personal memories. None of the artists were alive during the war, so their memories are based on a range of sources including informa-tion that was passed down to them through family members, historical research and poetic imaginings.
Winchester Galleries2260 Oak Bay Ave & 665 Fort St &250-595-2777 (Oak Bay)&250-386-2777 (Downtown)winchestergalleriesltd.comtue-fri 10am-4pm; sat 11am-5pm. 2260 OAK BAY AVE To Feb 3 Canadian Abstraction. Check the website for upcoming shows. 665 FORT STREET To Feb 3 The Photo Realists. Feb 8-24 The Chinese New Year Exhibition. Sculpture, paintings and photography by female artists from China and fea-turing watercolours from Lifu.
Xchanges Gallery and Studios6E-2333 Government St &250-382-0442 xchangesgallery.orgsat & sun 12-4pm. Free Admission. Feb 3-18 Kyle Labinsky: Pillars of Smoke. This painting series is a narrative describing a disjointed post-modern mythology following the journey of the Ghost Child, a cloaked melancholic figure trapped in an ever changing environment that shifts between the meta-physical and the abstract. Using layered surfaces and repetitive
symbols the Ghost Child traverses its environment confronting themes of isolation, loss, and environmental change. Mar 3-18 Clare Thomas: My Mothers House. Houses and identities are often intertwined. A house is a refuge from the world, while it reflects the soundness of our self. But what if the house is in disarray and nothing makes sense anymore? In response to her moth-ers' memory loss, the artists uses figurative drawings and paintings to create the imaginary house that holds her mothers' memories. A house in which, in the apparent disarray and confusion, new connec-tions and stories are made.
WEST VANCOUVER
Buckland Southerst Gallery2460 Marine Dr &604-922-1915 bucklandsoutherst.comtue-sat 10am-5pm. Representing the work of Rick Cepella, Ieva Baklane, Maria Josenhans, Shirley Williams, Elizabeth Topham, Domi-nique Walker, and Bi Cheng. Also
James HartThe Dance Screen (The Scream Too), (detail) 2010-13. Photo courtesy of Darby Magill.
audainartmuseum.com
Experience the art of British Columbia, from the traditional works of the province’s First Peoples, through to its contemporary masters
Visit us in Whistler, BC 4350 Blackcomb Way 604.962.0413
54 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018 H OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
WEST VANCOUVER
featuring paintings by Andrea Padovani, Adam Noonan, and Tatjana Mirkov-Popovicki, street scenes and cityscapes by Brian Eby, world scenes by Henry Huai Xu, and still lifes by Hazel Breitkreutz, and Deborah Worsfold.
Ferry Building GalleryWest Vancouver Cultural Services1414 Argyle Ave Ambleside Landing &604-925-7290 ferrybuildinggallery.comtue-sun 11am-5pm. Free Admis-sion. To Feb 20 Lynne Green: The Space Between: Microcosm, Macrocosm. Solo exhibition of paintings, prints and sculpture. Green's style evolved naturally from her many years as a professional goldsmith and jewellery designer. Her paintings are accented with 24K gold and, at times, with a variety of handcrafted pigments mixed with ground malachite, lapis lazuli and other semi-precious gems. She also makes use of many recycled items such as sterling silver, copper, brass, steel, rusted metal, wood, linen and silk, cotton fibres. Feb 20-Mar 4 Adrienne Moore, Louise Dee: Clearly Ambiguous, mixed media.
Silk Purse Arts Centre1570 Argyle Ave &604-925-7292 silkpurse.catue-sun 12-4pm. Free Admission. To Feb 11 Jennifer Ferries, Louisa Loots and Meghan Sharir: Ex-ploring Childhood. Ponder the joy & complexity of childhood through traditional & digital paintings of children exploring their relationships with nature, technology, the people in their lives & the notion of what it means to be a 'kid'. Feb 13-Mar 4 SPECTRUM 50. Multi-media group exhibit of established & emerging artists working in a broad spectrum of styles & subject matter. Mar 5-25 Chun Ping Claire Huang: Building Vistas. Textured, dream-like acrylic & oil paintings of buildings from Vancouver to Naples are abstracted & deconstructed to capture the character & spirit of a place rather than the materials that compose it. Opening Mar 27 Cherry Blossoms: A Textile Translation. 10th annual textile art group exhibit inspired by
the cherry blossom, co-produced by the Vancouver Guild of Fibre Arts & FibreEssence in conjunction with the Vancouver Internation-al Cherry Blossom Festival.
West Vancouver Museum680 17th St &604-925-7295 westvancouvermuseum.catue-sat 11am-5pm. Admission by donation. To Mar 10 The Ceramic Art of Thomas Kakinuma. This is the artist’s first substantial retro-spective offering a rare opportunity to see works from public and pri-vate collections. It is organized by the West Vancouver Museum, in collaboration with the Kakinuma Family, Debra Evelyn Sloan, Dr. Carol E. Mayer, Allan Collier and Stacy Reynaud.
WHISTLER
Adele Campbell Gallery109-4090 Whistler Way, Shops at the Westin Resort & Spa &604-938-0887 &1-888-938-0887adelecampbell.com daily 11am-5pm. Feb 3-8 Angela Morgan Solo Exhibition. Always full of joy and whimsy, Angela's latest collection of snowy scenes and more promise to delight at her annual winter exhibition. Feb 10-15 Laura Harris Solo Exhibition. Laura's powerful and emotive abstract landscapes have captured the hearts of many a client! We are delighted to welcome the artist back for her annual solo exhibition.Ongoing An ever-changing selection of Canadian art is always present at the Adele Campbell Gallery, from emerging talents to some of Canada's best artists. This warm and friendly gallery invites you to relax, look, and linger awhile.
Audain Art Museum4350 Blackcomb Way &604-962-0413 audainartmuseum.com mon, wed, sat, sun 10am-5pm; thu, fri 10am–7pm. Admission: adults $18, youth 16 and under free, mem-bers free. To Feb 26 Stone and Sky: Canada’s Mountain Landscape. Come and experience a trans-con-tinental journey that explores the
richness, vitality and diversity of Canada’s alpine landscapes. Through photographs, watercolours, drawings, paintings and prints, the exhibition highlights our Nation’s most celebrated artists, including Lawren Harris and members of the Group of Seven, Emily Carr, Toni Onley, Edward Burtynsky, Kenojuak Ashevak, John Hartman, Takao Tanabe and Ann Kipling. Opening Mar 30 Beau Dick: Revolutionary Spirit. This retrospective will provide insight into the complexities of tradi-tional and contemporary Indigenous approaches to the creation of art on the West Coast. Beau Dick was an artist who was deeply rooted in the traditions of his Kwakwaka’wakw First Nation. He also challenges those traditions in order to create a distinctive artistic and cultural voice for himself within and outside of his Nation. Ongoing Permanent Col-lection. Experience the art of British Columbia, from the traditional art of the province's First Peoples, through to its contemporary masters.
Mountain Galleries at the Fairmont Chateau4599 Chateau Blvd &604-935-1862 mountaingalleries.com open daily. Ongoing Wild and Sacred Places, featuring a handful of our top artists including Nicholas Bott, Shannon Ford, Brent Lynch, Karel Doruyter, Cathryn Jenkins, Charlie Easton, and Doria Moodie. Feb 16-23 Shannon Ford: SoloExhibition, new paintings.
WHITE ROCK
White Rock Gallery1247 Johnston Rd &604-538-4452 &1-877-974-4278 whiterockgallery.com tue-sat 10am-5:30pm; closed long weekends. Rotating exhibitions of gallery artists, including Nich-olas Bott, Phil Buytendorp, Rod Charlesworth, Robert Genn, Laura Harris, David Langevin, Min Ma, Re-nato Muccillo, Michael O'Toole, Mike Svob, Christopher Walker, Ray Ward, Alan Wylie, and Donna Zhang.
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WILLIAMS LAKE
HStation House Gallery#1 North Mackenzie Ave &250-392-6113 stationhousegallery.common-sat 10am-5pm. Free Admis-sion. Feb 2-24 Georgia Lesley: Is that Tree Dancing? Color, texture, realism and abstract play a big part in creating the sense of personality, light, movement and joy present within the natural world. Alexa Black: Wild Like Moonlight Alexa Black is a self taught multi media artist who works primarily with oil paint and natures decaying treasures. Mar 9-31 Breastfeeding Expo: Travelling Group Show. A multi media celebration of commu-nity, art and breastfeeding.
OREGONASTORIA
Imogen Gallery240 11th St &503-468-0620 imogengallery.common-sat 11am-5pm; sun 11am-4pm. Feb 10-Mar 6 Corey Arnold: Aleutian Dreams. In conjunction with the annual Fisher Poets Gathering, Imogen Gallery presents the powerful photography of com-mercial fisherman and artist Corey Arnold. Arnold shares an up close and intimate look at the working environment of those who depend on the sea for livelihood. Arnold is represented by the Charles Hartman Gallery in Portland, OR. Opening Mar
10 Jill Mayberg and Kim Murton: Sea Stories. A two person exhi-bition by the dynamic duo of Kim Murton and Jill Mayberg. A salty and whimsical collection of sea inspired, two and three dimensional pieces. Kim Murton, new to Imogen brings her terra cotta sculpture and Jill Mayberg returns with her bright and cheery mixed medium paintings. They both share a common interest and take inspiration from South American art.
CANNON BEACH
Cannon Beach Gallery GroupVarious Locations &503-436-1055 cbgallerygroup.comThe Cannon Beach Gallery Group produces two art festivals that
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encompass the entire town, focusing on the 11 galleries. Spring Unveil-ing (May) brings dozen of artists to town who are showing their latest work. The event also includes music and gallery receptions. Plein Air & More (June) features artists working in a variety of media in town and on the beach. Event also includes music and receptions.
