Blog

  • Jordan Clarke:“Something In-between”

    September 6 –  25, 2011
    Opening: Thursday, September 8, 7 – 9 pm,
    HANG MAN GALLERY
    756 Queen Street East (at Broadview Avenue)
    Toronto, ON M4M 1H4
    T: 416-465-0302
    hangmangallery@gmail.com
    www.ArtistsNetwork.ca.
    Hours: Tues to Sun 12 – 5 pm

    The Hang Man Gallery is proud to Announce “Something In-between”, Jordan Clarke’s self-portraiture series exploring her mixed-race identity as both a physical and a psychological state.
    Her paintings explore a biracial woman’s 21st Century perspective about constant pressures to assume predetermined racial and gender roles created by society.

    “My art is both a reflection of and a reaction to my society.  Through the act of painting, I aim to create striking pieces of art that provoke debate, thought, and emotion. Painting has always been the most natural way for me to express myself ”. Jordan Clarke

    Forecasted is Toronto’s majority population to be more multicultural and diverse, “Something In-between” is sure to stir heated issues and debate about identity and race this fall.

    About the Hang Man Gallery
    The Hang Man Gallery, an Artists’ Network initiative, is a venue where artists from all stages of their career can showcase their struggles with the gritty realities of contemporary life.

  • Artur Zmijewski: Them

     

    Artur Zmijewski, Them, 2007. NGC Collection. Courtesy the artist, Galerie Peter Kilchmann, Zurich, Foksal Gallery Foundation, Warsaw

    September 9 – October 30, 2011
    Opening: Friday, September 9, 8:00 – 11:00 pm
    MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY CANADIAN ART
    Media / Retail Space
    925 Queen Street West,
    Toronto,ON M6J 1G8
    T: 416-395-0067
    www.mocca.ca
    Hours: Tues – Sun 11-6

     Organized by the Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art and the National Gallery of Canada

    Polish artist Artur Zmijewski’s powerful video Them (2007), a highlight of Documenta 12 in Kassel, Germany, in 2007, documents the results of a social experiment bringing together four different groups within Polish society. As with many of Zmijewski’s projects, Them engages directly with dogma and prejudice to reveal profound insights into human behaviour and relationships.

  • Toronto International Film Festival’s Future Projections Programme

     
    September 9,  – September 18, 2011
    Opening: Friday, September 9, 8:00 – 11:00 pm
    MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY CANADIAN ART
    Project  Space
    925 Queen Street West,
    Toronto,ON M6J 1G8
    T: 416-395-0067
    www.mocca.ca
    Hours: Tues – Sun 11-6

    Presented in collaboration with the Toronto International Film Festival’s Future Projections Programme

    Cinema meets the visual arts with moving-image projects throughout the city of Toronto in TIFF’s Future Projections Programme. MOCCA has been a proud partner with TIFF since the inception of the Future Projections Programme in 2007.

     

  • ¡Patria o Libertad!

    ANTUAN

    September 9 – October 30, 2011
    Opening: Friday, September 9, 8:00 – 11:00 pm
    MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY CANADIAN ART
    Main Space
    925 Queen Street West,
    Toronto,ON M6J 1G8
    T: 416-395-0067
    www.mocca.ca
    Hours: Tues – Sun 11-6

    On Patriotism, Immigration and Populism
    Curated by Paco Barragán

    Adel Abidin, ANTUAN, Maja Bajevic, Marc Bijl, Alexander Apóstol, Iván Candeo, Emilio Chapela, DEMOCRACIA, Jen DeNike, Nezaket Ekici, Karlo Ibarra, Kaoru Katayama, Elena Kovylina, Carlos Motta, Benny Nemerofsky Ramsay & Pascal Lièvre, Johanna Reich, Krisdy Shindler, Shahzia Sikander, Santiago Sierra, José Angel Toirac, Katri Walker 

    As a consequence of immigration, globalisation and economic recession, patriotism is on the rise around the world. How we deal with love of country and nationalism is an important challenge of our time. ¡Patria o Libertad! presents video works by 22 international artists, all investigating the diverse forms that patriotism embodies.

  • Altered Reality – a group show by Artists’ Network members.

    August 23 – September 4, 2011
    Opening: Thursday, August 25, 7-9 pm,
    HANG MAN GALLERY
    756 Queen Street East (at Broadview Avenue)
    Toronto, ON M4M 1H4
    T: 416-465-0302
    hangmangallery@gmail.com
    www.ArtistsNetwork.ca.
    Hours: Tues to Sun 12 – 5 pm

    Artists interpret the realities that surround them, attempting to convey these concepts, struggles, and stories to their audience through their chosen medium. These interpretations can take the form of the direct through the techniques in Realism of Expressionism, or they can play with emotions and ideas through the altered realities of Cubism, Surrealism, and Abstract or Non-Objective art.

