-- Advertisement --

                           

-- Advertisement --

Canadian Art

See It

David Askevold: Tributes and Two Hanks

Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, Halifax Mar 30 2008
David Askevold  <i>It's No Use Crying</i>  1972  Video still David Askevold It's No Use Crying 1972 Video still

David Askevold <i>It's No Use Crying</i> 1972 Video still

The Canadian art community suffered a great loss this January with the passing of Nova Scotia–based artist and teacher David Askevold. In the early 1970s, Askevold became a pioneer of conceptual video and photo art with a unique approach that collapsed formal narrative structures in favour of free-flowing image constructions unfolding in a synergy of visual motifs.

This pursuit of unexpected connections between image and meaning lent Askevold’s work a mystical, and at times overtly paranormal, quality. Take for instance his Muse Extracts, a photo-text installation of ghost-like self-portraits that was featured at Documenta in 1977, The Poltergeist, a collaborative photo project with Mike Kelley in 1979, or, more recently, Askevold’s performance Two Hanks, which summoned the disparate spirits of country music stars Hank Williams and Hank Snow. Other photo-text works—from the map-based Cultural Geographies series to his final set of digital “paintings” produced in 2007—are equally informed by complex ideas and visual structures that never lose a sense of playfulness.

Askevold was also a highly influential teacher at schools in Canada and the United States. In 1975, he was the popular choice to replace Bas Jan Ader (who had gone missing at sea) at the University of California and he was also a key figure in the 1970s post-minimal heyday at CalArts. As an instructor at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in the late 1960s and early 1970s, Askevold developed and led the legendary Projects Class that is still widely regarded as a radical innovation in contemporary art instruction.

Memorial exhibitions are in the works, and this Sunday sees the launch of the DVD David Askevold: A Retrospective. Organized by Halifax’s Centre for Art Tapes, the launch begins with a screening at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia and continues with a reception at the centre. (1723 Hollis St, Halifax NS)

This article was first published online on March 27, 2008.

RELATED STORIES

  • Carl Zimmerman

    Carl Zimmerman (a Hamilton, Ontario, native who lives in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia) makes photographs of imagined architectural spaces. He builds physical models, photographs them and then digitally manipulates the photographs, creating vast, impossible spaces.

  • Cross-Country

    Art professionals offer thoughts about Canada's largest city and art scene

  • The New Nature

    The skyscrapers of Toronto are built on glacial debris deposited east of the Niagara Escarpment some two million years ago, over a bed of lime shale that dates back another four hundred and fifty million years to the Silurian period. It is the end of day, the rush hour.

 

FOUNDATION NEWS

More Foundation news

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.

More Online

- Advertisements -



- Advertisements -
Report a problem