Northwest By Northwest Gallery232 N Spruce, across from the City Park & Info Center downtown, &503-436-0741&1-800-494-0741 nwbynwgallery.comdaily 11am-6pm and by appt. Cel-ebrating 31 years in Cannon Beach.
Feb Master of Fine Art Photography Christopher Burkett uses real film and a darkroom to create luminous images. New work includes Oak Ju-bilee, Oregon. Georgia Gerber, not-ed bronze wildlife sculptor unveils new collection including Hawk Owl. Ann Fleming, bronze figurativenar-rative including Belonging. Angelita Surmon, paintings and glass. Mar Glass work of Mitzi Kugler fused & textured glass with metal. Jeff White Pointillist, oil paintings exclusive to NW by NW Gallery.
White Bird Gallery251 N Hemlock St &503-436-2681 whitebirdgallery.com thu-mon 11am-5pm; tue & wed by appt. To Feb 28 Winter Group Show: Texture & Abstraction.
Featuring Christopher Mathie, coastal mixed media paintings. Helga Winter, sculptural paintings from repurposed books. Drea Rose Frost, limestone clay cold wax pantings. Melanie Brauner, metal & abaca paper sculptures and jewelry. Mar 10, 1-5pm Wine Walk. See cbgallerygroup.com for more info. Opening Mar 17 Robin & John Gumaelius, sculptures. Paula Blackwell, encaustic paintings.
PORTLAND
HBlackfish Gallery420 NW 9th Ave &503-224-2634 blackfish.comtue-sat 11am-5pm. To Feb 24 Kan-etaka Ikeda: Parts of the Cosmic
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Tree. The latest iteration of his Cos-mic Tree, a subject that sprang from a vivid, cosmological dream experi-enced 30 years ago. The works are large, mixed media sculptures made of cotton batting fabric. Alan Lau: Quiet Days. An unofficial record of solitude and the shaping of memory when the heat of summer swooned and fell into the of autumn's rain. Primarily working on delicate Jap-anese rice paper, Lau layers sumi ink, watercolor, pastel, and other media to create abstract works with great depth yet surprising lightness. Christy Wyckoff: Paintings and Works on Paper. Oil paintings and woven paper pieces traverse similar territory in radically different ways. The paintings utilize a flattened pictorial space and a reduced color palette to explore an interwoven field of branches and limbs in the natural world. Monica Mitchell: Habitat. Through tactile materials and color, these installations convey a sense of order and chaos. They are explorations of ideas about my-thology, gender issues, masquerade and consumerism. Feb 27-Mar 31 Greg Conyne: Open Sesame. Boxes or containment vessels with the ex-ception of 3 carved wood columns. The work came about primarily by finding or producing an object and building a box to place it in. The show is a continuation of exploring containment and surprise when the box is opened. Theresa Redinger, recent work.
HBlue Sky Gallery, Oregon Center for Photographic Arts122 NW 8th Ave &503-225-0210 blueskygallery.org tue-sun 12-5pm; first thu 6-9pm. Dedicated to exhibiting emerging and established artists that exemplify the finest in photographic vision and innovation. To Feb 25 Robert Frank: Books and Films 1947-2018. Mar Michal Cala: Silesia and Zun Lee: Father Figure.
Disjecta Contemporary Art Center8371 N Interstate Ave &503-286-9449 disjecta.org fri-sun 12-5pm or by appt. To Mar 4 Flood. The third exhi-bition by Curator-in-Residence Julia Greenway. Portia Munson’s Flood presents a meditation on archive, materiality, and mass consumption. Describing her process of “collecting objects and assembling, in essence using as my resource the refuse of consumer culture,” Munson assem-bles thousands of found objects, all of them made of blue plastic, creating a singular large-scale installation.
Douglas F. Cooley Memorial Art Gallery, Reed College3203 SE Woodstock Blvd &503-517-7851 reed.edu/gallery tue-sun 12-5pm. Enhances the academic offerings of Reed College with a diverse range of scholarly exhibitions, lectures, and colloquia in its role as a teaching
gallery. See website for current shows.
HElizabeth Leach Gallery417 NW 9th Ave, (at Flanders) &503-224-0521 elizabethleach.comtue-sat 10:30am-5:30pm and by appt. Feb 1-Mar 31 Assemblage and Collage, a group exhibition featuring artists who create work through layered materiality and unexpected juxtapositions. Collage has remained a touchstone of expression throughout art history and is particularly resonant during times of social unrest and chaos. The artists included in the exhibition experiment, innovate and trans-form existing materials to create something new and unanticipated.
Michael Parsons Fine Art716 SW Madison St &503-206-8601 michaelparsonsfineart.comwed-sat 12-5pm. Feb 3-Mar 2 Charles Heaney: Oregon Print-maker. Heaney arrived in Oregon from Wisconsin in 1913. He worked part time as a jewelry engraver, and studied for a year at the Museum Art School, where he was deeply influenced by Harry Wentz. Heaney enjoyed a close friendship with the famed Northwest modernist C.S. Price, who deeply influenced his development as an artist. Mar 3-31 Melville Wire: Oregon Impression-ist-Paintings, Engravings, and Drawings. Widely known for his brightly colored, impressionist paint-ings of the landscape, Wire generally worked en plein aire, or directly from nature. He moved to Oregon, from Illinois, in 1884 and studied art at Willamette University in Salem. Wire received national recognition as a printmaker, producing 30 works in this medium, with 8 of his etchings and engravings being published by the Associated American Artists Gallery in New York. Wire is the only artist in Oregon art history to receive this honor.
Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education724 NW Davis Street &503-226-3600 ojmche.orgtue-thu 11am-5pm; fri 11am-4pm; sat & sun 12-5pm. To Feb 14 I Am
Corey Arnold. Homecoming, 2018. Imogen Gallery
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OREGON ALLYN CANTOR VIGNETTESROBERT FRANK BOOKS AND FILMS: 1947-2017 Blue Sky, Portland, To Feb 25Conceived of by Robert Frank and Gerhard Steidl, this exhibition emphasizesartistic imagery over value of art. Instead of displaying Frank’s fragile original silver gelatin prints, these images are printed on sheets of newsprint hung from the gallery walls and ceilings, with a handful of fi lms and video projected directly onto the walls. This temporary pop-up style of presentation is in line with Frank’s milieu. He is considered the inventor of street photography and is known for his infl uential photography book, The Americans, published in the late1950’s, with an introduction by Beat Generation poet, Jack Kerouac.
VEDEM: THE UNDERGROUND MAGAZINE OF THE TEREZIN GHETTOOregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education, Portland, To May 27During World War II, a group of teenage Jewish boys authored the longest-running underground magazine to be regularly produced by Nazi concen-tration camp prisoners. Vedem (Czech for “In the Lead”) was created in secret from 1942-44 in Czechoslovakia’s Terezin Ghetto. This exhibit recreates the prose, poetry, illustrations and pop art graphics from the 83 weekly issues. Reproductions of the original content are reimagined as a contemporary magazine, as a work of rebellion and social commentary, still relevant today.
JUSTIN L’AMIE: MIDNIGHT FLORIST PDX Contemporary Art, Portland, To Feb 24Infl uenced by the principles of Northwest Mystics, Morris Graves and Mark Tobey, Northwest native, Justin L’Amie, draws from the wealth of natural re-sources that characterize the region. His imaginative Midnight Florist paintings depict variations within the familiar world of plants and insects that exist within the mind of the artist, pointing to a spiritual realm versus a logical one. L’Amie was selected for an upcoming solo show at the Morris Graves Museum of Art. In 2016, he was also awarded a residency at the Morris Graves Foundation.
ALIX PEARLSTEIN: HAREM ROOM-1 AND TWO WOMENUpfor Gallery, Portland Feb 1-24In this solo exhibit, two experiential works by New York artist Alix Pearlstein address a psycological understanding of complex human motivations and exchanges. Harem ROOM-1 (2016) is a sculptural installation of furry cats staged to highlight the idiosyncrasies of social interactions and hierarchies through the interplay of social groupings, affections and individuality. Her video piece Two Women (2000) uses tension and suggestion between male and female to portray notions of real and fake desire, as depicted by the media.
MK GUTH: PAYING ATTENTION Hallie Ford Museum of Art, Salem, To Apr 1This exhibit features a range of new and previously created still-life instal-lations by nationally recognized multi-disciplinary artist, MK Guth. In her thought-provoking works, the Portland artist encourages a level of interaction where artistic intention comes to fruition through the engagement of museum visitors. What Needs to Be Said is an installation of artist-created books inviting people to write their thoughts and beliefs about a broad range of topics into volumes, which are categorized by the subjects of art, ecology, identity, politics and love.
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MK GUTH, WHAT NEEDS TO BE SAID, 2017COURTESY OF THE ARTIST AND THE CRISTIN TIERNEY
GALLERY, NEW YORK. PHOTO: DAN KVITKA
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This, Art by Oregon Jewish Artist, presents the work of Jewish artists with an association to Oregon, spanning the early twentieth century through today, curated by Bruce Guenther. Opening Feb 16 Vedum Underground. An examination of the literary magazine written by Jewish teens imprisoned at Terezin, a Nazi camp in Czechoslovakia during the Second World War. To Tell The Sto-ry: the Wollach Holocaust Hagga-dah. Commissioned by Helene and Zygfryd B. Wolloch, the Holocaust Haggadah is richly illustrated with lithographic prints by David Wander and calligraphy by Yonah Weinreb that link the story of liberation from ancient Egypt to the Holocaust.
