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Canadian Art


Summer 2007

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Notebook
Features
  • Kitty Scott’s Serpentine Segue
    The former National Gallery of Canada curator lands at the heart of the thriving London art scene
    by Reesa Greenberg
  • Giardini Birdland
    The rising international art star David Altmejd creates a fantastical hybrid aviary inside the tree-harbouring Canadian Pavilion at the 52nd Venice Biennale
    by Christina Bagatavicius
  • Ed Pien: Drawing Hauntology
    Lost demons and other foreign guests make an eerie return in intimate textured-paper installations
    by Laiwan
  • Venetian Opera
    The Montreal-based artist Rafael Lozano-Hemmer represents Mexico in Venice with interactive, technology-based artworks and plans for a Gothic palace
    by Christine Redfern
Spotlight
  • Sponsored by The Fraser Elliott Foundation in memory of Betty Ann Elliott

  • Buffalo Boy at Burning Man
    The Saskatoon artist Adrian Stimson camps up history
    by Lynne Bell
Canadian Art International
In Review

 

FOUNDATION NEWS

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ONLINE

  • Will Munro: Ecstatic Legacies

    In 2010, at the age of 35, Toronto artist/DJ/promoter/activist Will Munro succumbed to brain cancer. Here, David Balzer reviews the first big survey of Munro’s work, which makes apparent how talented, prolific and perceptive this creator was.

  • Painting Canada: Artistry in the UK

    The Dulwich Picture Gallery’s recent Group of Seven show was one of the UK museum’s biggest hits ever, drawing 41,000 visitors. The attention was deserved, writes Sarah Milroy, as the exhibition offered new insights even to seasoned Canadian-art observers.

  • David Altmejd: In the Belly of the Beast

    The Occupy movement has galvanized the way we think about haves and have-nots. But where do artists fit in? As Joseph R. Wolin observes in this review of David Altmejd’s show at the Brant Foundation, context can be as powerful as content in determining the split.

  • A Stake in the Ground: When Language Wounds

    What happens to identity when our relationship to land and language is disrupted? This is a key question raised in “A Stake in the Ground,” an exhibition of works by 25 First Nations artists, curated by Nadia Myre, that’s currently at Montreal gallery Art Mûr.

  • Canadianartschool.ca: Tips for a Successful Winter Term

    Our education and careers site has just posted more stories and tips to help students achieve a great winter term. Highlights include a profile of internationally renowned fashion designer Jeremy Laing, a Q&A on grad schools and more.

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