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Canadian Art

Features

  • Features17.03.2011

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    Myfanwy MacLeod: Big Birds

    Horror films, slapstick comedy and folk tales converge in the work of Myfanwy MacLeod, whose monumental The Birds sculpture for Vancouver's Olympic Plaza is explored in Danielle Egan's cover story from our Spring 2011 Issue.
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  • Features17.03.2011

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    Julian Schnabel: Eye of the Storm

    Bombastic American art star Julian Schnabel came to Toronto last fall for the premiere of his new film Miral at the Toronto International Film Festival, and the opening of "Julian Schnabel: Art and Film" at the Art Gallery of Ontario. In this feature from our Spring 2011 issue, writer Daniel Baird visits Schnabel at his summer home in Montauk, Long Island, right before his Canadian landing.
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  • Features17.03.2011

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    Brian Jungen: Work in Progress

    Artist Brian Jungen, best known for his transformation of contemporary objects into Aboriginal motifs, has seen great success over the past decade. In this feature from our Spring 2011 issue, critic Sarah Milroy talks with the artist of his new work, and his longstanding ties with the reserve at Doig River First Nation north of Fort St. John, B.C.
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  • FeaturesWinter 2010/11

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    Josée Drouin-Brisebois: Venice Bound

    This article from the winter 2010/11 issue of Canadian Art provides a glimpse of National Gallery of Canada senior curator of contemporary art Josée Drouin-Brisebois as she prepares to introduce Steven Shearer to the 2011 Venice Biennale.
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  • FeaturesWinter 2010

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    DHC/ART: FLOW CHART

    Located in Old Montreal, DHC/ART is an exhibition space that operates admission-free and without public funding. "What characterizes all of the presentations we’ve done is a sense of engagement with the world at large," says the institution's curator John Zeppetelli.
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  • Features24.02.2011

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    Dana Claxton: From a Whisper to a Scream

    First Nations artist Dana Claxton had a great-grandmother who walked alongside Sitting Bull, and as a creator, curator and educator she’s made great strides addressing such overlooked histories. Find out more in this winter-issue feature by Lynne Bell.
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  • Features17.02.2011

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    Landon Mackenzie: The Centre of the World

    Art, artist and art school intertwine in the recent work of Landon Mackenzie, an energetic painter and influential instructor at Emily Carr. In this feature from our winter issue, critic Robin Laurence explores the webs of connections in Mackenzie’s practice.
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  • Features10.02.2011

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    Mowry Baden: The Great One

    With more than 30 years in the classroom, sculptor Mowry Baden is a teacher’s teacher. In this feature from our winter issue, author Ann Ireland reveals some of Baden’s top teachable moments, from childhood to retirement and beyond.
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  • Features03.02.2011

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    John Kissick: Painter, Thinker, Scribe

    He paints. He writes. He teaches. He administers. John Kissick is the busiest person critic Pete Smith has ever met. Now, Smith takes a closer look at Kissick (his past professor and “Guelph Mafia” don) in a feature from the Winter issue of Canadian Art.
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  • Features27.01.2011

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    Rita McKeough: Subversive at Work

    For 30 years, award-winning artist Rita McKeough has been an energetic creator and influential teacher who forgoes separating art and life. Discover why in Diana Sherlock’s in-depth feature from the current issue of Canadian Art.
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  • Features09.12.2010

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    Thick as a Brick

    The Endless Art of Calgary’s Eric Cameron
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  • Features09.12.2010

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    Northern Light

    Charles Stankievech shapes his Ghost Rockets World Tour from Dawson City
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  • Features09.12.2010

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    Old School, Cool School

    Heather Nicol finds the future on Shaw Street
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  • FeaturesFall 2010

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    Edward Burtynsky: Deepwater Blues

    Edward Burtynsky documents America's greatest ecological disaster in this feature from the fall 2010 print issue of Canadian Art.
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  • FeaturesFall 2010

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    Jayce Salloum: Reclamation Artist

    Jayce Salloum's archival art gives voice to the lost and forgotten.
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FOUNDATION NEWS

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ONLINE

  • Arnaud Maggs: Winner of the $50,000 Scotiabank Photography Award

    The 85-year-old artist Arnaud Maggs nudged out Fred Herzog and Alain Paiement as winner of the second annual Scotiabank Photography Award, announced last night in Toronto. This $50,000 win follows the opening of a major Maggs survey at the National Gallery of Canada.

  • Public: Big Ambitions

    As one of the primary exhibitions for Contact 2012, “Public: Collective Identity | Occupied Spaces” is ambitious. Charlene K. Lau observes that the two-venue show mirrors the fractures of contemporary life: public and private, visible and invisible, place and non-place.

  • Abbas Akhavan: Up, Down and In-Between

    In this review, writer and artist Joni Murphy considers Abbas Akhavan’s current solo show in Montreal, which activates a variety of themes—war and art, destruction and nation building, human and animal—with a distinctively light touch.

  • Luke Painter: The Ornamentalist

    Melding William Morris-style ornamentation with more contemporary concerns, artist Luke Painter detours around dry academicism for something more vibrant and visceral. Mariam Nader reviews his current Toronto show at LE Gallery, finding depth in decoration.

  • Frieze New York: Taking it Outside

    Frieze opened its first New York edition last week with some surprising highlights: sculptures that were free for public viewing outside the big commercial tent. Canadian Art art director Barbara Solowan was there, and brought back this slideshow.

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