HPDX Contemporary Art925 NW Flanders St &503-222-0063 pdxcontemporaryart.comtue-sat 11am-6pm. To Feb 24 Justin L’Amie: Midnight Florist. Influenced by the principles of Northwest Mystics Morris Graves and Mark Tobey, L’Amie draws from the wealth of natural resources that characterize the region.
HPortland Art Museum1219 SW Park Ave &503-226-2811 portlandartmuseum.org tue, wed, sat, sun 10am-5pm, thu & fri 10am-8pm. Admission: members free, adults $19.99, seniors (62+) and students (18+ with ID) $16.99, children (17 and under) free. Opening Feb 24 Common Ground
Photographs by Fazal Sheikh, 1989 – 2013. Human rights and dig-nity form the core of Fazal Sheikh’s photographs. For more than 25 years, he has worked with individu-als rendered invisible by war, ethnic and religious strife, climate crises, and social banishment, inviting them to share their stories of unimag-inable hardship and perseverance. Ongoing In the Beginning: Minor White’s Oregon Photographs. This exhibition of White’s rarely exhibited early works celebrates the artist’s influence on the region, and honors the Museum’s dedication to acquir-ing and exhibiting photography as the institution enters its 125th year. Animating Life: The Art, Science, and Wonder of LAIKA a ground-breaking view behind-the-curtain into the visionary artistry and technology of the globally renowned
animation studio. In partnership with the Northwest Film Center.
HRusso Lee Gallery805 NW 21st Ave &503-226-2754 russoleegallery.com tue-fri 11am-5:30pm sat 11am-5pm. Feb 1-24 Elizabeth Malaska: Heavenly Bodies. G. Lewis Clevenger: Reclaiming My Time. Robert Yoder: Club Number. Mar 1-31 Fay Jones, Dan Gluibizzi & Liz Tran.
HUpfor929 NW Flanders St &503-227-5111 upforgallery.com tue-sat 11am-6pm and by appt. To Feb 24 Alix Pearlstein: Harem Room-1 and Two Women. Sculptural installation and video work by Alix Pearlstein grapple with issues of fetishization, subjugation and objectification. Feb 28-Mar 31 Srijon Chowdhury: The Coldest Night. Srijon Chowdhury’s second exhibition with Upfor explores how our understanding of art spaces and artworks emerges slowly, some-times frustratingly.
SALEM
Hallie Ford Museum of Art Willamette University700 State St. &503-370-6855 willamette.edu/arts/hfma/ tue-sat 10am-5pm; sun 1-5pm. Admission: adults $6, seniors (+55) $4, students (18+ with ID), children
(0-17) and members free. Tue free. To Apr 1 MK Guth: Paying Atten-tion, includes a range of still life installations by this nationally rec-ognized Portland conceptual artist that are intended to illuminate how social interaction is shaped through rites and treasured objects. Feb 10-Apr 29 Holy Beauty: Northern Renaissance Prints Discovered in an Early English Bible features a rare 17th century English Bible illustrated with 16th century Dutch and Flemish prints interpolated into the volume after it was printed.
WASHINGTONBAINBRIDGE ISLAND
Bainbridge Island Museum of Art550 Winslow Way E &206-451-4013 &1-855-613-1342 biartmuseum.org daily 10am-6pm. Admission is free. To Feb 14 Frank Renlie: Smile. Renlie (Lake Forest Park) paints what’s in his head, and you can’t help but smile. To Feb 28 Robert McCauley: American Fiction. A solo exhibition featuring over thirty paintings and assem-blage works from the 1990s to the present, this show will travel to Museum of Northwest Art (MoNA) in 2018. Nadine Karina: The Hammer and the Peony. Seattle metalsmith Nadine Kariya presents her elegant and diverse designs and stories in
jewelry. Paul Polson: Out Here. Polson (from Poulsbo) presents his regional landscape paintings in oil. Opening Mar 10 George Rodriguez. For his solo museum debut, El Paso, Texas native George Rodriguez creates an installation based on his travels to 24 countries within nine months, funded by the University of Washington postgraduate Bondsman Fellowship. E
BELLEVUE
Bellevue Arts Museum510 Bellevue Way NE &425-519-0770 bellevuearts.org wed-sun 11am-5pm; free first fri 11am-8pm. Admission: adults $15, students/seniors/military (ID required) $12, teens (with Teen Tix) $5, children under 6 and members free. To Mar 25 Walter McConnell: Itinerant Edens: A Measure of Disorder. An ambitious new instal-lation by Walter McConnell presents a series of elliptical vitrines bearing nude male figures set in land-scapes of moist red clay. Sealed in terrarium-like enclosures, his work addresses the relationship between nature and culture. Humaira Abid: Searching for Home. Abid’s first solo museum exhibition offers an intimate look at the humanitarian consequences of the worldwide refugee crisis. Drawn from personal accounts documented by the artist, the exhibition tells the story of the
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TOURISM COMMISSION
Find year-round activities in our Whatcom County Arts & Culture Guide.
UPCOMING EVENTS INCLUDE —
Recycled Arts Expo 4/6 and 4/7/18Bellingham SeaFeast 9/21 and 9/22/18Holiday Festival of the Arts 11/16–12/24/18 Information at alliedarts.org
866-650-9317
the unique culture of BellinghamEXPLORE
Road Trip by Shanni Welsh
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collateral victims of persecution, political conflicts, or natural disas-ters-a disproportionate number of whom are women and girls. To Apr 15 Making our Mark: Art by Pratt Teaching Artists. One of BAM’s most ambitious group shows to date, Making our Mark is a com-memorative exhibition celebrating the 40th anniversary of the Pratt Fine Arts Center with work from over 250 Pratt teaching artists throughout the organization’s influential history.
BELLINGHAM
Allied Arts of Whatcom County1418 Cornwall Ave &360-676-8548 alliedarts.orgmon-fri 10am-5pm; sat 12-5pm. Feb 2-24 Allied Arts Annual Mem-bers' Show will feature work from nearly 100 Allied Arts members, including professional artists, stu-dents, and new or emerging artists. Works presented will range from
traditional paintings to photography to contemporary sculptures and everything in between. Mar 2-31 Tore Ofteness, Frank Frazee and Various Local Artists: Whatcom READS Art Challenge & Exhibit. Local artists were presented a chal-lenge, read the book. Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of a Fist by Sunil Yapa and create a piece of visual art inspired by it. Works presented will interpret the book in each artist's unique style.
Gallery Pegasus301 W. Holly Street &360-599-7731 gallerypegasus.com tue-sun 12-5pm and by appt. To Feb 28 Unfold: Nude Form and Concept Interpretations of the nude in abstract expressionism, cubism, contemporary, and classical paintings,three dimensional works in stone and clay, carvings on stone. All aspects of the body are represented. Opening Mar 2 Other, will consist of art pieces in metal, glass and wood made by local artists. During this time there will be silent auctions for paintings done by none profit
organizations. Art Walk first Friday of the month 6-10pm.
HWestern Gallery Western Washington University516 High St, Fine Arts Bldg, FI 116 &360-650-3900 westerngallery.wwu.edu mon-wed, fri 10am-4pm; thu 10am-8pm; sat 12-4pm. To Mar 16 Back to the Sandbox: Art and Radical Pedagogy. An international exhibi-tion of artists who pose questions about the nature and significance of education.
BELLINGHAM
Whatcom MuseumOld City Hall, 121 Prospect St Lightcatcher Building, 250 Flora St &360-778-8930 whatcommuseum.org Lightcatcher: wed-sun 12-5pm. Old City Hall: wed-sun 12-5pm. Admis-sion: adults $10; youth, students, military, seniors $8; children 2-5 $5; under 2 free.
BACK TO THE SANDBOXArt and Radical Pedagogy JAN. 9 – MARCH 17An international exhibition of artists who pose questions about the nature and significance of education.
Luis Camnitzer, Eva Bekkeslett, Teddy Cruz and Fonna Forman, Priscila Fernandes, Michael Joaquin Grey, Ane Hjort Guttu, Markus Kayser, Eva Koťátková, Graziela Kunsch, Pam Kuntz, James Mollison, Renzo Piano, Calvin Seibert
WesternGal lery.wwu.eduM-F 10a – 4p W 10a – 8p SAT 12p – 4p
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LIGHT CATCHER BUILDING Opening Feb 3 Rooted, Revived, Reinvented: Basketry in America chronicles a history of American basketry from its origins in Native American, immigrant, and slave communities to its presence within the contemporary fine art world. Organized by the National Basketry Organization in partnership with the University of Missouri's Museum of Art and Archaeology and sponsored by the Northwest Basket Weavers Vi Phillips Guild. Jeweled Objects of Desire: From Ordinary to Extraor-dinary. Featuring rarely seen items from the vaults of the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History. Each artwork demonstrates the skill and ingenuity of various artists in transforming simple materials into striking treasures, and creates a sense of awe at the vision required to take the rough to polished, the mundane to exceptional, and the simple to complex. Ongoing People of the Sea and Cedar, Coast Salish art and artifacts from the Museum's collection, focusing on Lummi and Nooksack history, culture, and lifestyle. OLD CITY HALL Opening Feb 3 Gathered Together & Hidden in the Bundle. Running concurrently with Rooted, Revived, Reinvented: Basketry in America. Gathered Together celebrates members of the Northwest Basket Weavers Guild, and Hidden in the Bundle takes a look inside
the Whatcom Museum's basketry collection. Ongoing John M. Edson Hall of Birds, highlighting the Muse-um's founding collection of mounted birds by amateur ornithologist John M. Edson, with interpretation on modern-day bird habitat, species status, and hands-on activities.