    We challenged member artists to interpret their own altered realities using their chosen medium – photography, mixed media, painting, sculpture, and other fine art – and submit their best abstract interpretations on the theme.

    About the Hang Man Gallery
    The Hang Man Gallery, an Artists’ Network initiative, is a venue where artists from all stages of their career can showcase their struggles with the gritty realities of contemporary life.

  • Courvoisier Artist Collective Exhibition and Urban Showcase for Local Talent

    The Bar with Saba Askary’s Three Thousand Years on the right

    Rebecca Fair of PraxisPR, one of the event planners.

    Camilla Singh, one of the show curators. On the wall, Katie Prettie: Heaven knows (No Need To Fear) 2

     One of the show’s curators/judging panelists Marc Audette

    Erik Jerezano in front of his work: An Icon of this Industry, First Place
    Hyein Lee in front of her work: In Bruges, Second Place

    Mark Laliberte in front of his work: Bat Rainbow, Third Place

    Pat Stanley and her work:Stratigraphic Plate 1

    Eric Gold in front of his work: Monkey 11

    ReMo (Remus Moldovan): Caravaggio’s Brain

    The Courvoisier Brand Team alongside their agency partners, including PraxisPR, Matchstick, Therefore, Starcom and Strano & Pettigrew

    The crowd with dArt International publisher Steve Rockwell on righ side

    Journalist Jesse Ship from TORO Magazine

    Winner Justin Broadbent and friends

    King and Spadina winner

    Adelaide and Spadina winner

    Photo: Zach Slootsky

  • Sam Mogelonsky: Wish you were here

    August 31st – September 24th, 2011
    Opening: Thursday, September 8, 6 – 9pm
    THE RED HEAD GALLERY
    401 Richmond St. W., Suite 115.
    Toronto, ON M5V 3A8
    T:  416 504-5654.
    Email: art@redheadgallery.org.
    www.redheadgallery.org.
    Hours: Wed – Sa. 12 – 5 pm.

    The Red Head Gallery is pleased to present Wish you were here, the first solo show by emerging Canadian artist Samantha Mogelonsky.

    By developing her own form of naïve sculptural language, Mogelonsky constructs environments to transport the viewer into an imaginary space, outside and beyond the everyday. These humorous and sinister sculptural forms seek to investigate storytelling and repetition with the viewer becoming both participant and observer of an invented narrative: where the heroically crafted and time-consuming elements coexist.
     
    Drawing conceptual influence from Utopian literature, theories, and tall-tales, and Susan Stewart’s ‘On Longing’, she will present sculptural ‘island’ forms, thereby building an imaginary ‘little world’ for the viewer to experience. These islands retain the so-called child-like qualities of construction, but reflect the intricate details of her practice and merge the ‘made’ with found kitsch objects.


    The exhibition will also include neon signage, resin castings, postcards and trinkets from this imaginary place. Also in the space is a bronze cast of a typewriter that appears as if it has magically melted, which speaks to the changes in narrative perception and the relationship of storytelling to the overall narrative.
     
    Mogelonsky plays with the vernacular of travel, while creating largely desolate, lonely and haunting images, thereby evoking a tension between the expected present and the uncertain future. For more information, please visit her website at www.sammogelonsky.com

    The artist acknowledges the support of the Ontario Arts Council. The Ontario Arts Council is an agency of the Government of Ontario. Sam also thanks Fifth Leg, from Treasury Wine Estates, LMA Communications Inc and Maximum Graphics for their support of the exhibition.

  • Istvan Kantor: END OF SUMMER PANIC

     Saturday, August 27 · 2:00pm – 6:00pm
    ANTIX – Centre for Art Crime and Neoism
    276 Crawford Street, Toronto
    through drive way towards garage
    www.istvankantor.com
    http://home.interlog.com/~amen/
    http://www.hungarianpresence.ca/Culture/Media/kantor-215.cfm

    Special feature: 50 brand new, shrink wrapped, MONTY CANTSIN “Born Again In Flames” vinyl, 1987, Maldoror Records, NYC, 10buxeach!

