-- Advertisement --

-- Advertisement --

Canadian Art


Spring 2011

Thumbnail for cov_medium.jpg
Spring 2011
This Issue
Newsfront
  • What's happening from coast to coast

Faces
  • WANDA KOOP: FRIEND + FILM
    by Katherine Knight

Places
FEATURES
  • Big Birds
    Myfanwy MacLeod’s outsized public art project in Vancouver
    by Danielle Egan
  • Eye of the Storm
    Julian Schnabel weathers the fall season in Toronto
    by Daniel Baird
  • Work in Progress
    Brian Jungen bridges the divide between the Canadian North and South
    by Sarah Milroy
  • Le Grand Geste!
    The Automatistes' unsettled international fate
    by Roald Nasgaard
  • Darkroom Legacy
    In New York, Alison Rossiter makes a cameraless photography
    by Nancy Tousley
  • Handmade
    Luanne Martineau sets craft on a new trajectory
    by Noah Becker
Spotlight
  • Sponsored by The Fraser Elliott Foundation in memory of Betty Ann Elliott

  • The Nature of Culture
    Brendan Fernandes lives and explores transnational identity
    by Pandora Syperek
Agenda
  • A national and international roundup of the season’s best exhibitions

Readings
  • Recent art books and catalogues

Reviews
  • ELEANOR BOND
    by Amy Fung

  • POSITION AS DESIRED
    by Sally Frater

  • CHRIS KLINE
    by Anja Block

  • JENNIFER MURPHY
    by Bill Clarke

  • SARINDAR DHALIWAL
    by Cameron Skene

  • MIILES COLLYER
    Rosemary Heather

  • JAMELIE HASSAN
    by Sarah Mameni

  • EMILY VEY DUKE AND COOPER BATTERSBY
    by Sholem Krishtalka

Close up
  • “MAHARAJA” AND THE STAR OF INDIA
    by Janice Lindsay


 

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