EVERETT
Schack Art Center2921 Hoyt Ave &425-259-5050 schack.orgmon-fri 10am-6pm; sat 10am-5pm; sun 12-5pm. Free Admission. To Feb 24 Looking Back: Honoring 25 Years of Artist of the Year. Exhibit features work by all of the Schack Art Center Artist of the Year award recipients dating back to 1992. When the Schack created this award it was an opportunity to in-troduce the community to important regional artists and celebrate their work. Past recipients include: James Arrabito, Verena Schwippert, James Madison, Jim Davis, Karla Matzke, Kevin Petelle, Dona Anderson, Dan & Joi LaChaussee, and Paul Vexler. Opening Mar 8 the 21st Juried Art Show. This biennial collection of Northwest artists features a well-rounded variety of mediums to produce an eclectic and visually stimulating exhibit.
FRIDAY HARBOR
WaterWorks Gallery315 Argyle Ave &360-378-3060 waterworksgallery.comClosed for gallery hiatus until April.
LA CONNER
Museum of Northwest Art121 First St &360-466-4446 monamuseum.org sun-mon 12-5pm; tue-sat 10am-5pm. Free Admission. To Mar 25 Holly Andres: The Homecoming. Contemporary pho-tographer Holly Andres specializes in telling compelling and dramatic stories, often rooted in her real-life experiences. She has shown in galleries and museums from Bar-celona, Istanbul and Bogota, to New York, San Fransisco and Atlanta with viewers drawn to her often dark and mysterious or bright and witty pho-tographs. Katie Creyts: Wilderland. The fable-like scenes that Creyts creates are often a point depar-ture from a familiar narrative that encourage a new way of thinking about a story. She is an artist and art professor at Whitworth University. Creyts visualizes narratives using a wide range of materials, currently graphite on paper and etched glass.
BASKETRY IN AMERICA
A traveling exhibition featuring 93 traditional & contemporary baskets. Showing at the Whatcom Museum in Bellingham, WA, Feb. 3 - May 6, 2018.www.whatcommuseum.org
Shan Goshorn, They Were Called Kings, 2013.
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LA CONNER
Helen Loggie, James Lavadour, Lillian Pitt and Joe Feddersen: For the Masses. MoNA's first Permanent Collection exhibit solely devoted to prints and printmak-ing. The title is derived from the concept of prints as apopulist and egalitarian form of artmaking and viewing. By their nature, prints need to be graphicand easy to under-stand. From the very beginning of printmaking, prints have been used to spread ideas and news amongst the public.
PORT ANGELES
Port Angeles Fine Arts Center1203 E Lauridsen Blvd &360-457-3532 pafac.org Gallery hours: thu-sun 11am-5pm. Webster's Woods Art Park: daily from sunrise to sunset. Opening Feb 24 Unrestricted: an Exploration of Artist Books. What IS an Artist Book? Lacking definition and boundaries, the Artist Book gives artists the space to follow idea or gut feeling, or glimmer of insight wherever it takes them without the edges of established art mediums to criticize them. The Artist Book is uncharted land, which arouses de-light upon its discovery. And, for that reason we artist book makers have come together in this show to share with you the joys and discoveries of our adventures.
SEATTLE
Davidson Galleries313 Occidental Ave S &206-624-7684 davidsongalleries.comtue-sat 10am-5:30pm. Feb 2-24 Mi-chael Kempson: Child’s Play; Ben Beres: They're Shootin' to Kill; Kurt Seligmann: Protuberances Cardiaques Suite; Roberto Matta: Selected Etchings. Matta's images reflect a blend of the Surrealist landscape of the subconscious and the Action Painting of the Abstract Expressionist school. He was a strong colorist as both painter and printmaker. Mar 2-31 Keitsuke Yamamoto: Recent Lithographs. Friedensreich Hundertwasser: Regentag portfolio & selected
works. Hundertwasser was an Austrian-born artist and architect, as well as an environmental activist. Inspired by the relationship between humans and nature, his work is characterized by undulating curves, organic shapes and bright colors. His prints often combine many colors and foil imprints to explore variations within the edition.
HFoster/White Gallery220 3rd Ave S, #100, Pioneer Square &206-622-2833 fosterwhite.comtue-sat 10am-6pm. To Feb 17 Res-olution. Gallery artists contributed work, new or old, that rings true to the theme of Resolution. The show offers a range of media and subject matter, celebrating each artist's unique engagement with their respective discipline. Mar 1-24 Alia Ali, Erin Armstrong, Carlos Donjuan: Portraiture. Showing for the first time three artists who use portraiture to examine a diverse range of subjects including cultural identity, societal acceptance and self-definition.
HFrye Art Museum704 Terry Ave &206-622-9250 fryemuseum.org tue-sun 11am-5pm; thu 11am-7pm. Free admission. To Apr 15 Tavares Strachan: Always, Sometimes, Never brings the work of New York-based conceptual artist Tavares Strachan to Seattle for the first time. A selection of Strachan's diverse ex-plorations of nature and technology will be provocatively installed within and alongside reflecting pools, highlighting his signature fascination with perception, distortion, and invisibility. Opening Feb 17 Ko Kirk Yama-hira. Seattle-based artist Ko Kirk Yamahira deconstructs his paintings by painstakingly removing individ-ual threads from the weave of the canvas, turning surface into form. This exhibition samples the artist's recent output - including several pieces made for the occasion - to offer a meditation on identity, duality, and the relativity of perception. Ongoing Frye Salon A restaging of the Founding Collection as it was installed in the home gallery of Charles and Emma Frye.
G. Gibson Gallery104 W Roy St &206-587-4033 ggibsongallery.com wed-fri 11am-5:30pm; sat 11:30am-4pm; tue by appt. To Mar 3 Weldon Butler, selected works. Amanda Knowles, new work.
HGallery 110110 3rd Ave S &206-624-9336 gallery110.com thu-sat 12-5pm. Feb 1-24 Human/Nature. The 8th Annual Juried Exhibition. Each year Gallery 110 offers Seattle the unknown and unexpected: an exhibit of compelling contemporary art work, chosen by a juror with ties to the artistic community of the Pacific northwest, selected from submissions from artists from around the world. Juror: Sara Krajewski Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Portland Art Museum. Mar 1-31 Luminaries - Paintings of Love and Serendipity. The varied figurative paintings and sculptures of Vancouver artist Michael Abraham contain a nuanced display of the lighter and dark sides of existence, with an underlying hopefulness. David Haughton: 40+ Views of Mount Baker. A new series of landscape paintings by Vancouver, BC artist David Haughton pays homage to the Japanese artist Katsushika Hokusai, an artistic ‘hero’ of Haughton’s for many years.
Roberto MATTA (Chilean, 1912–2002)L'Ame Est Une Courone
From Seasons In Hell Suite
66 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018 H OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
SEATTLE
HGallery I M A 123 S Jackson St &206-625-0055 galleryima.com tue-sat 10:30am-5:30pm; sun & mon by appt. Feb 1-24 WORKS ON PAPER. This exhibition highlights one-of-a-kind works on paper, in which mark-making is not limited to pen or brush, but emerges from al-terative process and material. While some artists will craft homemade tools, forge lines with needle and thread, or employ sgraffito tech-niques, others utilize layered space and the nature of gravity. Included Artists: Larry Calkins, Alan Corkery Hahn, Mieko Hara, Cory Peeke, Kath-leen Skeels, and Margaret Watson. Mar 1-31 JACQUELINE BARNETT: CONVERSATION. Abstract oil painter, Jacqueline Barnett, presents a bold and expressive new body of work. "My work is a kind of emotional Rorschach test, as it invites the viewer to decipher its meaning. I intentionally stride the line between abstraction and reality, enticing you to enjoy the mystery of visual abstraction."
HHarris Harvey Gallery1915 First Ave &206-443-3315 harrisharveygallery.com tue-sat 11am-6pm; mon by appt. Feb 1-24 Things Imagined. Featur-ing a selection of narrative paintings and works on paper, Things Imag-
ined brings together the fantastical imaginations of Mark Butler, John Lysak, Royal Nebeker and Thomas Wood. Mar 1-31 Peter de Lory: A Silent Way. Featuring Seattle-based photographer Peter de Lory’s most recent body of work, also exhibited at the San Juan Island Museum of Art, A Silent Way presents black and white photography that uncovers the distinct, rugged beauty of the San Juan Islands. The exhibition will also be accompanied by works from various gallery artists depicting or inspired by island imagery.
HHenry Art GalleryUniversity of Washingon4100 15th Ave NE &206-543-2280 henryart.orgwed, fri, sat & sun 11am-4pm; thu 11am-9pm. To Mar 25 The Time. The Place. Contemporary Art from the Collection. A museum-wide exhibition of the contemporary collection, featuring over fifty artworks by an international roster of artists, in media ranging from video installation to photography, sculpture to drawing. The artworks in this exhibition explore conditions and events of contemporary social and cultural life through the lens of time and place.
HPatricia Rovzar Gallery1111 1st Ave &206-223-0273 rovzargallery.com daily 11am-5pm. Opening Mar 1 Kathy Jones. Part of the gallery's
25th anniversary year celebration, Kathy Jones continues her explora-tion of anonymous figures in dark or brightly colored environments.