    Come and celebrate the end of the summer with mindblowing ideas at the Temple of Desperadoes and learn more about the Diabolic Personalia and Secret Archives of Istvan Kantor / Istvan Kantor’s ANTIX Depot is Istvan Kantor’s storage space and summer gallery, archive of Kantor’s life and crimes, a meeting place for secret conversations, future projects, conspiracy plans, also amazing deals on bloody canvases and many other beautiful Neoist Monty Cantsin artifacts! It is “the Vatican of Neoism”, the secret emergency exit to Neoist eternity… an archive of over three decades of works, from mail-art to machinery, anti-drawings, re-mixed-media paintings, stolen information, broken sculptures, hypersex-manifestos, flaming banners, burned flags, 1001 broken irons, … a spot for revolutionary ideas, conspiratorial gatherings, great deals, mind blowing conversations with Neoist Genii / mostly every saturdayday aft from 2pm to 6pm/ with special invited guests /Come with a juice or beer, bring your friends, look around, sit down, have a great afternoon… while the Rentagon is out on vacation, we R right into revolution!

    Istvan Kantor’s artistic practice incorporates robotic sculpture, video, performance, mixed-media installation, painting, sound, and various other action-based social-mediums like the open-pop-star movement of Monty Cantsin and the world wide network of Neoism. Neoism is a transmission interface and revolving platform to gain public support and media attention for its users.
    Kantor employs all his skills and talents to constantly surprise and fascinate. “I swear to God, I’ll never make any boring art!” he declares with bold determination, irony and wit, holding up a picketing sign.
    His main interest lies in creating work that establishes a discussion within and around the conflicting territories of institutional authority and cultural gentrification. In this regard Kantor’s work investigates the revolutionary and scientific aspects of artistic practices that attempt to surpass the conventional models of creative experience.
    Istvan Kantor is Hungarian-born, Toronto-based artist. Recent and upcoming solo exhibitions include: Monty Cantsin Was Here, Jogja National Museum, Yogyakarta, Indonesia, febr/2011; Made in Estonia, installation, Tallinn, may/2011; Selected works, St.Istvan Museum, Szekesfehervar, Hungary, oct/nov 2011 Upcoming group exhibitions include: Interakcje Festival, Piotrkow, Poland, may/2011; WRO Biennale, Wroclaw, Poland, may/2011

    Istvan Kantor aka Monty Cantsin is also known as a noise/music artist, electro-instrumentalist and singer of the Toronto based Red Armband. He has recorded and released over a dozen albums of songs and noise works since the early 80s.

  • Abstract Expressionist New York

    by Emese Krunák-Hajagos

    Abstract Expressionist New York
    Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, May 28 – September 4, 2011

         Abstract Expressionist New York considered a “killer” exhibition in Toronto showing the most important American art works of the 20th century. The exhibition is an open book of modern art history. It was exhibited first in New York titled The Big Picture (Museum of Modern Art, New York, October 3, 2010 – April 25, 2011) and is really a great bonus for Toronto to host a show at this scale and artistic importance in the summer.

        Abstract Expressionism was the first specifically American movement to achieve worldwide recognition. In the late 1930s and through World War II many leading painters fled the terrors of Nazism in Europe and sought refuge in the United States. Among them were Hans Hoffman, who became a pioneer and teacher of abstraction and Archile Gorky, the “godfather” of the movement. While the war was raging in Europe, New York City was a safe haven. Exiled artists and dealers filled the city. Peggy Guggenheim opened her gallery The Art of This Century, Leo Castelli became an art dealer and local artists all benefitted. At the end of the war, Europe was in ruins and New York replaced Paris as the centre of the art world. The United States came out of the war victorious and its economy was stronger than ever. Some kind of hero worship was in the air and the Americans were ready to develop their national identity even further and show their importance to the world. A new generation of American artists began to emerge and soon they would be ready to dominate the world stage. They were called the New York School or the Abstract Expressionists, a new term the art critic Robert Coates used to describe Hofmann’s works in 1946. All the artists felt an urgency to depict, look at, think about and make art of their time. As Jackson Pollock said, “It seems to me that the modern painter cannot express this age, the airplane, the atom bomb, the radio, in the old forms of the Renaissance or of any other past culture. Each age finds its own techniques.”

