-- Advertisement --

-- Advertisement --

Canadian Art

Canadian Art Foundation New Contemporaries

Canadian Art Foundation New Contemporaries

The Canadian Art Foundation invites you to join the New Contemporaries, our exciting Toronto-based patron group for young professionals. Co-chaired by Jennen Phelan, Pamela Quiroga, Tatiana Read and Emily Thring, the New Contemporaries promotes and creates access to our vibrant visual art community through specially designed programs and events where members meet and mingle with art-world personalities.

Members will have the opportunity to directly engage with artists, critics, curators, collectors and leading art-world figures through exclusive programs designed to deepen an understanding of contemporary art.

Contributions from the New Contemporaries directly support the work of the Canadian Art Foundation, a charitable organization that fosters and supports the visual arts in Canada. The foundation unites art, ideas and people from coast to coast through a diverse arrangement of national and international educational programs.

Canadian Art New Contemporaries Privileges

• private tours through artist studios
• visits to private art collections
• intimate tours of commercial art galleries
• VIP tours of art fairs
• specially designed behind-the-scenes tours of selected art venues
• invites to Canadian Art magazine launches and talks
• updates about and invitations to Canadian Art events and programs throughout the year
• a subscription to Canadian Art magazine
• a tax receipt for the maximum amount allowable for your charitable donation

Individual Membership $235
($175 tax receipt)

Dual Membership (2 people residing at the same address) $400
($340 tax receipt)

For more information, please email info@canadianart.ca, phone (416) 368-8854 ext.101 or visit canadianart.ca/newcontemporaries.


ANNOUNCEMENTS

LOOKING BACK

 

FOUNDATION NEWS

More Foundation news

ONLINE

  • Jon Rafman: Mapping Google

    Jon Rafman’s work enjoys a deservedly high profile at this year’s Contact Festival. As Saelan Twerdy observes in this review, Rafman’s stunning, and often funny, Google Street View scenes demonstrate how the Internet is making everything public, from information to intimacy.

  • Spring Auctions: Going Once, Going Twice…

    The auction record for contemporary Canadian art was broken earlier this month in New York with Christie’s $3.6 million sale of a Jeff Wall photograph. This week, Canada’s top houses head into their spring sales hoping to break more records.

  • Keren Cytter: Video Virtuoso

    “Based on a True Story” in Oakville boasts the largest North American survey to date of Keren Cytter, the Tel Aviv–born artist known as one of today’s most intriguing video practitioners. Mariam Nader reviews, finding greatest hits and unexpected delights.

  • Sovereign Acts: Painful Histories, Terrific Performances

    The history of indigenous people performing for colonial audiences inspires "Sovereign Acts,” a current Toronto group show. As Max Mosher writes, the show—featuring Lori Blondeau, Adrian Stimson and others—is both campy and contemplative.

  • Dil Hildebrand: In the Green Room

    Dil Hildebrand is one brave painter. In his new show “Back to the Drawing Board (Reprise),” he stares down the old adage that no one wants to look at a green painting, let alone buy one. There's not just one green painting here—there's a room of them.

More Online

- Advertisements -



- Advertisements -
Report a problem