HPROGRAPHICA/KDR313 Occidental Ave S &206-999-0849 prographicagallery.com tue-sat 10am-5:30pm. Feb 2-25 Sandow Birk: MONUMENTAL, a collection of iconic series. Birk's first exhibition in Seattle. MONUMENTAL, will include a selection of works from the artist's iconic series: Imag-inary Monuments, American Qur'an, and the debut of print works Trump-agruel and American Procession made in collaboration with Elyse Pignolet and printed by Mullowney Printing in San Francisco. Mar 3-31 Dianne Kornberg: The Lore Which Nature Brings. Kornberg and poet Elisabeth Frost explore the imagery of birds' nests to contrast two tropes: specimen collection (the nests as objects - Caliology - being the study of birds' nests) and the history of highly subjective poetry about birds and nesting. Anne Petty: New Paintings. HSeattle Art Museum1300 First Ave &206-654-3100 seattleartmuseum.org wed 10am-5pm; thu 10am-9pm; fri-sun 10am-5pm. Suggested admission: adults $24.95, seniors
SEATTLE INVITES YOU TO
REFLECTHALF-PRICE MUSEUM
ADMISSION FOR DOWNTOWN HOTEL GUESTS IN FEBRUARY.*
restrictions apply*
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68 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018 H OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
SEATTLE
(62 and over) and military (with ID) $22.95, students (with ID) and teens (13-19) $14.95, children 12 & under free, SAM members free. Olympic Sculpture Park (2901 Western Ave) hours: open daily, opens 30 minutes prior to sunrise, closes 30 minutes after sunset. Free to the public. Opening Feb 15 Robert Colescott, Kerry James Marshall, Mickalene Thomas: Figuring History. Featur-ing three leading American artists from three different generations whose work challenges a Western painting tradition that historically erases or misrepresents people of color. While each artist’s paintings are distinctive in style, subject mat-ter, and the historic moments they reference, collectively they critique and redefine mainstream narratives of history and representation. At the heart of these artists’ portrayals are material and cultural histories centered on Black experiences and perspectives. Opening Feb 10 John Grade: Middle Fork. A highly detailed tree sculpture made with nearly one million reclaimed cedar pieces that dynamically spans the entire length of the Brotman Forum, the main entrance lobby that welcomes guests to the museum. Ongoing Big Picture: Art After 1945. Presenting significant works of abstract painting and sculpture from SAM’s collection, including works by Mark Rothko, Jasper
Johns, and Anselm Kiefer. OFFSITE Olympic Sculpture Park, 2901 Western Avenue. Spencer Finch: The Western Mystery. Composed of 90 glass panels sus-pended from the ceiling,The Western Mystery creates an overlapping and constantly moving constellation of colors based on sunsets photo-graphed from the sculpture park over Puget Sound.
HShift Gallery312 S Washington St, Tashiro Kaplan Bldg &607-379-9523 shiftgallery.org fri & sat 12-5pm or by appt. Feb 1-24 Stephanie Hargrave: ObeisanceDerision. Hargrave's solo show will be an installation homage to nature using wood, encaustic, fabric, wire, paper, thread, sterling silver and clay, as well as encaustic paintings that quietly mock the current administra-tion. Opening Mar 1 Eric Chamber-lain: Abstracts. In his solo show, Chamberlain presents a recent body of abstract work including paintings, drawings, and prints.
SPOKANE
Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture2316 W First Ave &509-456-3931 northwestmuseum.orgtue-sun 10am-5pm; wed 10am-
8pm. Admission: adults $10, seniors (60+) $7.50, students (with ID) $5, kids 5 and under and MAC members no charge. Campbell House Tours: included in admission price. Ongoing Titanic: the Artifact Exhibition. Educational, emotional and appropriate for all ages, Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition takes visitors on a journey through the life of the Titanic. Along the way visitors will learn countless stories of heroism and humanity that pay tribute to the indomitable force of the human spirit in the face of tragedy.
TACOMA
Foss Waterway Seaport705 Dock Street &253.272.2750 fosswaterwayseaport.org wed-sat 10am to 4pm, sun 12 to 4pm; Admission: adults $10, seniors/students/children $8, family pass $25. Third Thursday free. Opening Feb 15 The Puyallup People: First on the Waterway. Exploring the history of the Puyallup People and their intimate connection to the Salish Sea and the Puyallup River. Includes boat building and fishing techniques, resource utilization, diet, recreation, world view, and contact with other tribes and later explorers. To tell this story accurately, the exhibit content has been developed in partnership with local members of the Puyallup Tribe.
HUMAN/NATUREGallery 110 8th Annual Juried Show
February 1–24, 2018Thursday, Friday, Saturday, noon to 5:00
JUROR: Sara Krajewski, Curator of Modernand Contemporary Art, Portland, Oregon
110 3rd Ave S, Seattle, WA 98104www.gallery110.com
Gallery110 jury ad_FM2018_Prevmag-1/3 H 2018-01-09 11:23 AM Page 1
preview-art.com PREVIEW 69
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70 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018 H OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
WASHINGTON MATTHEW KANGAS VIGNETTESGEORGE RODRIGUEZ Bainbridge Island Museum of Art, Bainbridge, Mar 10-Jun 3For his solo museum debut, El Paso, Texas native George Rodriguez cre-ates an installation based on his travels to 24 countries within nine months, funded by his University of Washington postgraduate Bonderman Fellow-ship. As a result, the Indigenous Chicano imagery of his childhood com-bines with ceramic riffs on Indonesian, Peruvian, Malaysian, Indian and Japanese devotional objects, which infl uence his devotional sanctuary of people, lions, dogs, and other objects associated with ecstatic ancient cults. He teaches art at North Seattle College.
HUMAIRA ABID Bellevue Arts Museum, Bellevue, To Mar 25For her solo museum debut, the Pakistani-born sculptor created Searchingfor Home to explore issues of displacement, refugee crises and women’s roles in times of catastrophe and wide geographical diaspora. With trompe l’œil carved wooden sculptures of suitcases, sneakers, birds, insects and animals, Abid’s installation moves the viewer from home to barrier to barbed wire and back, all symbolized by abbreviated accumulations of objects associatedwith coercive migration. A Seattle-area resident since 2008, Abid exhibits widely in Pakistan and India as well as Dubai, Kenya and Nepal.
JACQUELINE BARNETT Gallery I M A, Seattle, Mar 3-31Now 83, Barnett’s unceasing energy is the key to her inexhaustible store of imagery and revelatory gestures. Following her retrospective at Museum of Northwest Art, the New York-born fi gurative expressionist painter is ex-tending her open-ended forms and recurrent imagery. Part of the Bay Area feminist renaissance in the 1970s, Barnett submerges the female fi gure by dispersing anatomical parts and attributes throughout a composition. A full-length monograph (by this author), Figure to Field, puts her continuous,yet cyclical, evolution in perspective.
THE TIME. THE PLACE. CONTEMPORARY ART FROM THE COLLECTIONHenry Art Gallery, University of Washington, Seattle, To Apr 22The Henry has been most successful at attracting young wealthy techies with an interest in funding contemporary art programs and acquisitions. As a result, director Sylvia Wolf is displaying some of the riches of the past two decades. Director Emeritus Richard Andrews and ex-curator Elizabeth Brown secured accessions by Richard Long, Lorna Simpson and ShirinNeshat, among other sculptors, video and installation artists, many of whom have shown at the U of W museum, now in its 90th year.
KATHY JONES Patricia Rovzar Gallery, Seattle, Mar 1-Apr 1Part of the gallery’s 25th anniversary year celebration, Kathy Jones contin-ues her exploration of anonymous fi gures in dark or brightly colored envi-ronments. Like Jacqueline Barnett, she studied printmaking and drawing at Stanford, where Manuel Neri and Frank Lobdell long prevailed. She also taught in Egypt. Jones’ paintings exude a dense, southern California tension between sunlight and shadow, metaphors perhaps for the relation-ships between the couples that inhabit these works.
HUMAIRA ABID, SEARCHING FOR HOME, 2016PHOTO: ADEEL AHMED
JACQUELINE BARNETT, AFFIRMATION, 2017IMAGE COURTESY OF GALLERY IMA
PHOTO: JOEL CLARIN
KATHY JONES, MY COMPANIONS, 2017IMAGE COURTESY OF PATRICIA ROVZAR GALLERY
GEORGE RODRIGUEZ, LIONIMAGE COURTESY OF FOSTER/WHITE GALLERY
SHIRIN NESHAT, GHADA, 2013IMAGE COURTESY OF THE ARTIST AND
GLADSTONE GALLERY, NEW YORK & BRUSSELS
preview-art.com PREVIEW 71
TACOMA
Museum of Glass1801 Dock St &253-284-4750 museumofglass.org wed-sat 10am-5pm; sun 12-5pm; 3rd thu 10am-8pm. Admission: members free, adults $15, seniors (62+), military and students (13+) $12, groups of 20+ $12, groups of 50+ $10, children 6-12 $5 (under 6 are free), every 3rd thu 5-8pm free. Ongoing Complementary Con-trasts: The Glass and Steel Sculp-tures of Albert Paley. Highlights the significance of glass in the body of work of this celebrated sculptor. Best known for his metal sculptures, Paley has incorporated glass in many commissions and exhibitions for over a decade. These sculptures demonstrate his commitment to innovation as well as many of the elements that distinguish his style. Michael E. Taylor: Traversing Par-allels. Taylor is widely-renowned for his cut and laminated glass works, geometric constructions, and fractal abstractions. His work is inspired by everything from subatomic par-ticles to music. Spotlight on Dale Chihuly: Works from Museum of Glass Permanent Collection. In honor of Chihuly's impact on the American Studio Glass movement and his connection to Tacoma and the Pacific Northwest, this exhibition celebrates the artistic innovation of Dale Chihuly and introduces Museum of Glass visitors to his work
by showcasing 9 intimate examples including the never publicly viewed, Gibson Chandelier. Opening Mar 7 Akio Takamori: Portraits and Sleepers. Takamori completed a Vis-iting Artist Residency at Museum of Glass in August 2014, during which he created work inspired by head-shaped ancient Roman glass flasks. Each piece is embellished with enamel paints, creating a pictorial surface which plays with the trans-parency and opacity of the glass. In celebration of his extraordinary life and continually innovative career, the Museum presents a selective display which includes examples from his residency.