    Artist Jackson Pollock working in his studio. Photo by Martha Holmes/Time Life Pictures/Getty images

         “We agree only to disagree”could be the unwritten motto of this loose grouping of artists according to the art historian Irving Sandler. As the Abstract Expressionists never formed a unified group, their diversity was always visible. In the 1940s, the two leading critics of Abstract Expressionism, Clement Greenberg and Harold Rosenberg had different theories about the meaning, function and style of modern art that created an ongoing debate. Greenberg defined painting by its flatness, so it had to be purified of all illusionistic and sculptural effects such as deepness and plasticity. Subject matter also had to be eliminated. He urged the artists to develop “a bland, large, balanced, Apollonian art” aiming for “an intense detachment” from everything present—a rather minimalist approach. Greenberg advocated for Jackson Pollock and the Color field painters like Mark Rothko, Barnett Newman, Adolf Gottlieb, Clyfford Still and Hans Hofmann. However artists had little sympathy for his formalist perspective, as Rothko wrote in a letter to the New York Times in 1943: “It is widely accepted notion among painters that it does not matter what one paints so long as it is well painted… There is not such a thing as good painting about nothing.” Harold Rosenberg was more interested in the political and social movements of the period and their influence on the artists. He spoke of the transformation of painting into an existential drama: “At a certain moment the canvas began to appear to one American painter after another as an arena in which to act. What was to go on the canvas was not a picture but an event.” Action painting is a term created to describe the works of Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning and Franz Kline. Then came the big moment when it was painting for just the sake of PAINT and the gesture on the canvas was liberation from political, aesthetic and moral values.

           Abstract Expressionism and MoMA came into being about the same time. In the 1940s director Alfred H. Barr, Jr. started to collect works from his artist friends; being there at the moment when their first exhibition opened; artist and curator building institutional and art history at the same time. As MoMA’s director Glenn Lowry said what made that time unique  “was a capacity of artists to engage with a cosmic quest, a spiritual quest to find meaning.” “A total commitment on the artists’ side” continued Ann Temkin – “painting was the only thing that mattered there was no separation between the self and the art work, that’s why the paintings feel like living things.”  The exhibited works in this show all came from MoMA’s collection curated by Ann Temkin. Her goal was finding the layers underneath the surface and show the artists’ works before they became “big”, documenting the whole artistic development not just the trophy pieces. The New York and Toronto exhibitions are differently installed and that somehow changes the outcome. There are less works in numbers in Toronto still the show is as strong, even more focused, since the most important, strongest pieces are here.

    Arshile Gorky (American, bornArshile Gorky (American, born Arshile Gorky (American, born Armenia. 1904-1948), Garden in Sochi; c. 194;3 Oil on canvas; 31 x 39″ (78.7 x 99 cm)The Museum of Modern Art. Acquired through the Lillie P. Bliss Bequest 492.1969 © 2010 The Arshile Gorky Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York Photo Credit: The Museum of Modern Art, Department of Imaging Services, Paige Knigh

         As we walk into a narrow corridor at the beginning of the show we see the early mythological works of William Baziotes (Dwarf, 1947) and Adolf Gottlieb.  Achile Gorky’s late works like Garden in Sochi (1938-40) refers to the artist’s past and the memories of it. His images are more delicate and more outlined then earlier in his carrier with a vibrant palette. His figures go through a methamorphosis and are becoming floral like creatures and even a composition like Agony (1947) seems almost happy.

    Willem de Kooning (American, born the Netherlands.1904-1997) Woman, I.; 1950-52; Oil on canvas; 6′ 3 7/8″ x x58″ (192.7×147.3 cm). The Museum of Modern Art. Purchase 478.19532010 The Willem de Kooning Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York Photo Credit: The Museum of Modern Art, Department of Imaging Services, John Wronn

        Willem de Kooning is represented by only three paintings hanging in the same small room; they were placed in three separate galleries in New York. It is even more visible here how he never applied himself to any style keeping his artistic freedom, switching between abstraction and figurativity. The famous Woman I, (1950), a strong figurative piece, is much disputed. Does it picture the scary, overwhelming aspect of female power over men or does it mirror male aggression toward women? The large figure of the woman with enormous breasts, big eyes and howling mouth is depicted by angry brush strokes while her clothes and the background are created by abstract patches of paint.