Tacoma Art Museum1701 Pacific Ave &253-272-4258 tacomaartmuseum.org tue-sun 10am-5pm; 3rd thu 10am-8pm; free every 3rd thu 5-8pm. Ad-mission: members free, adults $15, students, military, seniors (65+) $13, family (2 adults + up to 4 children under 18) $40, children 5 and under free. To Feb 18 Zhi LIN: In Search of the Lost History of Chinese Migrants and the Transcontinental Railroads, paintings that refocus attention on the overlooked yet vital history of the Chinese laborers of the 19th century. Opening Feb 3 Immigrant Artists and the Amer-ican West. Immigration is a topic on many peoples' minds. This exhibition draws attention to how art relates
to and responds to personal and political issues around immigration. Drawing from the Haub Family Collection of Western American Art, the Northwest Art Collection, as well as loans of contemporary art, this exhibition explores how immigrants' experiences are shared through art. Opening Feb 10 Native Portraiture: Power and Perception. What is communicated when an outsider portrays someone from another culture? By countering non-Native narratives with contemporary art by Native artists, this exhibition gives voice to Native people and commu-nities to show their resiliency and power over the ways in which they are portrayed and perceived.
705 Dock Street. Tacoma, WA 98402 253.272.2750fosswaterwayseaport.org
FOSS WATERWAY
SEAPORTMaritime Museum
Photo: Kevin Scott
Celebrating Tacoma & South Puget Soundmaritime heritage - past, present and future
New featured exhibitionThe Puyallup People:
First on the WaterwayOpens February 15, 2018
Photo: Puyallup Tribe- Historic Preservation Department
G. Lewis Clevenger, Four Days in September
acrylic on canvas
72 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018
Hardcover, 240 pp., $55 USD. Available at Seattle Art Museum Shop, 206-654-3120
Exhibition Catalogues of Interest A HISTORY OF ENGAGEMENT: THE PORTLAND ART MUSEUM, 1892-2017 Written in celebration of the Museum’s 125th anniversary, this lively publication tracesthe institution’s educational and outreach efforts. Researched and written by Sarah Lampen and Jen Delos-Reyes, the book takes the form of a playful timeline moving through multiple incarnations of the museum, like its intertwining with the Museum Art School, which is now the independent Pacifi c Northwest College of Art. Illustrated and designed by Olivia Serrill.
Softcover 37 pages, $8 USD, Available at Portland Art Museum Store, Portland, OR 503-276-4204.
PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST complements the Royal Collection exhibition, currently drawing big crowds at the Vancouver Art Gallery (to Feb 4). Spanning fi ve centuries, it focuses on artists’ portraits and self-portraits and explores a number of themes con-cerning the shifting role and growing status of the artist in the Western world. Richly illustrated, the book also demonstrates the ways artists, from great masters to more contemporary artists, delved deeply into their own spiritual and psychological states through the act of painting or drawing their physical likeness.
Hardcover, 256 pp., $49.95 CAD. Available at the Vancouver Art Gallery Store, 604-662-4706.
GARY PEARSON: SHORT FICTIONS is the catalogue for the Kelowna Art Gallery exhibition (on until March 18). Both show and catalogue survey the Kelowna-based artist’s energetic career, from his early symbolic abstractions to the fi gurative paintings, charged with “philosophical and psychosexual content,” for which he is known today, Pearson’s literary, photographic, and pop culture infl uences are cited, along with the impact of time spent in New York and Berlin. Essays by Liz Wylie, Michael Turner, and Aaron Peck, and a conversation between the artist and Ihor Holubizky are included.
Softcover, 144 pp., $34.95 CAD. Available at the Kelowna Art Gallery, 250-762-2226or info@kelownaartgallery.
SYLVIA TAIT: JOURNEY is the companion publication to the recent Burnaby Art Gal-lery show. From the 1960s to the present day, it surveys works on paper, including paintings, prints, and drawings, by one of this country’s foremost colourists. At the same time, it traces Tait’s development from fi guration to abstraction, and spotlights the ex-tensive travels through Europe and Mexico that have infl uenced her art. Most surprising to those familiar with Tait’s abstract paintings are her early line drawings of friends, family, and colleagues, executed with acuity and affection.
Softcover, 98 pp., $19.05 CAD. Available at the Burnaby Art Gallery, 604-297-4422.
EARTHLINGS is the catalogue published in conjunction with last year’s Esker Founda-tion exhibition. Developed from an idea by Toronto artist Shary Boyle, it erases distinc-tions between institutional categories of art-making, while also exploring the profoundly imaginative visions of Shuvinai Ashoona, Roger Aksadjuak, Pierre Aupilardjuk, Jessie Kenalogak, John Kurok, Leo Napayok, and Boyle herself. Featured are a fantastical array of individual and collaborative works in ceramic and coloured pencil. The illuminating text is in French, English, and Inuktitut.
Softcover 42 pp., $45 CAD. Available at the Esker Foundation, 403-930-2490.
Prices may be subject to additional charges for postage, handling and taxes.
FEB - MAR 2018
Check out our new websitepreview-art.com
Image courtesy of Ian Tan Gallery. Photo: Pablo Esteva
preview-art.com PREVIEW 73
Hardcover, 240 pp., $55 USD. Available at Seattle Art Museum Shop, 206-654-3120
Exhibition Catalogues of Interest A HISTORY OF ENGAGEMENT: THE PORTLAND ART MUSEUM, 1892-2017 Written in celebration of the Museum’s 125th anniversary, this lively publication tracesthe institution’s educational and outreach efforts. Researched and written by Sarah Lampen and Jen Delos-Reyes, the book takes the form of a playful timeline moving through multiple incarnations of the museum, like its intertwining with the Museum Art School, which is now the independent Pacifi c Northwest College of Art. Illustrated and designed by Olivia Serrill.
Softcover 37 pages, $8 USD, Available at Portland Art Museum Store, Portland, OR 503-276-4204.
PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST complements the Royal Collection exhibition, currently drawing big crowds at the Vancouver Art Gallery (to Feb 4). Spanning fi ve centuries, it focuses on artists’ portraits and self-portraits and explores a number of themes con-cerning the shifting role and growing status of the artist in the Western world. Richly illustrated, the book also demonstrates the ways artists, from great masters to more contemporary artists, delved deeply into their own spiritual and psychological states through the act of painting or drawing their physical likeness.
Hardcover, 256 pp., $49.95 CAD. Available at the Vancouver Art Gallery Store, 604-662-4706.
GARY PEARSON: SHORT FICTIONS is the catalogue for the Kelowna Art Gallery exhibition (on until March 18). Both show and catalogue survey the Kelowna-based artist’s energetic career, from his early symbolic abstractions to the fi gurative paintings, charged with “philosophical and psychosexual content,” for which he is known today, Pearson’s literary, photographic, and pop culture infl uences are cited, along with the impact of time spent in New York and Berlin. Essays by Liz Wylie, Michael Turner, and Aaron Peck, and a conversation between the artist and Ihor Holubizky are included.
Softcover, 144 pp., $34.95 CAD. Available at the Kelowna Art Gallery, 250-762-2226or info@kelownaartgallery.
SYLVIA TAIT: JOURNEY is the companion publication to the recent Burnaby Art Gal-lery show. From the 1960s to the present day, it surveys works on paper, including paintings, prints, and drawings, by one of this country’s foremost colourists. At the same time, it traces Tait’s development from fi guration to abstraction, and spotlights the ex-tensive travels through Europe and Mexico that have infl uenced her art. Most surprising to those familiar with Tait’s abstract paintings are her early line drawings of friends, family, and colleagues, executed with acuity and affection.
Softcover, 98 pp., $19.05 CAD. Available at the Burnaby Art Gallery, 604-297-4422.
EARTHLINGS is the catalogue published in conjunction with last year’s Esker Founda-tion exhibition. Developed from an idea by Toronto artist Shary Boyle, it erases distinc-tions between institutional categories of art-making, while also exploring the profoundly imaginative visions of Shuvinai Ashoona, Roger Aksadjuak, Pierre Aupilardjuk, Jessie Kenalogak, John Kurok, Leo Napayok, and Boyle herself. Featured are a fantastical array of individual and collaborative works in ceramic and coloured pencil. The illuminating text is in French, English, and Inuktitut.
Softcover 42 pp., $45 CAD. Available at the Esker Foundation, 403-930-2490.
Prices may be subject to additional charges for postage, handling and taxes.
FEB - MAR 2018
2 PREVIEW n SEP-OCT 2017 ★ OPEN LATE ON FIRST THURSDAYS
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76 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018
ACT Art Gallery (The) 21
Adele Campbell Gallery 54
Alberta Craft Gallery - Calgary 8
Alberta Craft Gallery - Edmonton 13
Alberta Printmakers Gallery and Studio 8
Allied Arts of Whatcom County 62
Amelia Douglas Gallery Douglas College 22
Arbutus Gallery at Coast Capital Savings Library 30
arc.hive gallery 50
Arnold Mikelson Mind & Matter Art Gallery 30
Art Beatus (Vancouver) Consultancy Ltd. 31
Art Emporium (The) 31
Art Gallery at Evergreen Cultural Centre 19
Art Gallery of Alberta 13
Art Gallery of Greater Victoria 50
Art Gallery of St. Albert 16
Arts Off Main Gallery 32
ArtStarts Gallery 32
Art Works Gallery 31
Audain Art Museum 54
Audain Gallery 32
Bainbridge Island Museum of Art 61
Barbara Boldt Original Art Studio 20
Bau-Xi Gallery 33
Beaty Biodiversity Museum 33
Bellevue Arts Museum 61
Bill Reid Gallery of Northwest Coast Art 33
Blackfish Gallery 56
Blue Sky Gallery, Oregon Center for Photographic Arts 58
Bluerock Gallery 8
Brian Scott Studio & Gallery 19 & 34
Buckland Southerst Gallery 53
Bugera Matheson Gallery 14
Burnaby Art Gallery 17
Campbell River Art Gallery 18
Cannon Beach Gallery Group 55
Caroun Art Gallery 23
Catriona Jeffries 34
Centre A, Vancouver International Centre for Contemporary Asian Art 34
Chali-Rosso Art Gallery 34
Chinese Cultural Centre Museum 34
Choboter Fine Art 34
Circle Craft Gallery 34
CityScape Community Art Space, North Vancouver Community Arts Council 23
Coastal Peoples Fine Arts Gallery 35
Collectors' Gallery of Art (The) 9
Contemporary Art Gallery 35
Contemporary Calgary 9
Craft Council of BC Gallery 35
Cumberland Museum & Archives 19
Davidson Galleries 65
Deer Lake Gallery, Deer Lake Arts Council 17
Deluge Contemporary Art 51
Disjecta Contemporary Art Center 58
Douglas F. Cooley Memorial Art Gal-lery, Reed College 58
Douglas Reynolds Gallery 38
DRAW Gallery 26
Dundarave Print Workshop + Gallery 38
Eagle Spirit Gallery 38
Elissa Cristall Gallery 39
Elizabeth Leach Gallery 58
English Bay Gallery 39
Esker Foundation 9
Esplanade Art Gallery 16
Federation Gallery 39
Ferry Building Gallery 54
Firehall Arts Centre Gallery 39
Fort Gallery (The) 20
Front Gallery (The) 14
Foss Waterway Seaport 68
Foster/White Gallery 65
Founders' Gallery 9
Frye Art Museum 65
Gage Gallery Arts Collective 51
Gallery 2, Grand Forks and District Art and Heritage Centre 20
Gallery 110 65
Gallery 1710 31
Gallery at The Cultch 39
Gallery Gachet 39
Gallery I M A 66
Gallery in the Oak Bay Village 51
Gallery Jones 39
Gallery of BC Ceramics 39
Gallery Pegasus 62
Geert Maas Sculpture Gardens and Gallery 20
G. Gibson Gallery 65
Glenbow 9
Goldmoss Satellite 39
Gordon Smith Gallery of Canadian Art 23
Griffin Art Projects 26
grunt gallery 39
Haida Gwaii Museum 30
Hallie Ford Museum of Art Willamette University 61
Harris Harvey Gallery 66
Havana Gallery 40
Heffel Fine Art Auction House 40
Henry Art Gallery 66
Herringer Kiss Gallery 10
hfa contemporary 40
Ian Tan Gallery 40
Illingworth Kerr Gallery, ACAD 10
Il Museo, Il Centro, Italian Cultural Centre 40
Alphabetical listing of galleries and museums in this issue
preview-art.com PREVIEW 77
Imogen Gallery 55
Inuit Gallery of Vancouver 40
Kamloops Art Gallery 20
Kariton Art Gallery & Boutique 16
Katherine McLean Studio 40
Kelowna Art Gallery 20
Kimoto Gallery 42
Kootenay Gallery of Art, History & Science Society 18
Lattimer Gallery 42
Legacy Art Gallery Downtown, Uni-versity of Victoria 51
Libby Leshgold Gallery Emily Carr University of Art + Design 42
Lloyd Gallery (The) 26
Lookout Gallery 42
Madrona Gallery 52
Marion Scott Gallery/ Kardosh Projects 44
Michael Parsons Fine Art 58
Monny's Art Gallery 44
Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery, UBC 44
Mountain Galleries at the Fairmont Chateau 54
Museum of Anthropology at UBC 44
Museum of Glass 71
Museum of Northern BC 29
Museum of Northwest Art 63
Museum of Vancouver 44
Musqueam Cultural Centre Gallery 45
Nanaimo Art Gallery 21
Nanaimo Museum 22
New Media Gallery 23
Newzones 12
Nickle Galleries University of Calgary 12
Nikkei National Museum 18
Nisga'a Museum 21
North Vancouver Museum and Archives 26
Northwest By Northwest Gallery 56
Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture 68
Open Space Arts Society 52
Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education 58
Or Gallery 45
Oxygen Art Centre 22
Patricia Rovzar Gallery 66
PDX Contemporary Art 60
Pendulum Gallery 45
Penticton Art Gallery 26
Peter Kiss Studio and Gallery 45
Peter Robertson Gallery 14
Petley Jones Gallery 45
Poly Culture Art Center 46
Polygon Gallery 26
Port Angeles Fine Arts Center 65
Portland Art Museum 60
Port Moody Arts Centre 26
PROGRAPHICA/KDR 66
Republic Gallery 46
Richmond Art Gallery 30
Russo Lee Gallery 61
Salmon Arm Arts Centre 30
Schack Art Center 63
Scott Gallery 14
S'eliyemetaxwtexw Art Gallery, University of the Fraser Vallery 17
Seattle Art Museum 66
Seymour Art Gallery 26
SFU Gallery 18
Shift Gallery 68
Sidneay and Gertrude Zack Gallery, The Jewish Community Centre of Greater Vancouver 46
Silk Purse Arts Centre 54
Skwachàys Lodge Aboriginal Hotel and Gallery 46
Slide Room Gallery 53
Southern Alberta Art Gallery 15
South Main Gallery 46
Spirit Wrestler Gallery 46
Station House Gallery 55
Surrey Art Gallery 30
Tacoma Art Museum 71
Teck Gallery 48
The Gallery at Queen's Park 22
The New Gallery (TNG) 13
The O'Connor Group Art Gallery 19
The Old School House Arts Centre 29
The Reach Gallery Museum 16 Abbotsford
Toni Onley Estate 48
Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History 22
TRUCK Contemporary Art in Calgary 13
Two Rivers Gallery 27
Udell Xhibitions Fine Art Gallery 15
Ukama Gallery 48
Unitarian Church of Vancouver 48
University of Washingon 66
Uno Langmann Limited 48
Upfor 61
Vancouver Art Gallery 49
Vancouver Lipont Art Centre 30
Vancouver Maritime Museum 49
Vernon Public Art Gallery 50
WaterWorks Gallery 63
West Vancouver Cultural Services 54
West Vancouver Museum 54
Western Gallery Western Washington University 62
Whatcom Museum 62
White Bird Gallery 56
White Rock Gallery 54
Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies 8
Winchester Galleries 53
Xchanges Gallery and Studios 53
Z Gallery Arts 50
Alphabetical listing of galleries and museums in this issue
78 PREVIEW n FEB -MAR 2018
OPENINGS & EVENTS ALBERTA
February 1 THURSDAY7pm Artist Reception: Dianne Bos: The Sleeping Garden AND Wes Bell: On the Line. ESPLANADE ART & HERITAGE CENTRE, 401 First St SE, Medicine Hat.5-8pm Opening Reception: Mark Dicey: Each Painted Document AND Walter May: Look Again. NICKLE GALLERY, 410 University Court NW, Calgary.February 2 FRIDAY6-10pm Opening Reception: DaveandJenn: Paradise for an in-between time AND Kapwani Kiwanga: a wall is just a wall (and nothing more at all). ESKER FOUNDATION, 4th fl oor - 1011 9th Ave SE, Calgary.February 3 SATURDAY2:30-5pm Opening Reception: Retinal Circus. ART GALLERY OF ST. ALBERT, #100, 6D Perron Street (temporary location), St. Albert.February 7 WEDNESDAY2-4pm Opening Reception: Witness: Canadian Art of the First World War. FOUNDERS’ GALLERY, 4520 Crowchild Trail SW, Calgary.February 8 THURSDAY7-9pm Opening Reception: Steve Coffey: New Oils and Fallen Star Cars. FRONT GALLERY, 10402 124th St NW, Edmonton.February 20 TUESDAY7-9pm Artist Talk: Peter von Tiesenhausen. ART GALLERY OF ALBERTA, 2 Sir Winston Churchill Square, Edmonton.February 23 FRIDAY7-9pm Opening Reception: Jacqueline Leigh Huskisson: Absurd Walls. ALBERTA PRINTMAKERS GALLERY AND STUDIO, 4025 4th St SE, Calgary.5:30-7:30pm Opening Reception: Kotama Bouabane: We’ll Get There Fast and Then We’ll Take it Slow. THE NEW GALLERY (TNG), 208 Centre St SE, Calgary.February 24 SATURDAY12-4pm Opening Reception: Margaret Shelton ASA, CPE (1915-1984). THE COLLECTORS’ GALLERY OF ART, 1332 9th Ave SE, Calgary.March 1 THURSDAY6-8:30pm Gallery Re-Opening and Reception: Linda Craddock: Levitas. BUGERA MATHESON GALLERY, 10345 124th St NW, Edmonton.March 3 SATURDAY2pm Artist Talk: Linda Craddock: Levitas. BUGERA MATHESON GALLERY, 10345 124th St NW, Edmonton.2pm Artist Talk: Uncommon Blends. ALBERTA CRAFT GALLERY, Suite 208 - 1721 29th Ave SW, Calgary.March 15 THURSDAY7-9pm Opening Reception: Julian Forrest: This Is Not A Century For Paradises. PETER ROBERTSON GALLERY, 12323 104th Ave NW, Edmonton.March 22 THURSDAY7-9pm Opening Reception: Robert Lemay: Big Screen TV. THE FRONT GALLERY, 10402 124th St NW, Edmonton.