    Jackson Pollock (American, 1912-1956), The She-Wolf, 1943; Oil, gouache, and plaster on canvas41 7/8 x 67″ (106.4 x 170.2 cm) .The Museum of Modern Art. Purchaces2011 The Pollock-Krasner Foundation/Artists Right Society (ARS), New York:Photo credit: The Museum of Modern Art, Department of Imaging Services

     A large gallery is dedicated to Jackson Pollock’s paintings. His early canvases (Mask, 1941) remind us of Picasso and his first really original piece is The She-Wolf (1943) with its free-form abstraction. In 1947, Pollock described his painting process in detail: “I prefer to tack the unstretched canvas to the hard wall or the floor. I need a resistance of a hard surface. On the floor I am more at ease. I feel nearer, more a part of the painting, since this way I can walk around it, work from the sides and literally be in the painting.” Pollock used objects such as sticks, spatulas, knives, or vessels with which the paint could be dripped, poured or hurled on the canvas. He emphasized the automatism of his approach as a “pure harmony, an easy give and take” but also mentioned that after a “get acquainted period” with the painting he makes changes, and has no fear of destroying part of the composition since the painting has its own life and comes out well at the end. Full Fathom Five (1947) is a good example of this method. The weave of the top colour-layers veils a figure painted with lead paint. The objects worked into the picture such as buttons, keys, nails, cigarettes etc. are placed with reference to this hidden figure, you can see them at a close observation.

    Jackson Pollock (American, 1912-1956), Number 1A, 1948; 1948; Oil and enamel paint on canvas; 68″ x 8′ 8″ (172.7 x 264.2 cm). The Museum of Modern Art. Purchase ©2010 The Pollock- Krasner Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New YorkPhoto Credit: The Museum of Modern Art, Department of Imaging Services

        Pollock painted with his whole body, moving fast in a dance-like trance around the canvas, dripping or throwing paint sometimes straight from the can, then quickly touching it up, radiating a strong physical energy. His new painting method was a revelation to the New York art scene and in August, 1949 Life Magazine named him the greatest living painter in the United States. It was a hard responsibility to shoulder. In July 1950 Hans Namuth photographed and filmed him at work and his pictures created the mythic, sexually-charged image of “Jack the Dripper.” Pollock became a hero of mass media and someone called his drip-painting an  “apocalyptic wallpaper.” Pollock didn’t mean to create decor, still his “all over” method—covering the entire surface of the canvas and giving each part an equal importance (White Light, 1954)—became very influential for ornamental and decorative styles. The art critic Robert Hughes wrote that as his work was so influential, his image as a man was too. The image of a world famous painter, the Vincent van Gogh from Wyoming, dying at forty-four, drunk, with two girls in a big, expensive car, was elevated to symbolism as it is depicted in the actor and director Ed Harris’ movie: Pollock (2000).

         Mark Rothko is represented in a large gallery. Slow Swirl at Edge of Sea (1945), a surrealistic composition with two humanlike forms embraced in a swirling, floating, dancing happiness, depicted by soft grays and browns. In 1950 he started to paint his “multiforms,” his signature paintings. Rothko usually divided the canvas into three horizontal planes of bright, vibrant colours. He applied a thin layer of binder mixed with pigment onto the bare canvas, and then painted thinned oils onto this layer, then another layer, creating a dense mixture of overlapping colours and shapes which bleed into each other. His brushstrokes were light and very fast. A dramatic effect is created by the contrast of colours, radiating with inner energy (No.5/No.22, 1950).

    Mark Rothko (American, born Latvia. 1903-1970), No. 5/No. 22; 1950 (dated on reverse 1949); Oil on canvas; 9′ 9″ x 8′ 11 1/8″ (297 x 272 cm). The Museum of Modern Art. Gift of the artist.© 1998 Kate Rothko Prizel & Christopher Rothko / ArtistsRights Society (ARS), New York.Photo credit: The Museum of Modern Art, Department of Imaging Services

         As Rothko wrote, his paintings are “only expressing basic human emotions – tragedy, ecstasy, doom and so on… The people who weep before my pictures are having the same religious experience I had when I painted them.” There is really something religious in Rothko’s attempt to abandon everything to feelings and create an unworldly atmosphere in his paintings No.37 Slate Blue and Brown on Plum (1958) gives a feeling of deepness and almost invites you to step into the blue shape and disappear into another world. Rothko became famous, successful and rich, and ironically that deepened his depression. The luxurious New York Four Seasons Restaurants commission (1958), well depicted in the Broadway show Red, was a great painterly challenge and his personal undoing at the same time. He never delivered the 40 pieces he painted for them. In the 1960s his horizon darkened dramatically. He finished the 14 large, dark, blood-coloured canvases for the Rothko Chapel but committed suicide before they were installed in 1971.