BRITISH COLUMBIA
February 2 FRIDAY6-9pm Opening Reception: Michael Slotis. KIMOTO GALLERY, 1525 W 6th Ave, Vancouver.7-9pm Opening Reception: Kyle Labinsky: Pillars of Smoke. XCHANGES GALLERY AND STUDIOS, 6E-2333 Government St, Victoria.February 3 SATURDAY1-4pm Opening Reception: Corrine Wolcoski: Rivers Inlet. MADRONA GALLERY, 606 View St, Victoria.2-4pm Opening Reception: Vladimir Kraynyk: Epiphanies. IAN TAN GALLERY, 2342 Granville St (new location), Vancouver.3-4:30pm Curator’s Tour: Innocence: West Coast Art and Artists Through a Visitor’s Eyes. LEGACY ART GALLERY (DOWNTOWN), 630 Yates St, Victoria.5-7pm Opening Reception: Angela Morgan Solo Exhibition. ADELE CAMPBELL GALLERY, 109-4090 Whistler Way, Whistler.February 8 THURSDAY7pm Opening Reception: Constructed Abstraction. DEER LAKE GALLERY, 6584 Deer Lake Ave, Burnaby.7-9pm Opening Reception: 19th Birthday Party Installation. CITYSCAPE COMMUNITY ART SPACE, 335 Lonsdale Ave, North Vancouver.February 10 SATURDAY2pm Panel Discussion: Thomas Kakinuma in Context. WEST VANCOUVER MUSEUM, 680 17th St, West Vancouver.5-7pm Opening Reception: Laura Harris Solo Exhibition. ADELE CAMPBELL GALLERY, 109-4090 Whistler Way, Whistler.February 14 WEDNESDAY7-9pm Opening Reception: Naufus Ramírez-Figueroa: Corazón del espantapájaros (Heart of the Scarecrow). AUDAIN GALLERY, SFU Goldcorp Centre for the Arts, 149 W Hastings St, Vancouver.February 17 SATURDAY10am-5pm Art Event: Heritage Day. CUMBERLAND MUSEUM & ARCHIVES, 2680 Dunsmuir Avenue, Cumberland.2-4pm Opening Reception: Canada West Illustrators Group Show. CUMBERLAND MUSEUM & ARCHIVES, CityScape: District Library Gallery, 1277 Lynn Valley Rd., North Vancouver.February 21 WEDNESDAY7-9pm Opening Reception: Naufus Ramíres-Figueroa: The Corpus Cycle. GRUNT GALERY, 116-350 E 2nd Ave, Vancouver.February 24 SATURDAY1-3pm Artist’s Reception: Donna Hitchens (Donya): Feelings of Colour. O’CONNOR GROUP ART GALLERY, Chilliwack Cultural Centre, 9201 Corbould Street, Chilliwack.February 27 TUESDAY7pm Art Event: 30th Anniversary Celebration Concert. THE OLD SCHOOL HOUSE ARTS CENTRE, 122 Fern Rd W, Qualicum Beach.March 1 THURSDAY4:30-7:30pm Opening Reception: Alex Wang: Lifelines. ADELE CAMPBELL GALLERY, 109-4090 Whistler Way, Whistler.
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March 2 FRIDAY6-9pm Opening Reception: Revisioned by Yorke Graham. KIMOTO GALLERY, 1525 W 6th Ave, Vancouver.7-9pm Opening Reception: Clare Thomas: My Mothers House. XCHANGES GALLERY AND STUDIOS, 6E-2333 Government St, Victoria.March 3 SATURDAY2-4pm Opening Reception: Chaki. GALLERY JONES,1-258 E 1st Ave, Vancouver.3:30pm Artist’s Talk: Alex Wang: Lifelines. AMEILA DOUGLAS GALLERY, Douglas College, 700 Royal Ave, New Westminster.5-8pm Reception: Fang Tong’s Photography Workshop. VANCOUVER LIPONT ART CENTRE, 4211 No. 3 Rd, Richmond.March 7 WEDNESDAY6-8pm Opening Reception: Works by Heather MacNeil and Lan Yao. THE GALLERY AT THE CULTCH, 1895 Venables St, Vancouver.March 8 THURSDAY6-8pm Opening Reception: Sean Caulfi eld: Active Workings. VERNON PUBLIC ART GALLERY, 3228 31st Ave, Vernon.7-9pm Opening Reception: She. We. They: The Women Show. TOUCHSTONES NELSON MUSEUM OF ART AND HISTORY, 502 Vernon St, Nelson.March 9 FRIDAY7-9pm Opening Reception: 802.11: Sound Installation by Dave Reidstra. ARC.HIVE GALLERY, 2516 Bridge St, Victoria.March 10 SATURDAY3-5pm Opening Reception: Lone Tratt: Under the Microscope. DUNDARAVE PRINT WORKSHOP + GALLERY,1640 Johnston St., Granville Island, Vancouver.10am-5pm Art Event: North Shore Art Crawl 2018 - see nvartscouncil.ca. for info. VARIOUS LOCATIONS, North Vancouver.March 11 SUNDAY10am-5pm Art Event: North Shore Art Crawl 2018 - see nvartscouncil.ca. for info. VARIOUS LOCATIONS, North Vancouver.March 15 THURSDAY7-9pm Opening Reception: Photobase. CITYSCAPE COMMUNITY ART SPACE, 335 Lonsdale Ave, North Vancouver.7-9pm Poetry/Art Event: Ava Lee Millman Fisher: I See Music. Host: Fran Bourassa. SIDNEY AND GERTRUDE ZACK GALLERY, Jewish Community Centre of Greater Vancouver, 950 West 41st Ave, Vancouver.March 17 SATURDAY5-7pm Opening Reception: Susie Cipolla Solo Exhibition. ADELE CAMPBELL GALLERY, 109-4090 Whistler Way, Whistler.5-8pm Reception: Fang Tong’s Photography Workshop. VANCOUVER LIPONT ART CENTRE, 4211 No. 3 Rd, Richmond.7pm Opening Reception: Luminescence III. DEER LAKE GALLERY, 6584 Deer Lake Ave, Burnaby.March 20 TUESDAY7-9pm Opening Reception: Victoria Sketch Club: Show and Sale. GLENLYON NORFOLK SCHOOL, 1701 Beach Drive, Victoria.
OREGON
February 1 THURSDAY5-8pm Opening Reception: Elizabeth Malaska: Heavenly Bodies AND G. Lewis Clevenger: Reclaiming My Time AND Robert Yoder: Club Number. RUSSO LEE GALLERY, 805 NW 21st Ave, Portland.February 10 SATURDAY11am Artist’s Talk: Elizabeth Malaska: Heavenly Bodies. RUSSO LEE GALLERY, 805 NW 21st Ave, Portland.5-8pm Artists’ Reception and Art Walk: Corey Arnold: Aleutian Dreams. IMOGEN GALLERY, 240 11th St, AstoriaMarch 1 THURSDAY5-8pm Opening Reception: Fay Jones, Dan Gluibizzi & Liz Tran. RUSSO LEE GALLERY, 805 NW 21st Ave, Portland.March 10 SATURDAY1-5pm Art Event: Savor Cannon Beach Wine Walk. WHITE BIRD, 251 N Hemlock St, Cannon Beach.5-8pm Artists’ Reception and Art Walk: Jill Mayberg and Kim Murton: Sea Stories. IMOGEN GALLERY, 240 11th St, AstoriaMarch 17 SATURDAY6-9pm Opening Reception: Sondra Perry. DISJECTA CONTEMPORARY ART CENTER, 8371 N Interstate Ave, Portland.
WASHINGTON
February 1 THURSDAY6-8pm Opening Reception: Works on Paper. GALLERY IMA, 123 S Jackson St, Seattle.February 2 FRIDAY6-9pm Opening Reception: Allied Arts Annual Member’s Show. ALLIED ARTS OF WHATCOM COUNTY, 1418 Cornwall Ave, Bellingham.February 10 SATURDAY1-2pm Artist’s Talk: Stephanie Hargrave: Obeisance/Derision. SHIFT GALLERY, 312 S Washington St, Seattle.February 15 THURSDAY5:30pm Opening Reception: Puyallup People: First on the Waterway. FOSS WATERWAY SEAPORT, 705 Dock St, Tacoma.February 24 SATURDAY5-7pm Opening Reception: Unrestricted: an Exploration of Artist Books. PORT ANGELES FINE ARTS CENTER, 1203 E Lauridsen Blvd, Port Angeles.March 1 THURSDAY6-8pm Opening Reception: Jacqueline Barnett: Conversation. GALLERY IMA, 123 S Jackson St, Seattle.March 24 SATURDAY3pm Artist’s Talk: Katie Creyts: Wilderland. MUSEUM OF NORTHWEST ART, 121 First St, La Conner.
B A U - X I G A L L E R Y
M A R C H 3 - 1 7, 2 0 1 8
J A M I E E V R A R D
Awake and Dreaming, oil on canvas, 62 x 62 inches
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