          A gallery shows a few works of Barnett Newman starting with Onement, I (1952), his breakthrough painting. The surface of a monochromatic background is vertically divided in half by an orange band, a “zip,” as the artist later called it. Newman explained his zip motive in his essay The First Man Was an Artist, as the stick the aboriginal man used to draw a line in the mud.  Newman suggested that his zip should be taken as a metaphor for this primal and tragic gesture of art. There is a photograph by Robert Frank showing a New York street with a white line in the middle (Street Line, New York, 1951); an interesting example of how a similar motive surfaces with different meanings in different artists’ works.

    Franz Kline (American, 1910-1962), Chief,1950; Oil on canvas; 58 3/8″ x 6′ 1 1/2″ (148.3 x 186.7 cm). The Museum of Modern Art. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. David M. Solinger. © 2010 The Franz Kline Estate / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Photo credit: The Museum of Modern Art, Department of Imaging Services, John Wronn

         There are excellent pieces from Clyfford Still, Franz Kline and Robert Motherwell representing a more simplified, but not simple, gestural painting style which influenced the future artist generation greatly. Refreshing with its humour Isamu Noguchi’s Even the Centipede, (1957) stoneware sculpture with its long body and many legs created of plates, kettles and various pots. Abstract Expressionism  involved many female artists as well. Lee Krasner greatest paintings were created after her husband Pollock’s death, Gaea, 1966, among them with its dynamic red and black waves. On Joan Mitchell’s large canvas titled Ladybug, 1957 fast, free-swinging brushstrokes try to follow the color illusion created by the fly of the bug.

    Joan Mitchell (American, 1925-1992). Ladybug, 1957; Oil on canvas;6′ 5 7/8″ x 9′ (197.9 x 274 cm). The Museum of Modern Art. Purchase © Estate of Joan Mitchell.Photo credit: The Museum of Modern Art, Department of Imaging Services, Thomas Griesel

         In the last room, the Canadian born Philip Guston begun with pure painterly gestures, to start and finish his canvases in one session, not to stop, not to look at it, just stay close to it and paint, which produced one of the happiest painting I’ve ever seen (Painting, 1954) with its deep, energetic, pink strokes. Later he decided to depart from abstractionism in order to tell stories in cartoonlike compositions (Edge of town, 1969) and his painting is the last work in this amazing show.  

     

     

  • LAURA PETURSON: Possible Outcome

    September 7 – October 8, 2011
    Opening  and our First Anniversary! *let them eat cake*: Sat, Sept 10, 2 – 4pm
    TELEPHONE BOOTH GALLERY
    3148 Dundas Street West
    Toronto, Ontario M6P 2A1
    (The Junction, Dundas at St. John’s Rd.)
    T: 647.270.7903
    E: sharlene@telephoneboothgallery.ca 
    www.telephoneboothgallery.ca
    Hours: Tues by appt., Wed and Sat 11-6, Thurs and Fri 11-7

    SNEAK PEEK AT IMAGES IN EXHIBITION  (more to come)

    Possible Outcome is a body of work comprised of prints created using screenprint, linocut, collograph and lithographic processes.  Influenced stylistically by fin-de-siècle art and literature, and by the domestic workings of her own family, Laura Peturson’s prints present a vision of childhood based in both reality and fiction.  These works capture and examine the expectations and sentiments placed upon very young girls. Each print depicts a child or children engaged in introspective play, often with objects that are commonly viewed as feminine.  In selected prints, the girls have been inserted compositionally into reproductions of 18th-century paintings.  A toddler reads in front of a Jacques Louis David reproduction taped to the wall of her nursery.  A little girl holds a shadow puppet as she stands amongst Ingres reproductions littered across the floor.  These neoclassical paintings reference a heroic male ideal and present the girls with a differently gendered possibility from their surroundings.  In addition to the narrative aspect of the work, the prints deal with formal elements, such as pattern, colour and the tension between illusory space and a flat, silhouetted aesthetic. 

    Laura Peturson received her MFA from the New York Academy of Art, New York in 2005 and a BFA from York University, Toronto in 2002.  She lives and works in Callander, Ontario and is an Assistant Professor of Fine Art at Nipissing University, specializing in printmaking. 

     

    Working from a melding of memory and fantasy, Kasia Czarnota’s glass works are inspired by family relationships, childhood and the tiny but wondrous moments that make up a day in a young life. Kasia Czarnota is a sculptor concentrating primarily in the mediums of kiln cast and blown glass. She attended Sheridan College Institute’s Crafts and Design Glass Program and her sculptural practice involves image and object manipulation that play with glass’ various qualities, including granular delicacy on one level and unique transparency on the other. An award winning artist, Czarnota’s work was recently exhibited at the Cheongju International Craft Biennale in South Korea.