F`d Up! - Art Gallery of Mississauga
Transcription
F`d Up! - Art Gallery of Mississauga
The AGM is Fibre’d Up as contemporary directions in fibre-based art create a radical vocabulary around material invention and sculptural ambitions. F’d Up! aims to explore the tension between these new directions that redefine the concept of “fibre art” based on examples of significant artists working in North America today. SWIPE scroll contents 2 Stuart Keeler F’D UP! 4 Kirsty Robertson ARTISTS Franco Arcieri, Claire Ashley, Amanda Browder, Lyn Carter, Kai Chan, Michelle Forsyth, Noelle Hamlyn & Colleen Snell, Hazel Meyer, Ed Pien, Judith Tinkl and Anne Wilson. This exhibition includes periodic and durational performances by Catalina Gonzalez, Sandra Poczobut and Johannes Zits. CURATED BY STUART KEELER Art Gallery of Mississauga F’ing Up Contemporary Art 6 Kendra Ainsworth Assembly/Abstraction 10 works 38 Artist Profiles Engage. Think. Inspire. F’D UP! This phrase opens the dialogue at the AGM. The Gallery connects with the people of Mississauga through the collection and presentation of relevant works from a range of periods and movements in Canadian art. Expressing multiple ideas and concepts, this visual art translates into meaningful cultural and social experiences for all audiences. The AGM employs innovative education, artist projects and other forms of dialogue to advance critical enquiry and community connection to the visual arts. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without prior written permission from the Art Gallery of Misisssauga. Copyright ©2013 by the Art Gallery of Mississauga All rights reserved. Art Gallery of Mississauga 300 City Centre Drive, Mississauga, Ontario L5B 3C1 artgalleryofmississauga.com Curator: Stuart Keeler Graphic Design: Zinzan Studio Project Coordinator: Jaclyn Qua-Hiansen Unless otherwise stated, photography by Janick Laurent. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Art Gallery of Mississauga, September 26 – November 9, 2013 Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication Essays by: Stuart Keeler, Kirsty Robertson, Kendra Ainsworth ISBN: 978-1-927595-04-6 1. Contemporary Canadian Art 2. Fibre Art 3. Sculpture I. Keeler, Stuart – II. Robertson, Kirsty – III. Ainsworth, Kendra – IV. Art Gallery of Mississauga. 300 City Centre Drive, Mississauga, Ontario L5B 3C1 artgalleryofmississauga.com Stuart Keeler Essay F’D UP! STUART KEELER 2 F’d Up! brings together significant works by 15 artists currently in the realm of contemporary material explorations who employ the skills and techniques of traditional craft or fibre. The debate of Fibre vs. Craft or Craft vs. Art is not the topic of interest. Rather, the work in this exhibition focuses upon fibre as a material study to convey conceptual rigour from the haptic to the hypnotic. What is “F’d up” is that an artist who works with thread, string, yarn or fabric is often equated with the backroom politics of the moniker “women’s work,” a gender-based derogatory term that precludes the possibility of male artists working with fibre. In line with that is the questionable assumption that fibre is a lesser sculptural medium for exploration or content in the realm of art. There is nothing wrong with “women’s work;” however the term excludes from the conversation important subjects being explored in the field of fibre-based work, such as notions of masculinity, identity, diaspora and global politics in addition to the queer crafting movement. In the late 1960s, the term “anti-form” meant the “disintegration” of traditional sculpture and art concepts, opening a new dialogue of aesthetic practices based on form. The exhibition F’d Up! aims to explore the tension between these new directions that redefine the concept of “fibre art” from examples of North American artists working today. Based upon experimentation, these contemporary works differentiate the protagonists from decades before, thereby illustrating how a new vocabulary is created as the result of a formative radical gesture. Harald Szeemann’s landmark exhibition, When Attitudes Become Form, continues to inform sculptural form and gesture; however when fibre, digital or craft technology and intuition are applied, the equation becomes “F’d Up! ” F’d Up! aims to evolve the discussion of artists’ conceptual intent alongside technique while simultaneously explore the slippage which begin to question materiality, both at the time a work of art was made, and subsequently as it ages and deteriorates. The exhibition expands upon the conversation between sculptural ambition and the multiple forms of fibre. The spirit of “anti-form” is present — forms that fall, drape, hang, tug and pull, and thereby alter our perception of the ground plane. In contrast to the traditional vein of sculpture and in line Stuart Keeler is the Director | Curator of the Art Gallery of Mississauga, as well as a writer and critic with broad international experience in curating, programming, writing about and commissioning contemporary artists, public art and socially based performance in the urban realm. Stuart’s research interests include contemporary art and its critical context and relation to communities; embodiment, diaspora issues and performativity; socially based art actions in gallery and community contexts with traditional use of fibre as material, objects are experienced rather than gazed upon. The image of a material investigation lingers within the vocabulary of fibre with abject use of colour, textural considerations and an intuitive sense in the work. We are reminded that artists make the rules, and that history will follow their vision – where labels and tropes of the past are allowed, if we let them – to see and experience a post-world that is indeed “F’d Up! ” in the best way. ● as well as cultural and artistic forms of sculptural practices and thinking. His previous roles include Curator and Director of Programmes, the AGM, Mississauga (2010 – 2012), Founding Director of Le Flash, Atlanta, GA (2007 – 2010), Artistic Director, Art 44|46 , Chicago in addition has founded and directed numerous artist projects and curatorial affiliations associated with festivals, museums, and contemporary art spaces in North America and the EU. Keeler has held several Professorships at School at the Art Institute of Chicago, Columbia College (Chicago) as well as currently teaches in the Sculpture Department at the Ontario College of Art and Design (Toronto). He has a BA in Art History from the University of London (UK), an MFA from The School at The Art institute of Chicago and is currently working on a Ph.D with an emphasis on Community Engagement and the Role of the Artist. 3 Kirsty Roberton Essay F’ing Up Contemporary Art: Fiber in the Gallery Kirsty Robertson 4 So many stereotypes circulate around textile-based art, ranging from the pervasively repeated idea that such art works do not belong in the gallery to gendered ideas that such art forms are pastime, hobby or, at the very least, the poor cousins of “real” art. A mis-interpretation for certain (after all, the canvas base of the world’s painted masterpieces hints at the secret textile history of most gallery and museum collections), the recent prevalence of works using textiles at all levels of the art world suggests a large number of contemporary artists working against stereotype. Perhaps it should not be surprising then, that as textiles find their way out of the shadows and into the front rooms of galleries and museums, they do so with an explosive, colourful, force. F’d Up! is a case in point. An exhibition dedicated to subverting the typical displays of textile art, F’d Up! features artists who draw on traditional techniques, and well-honed skills necessary in fibre work, but who use textiles for conceptually rigorous projects, highlighting queer and post-gender approaches, using new and old materials, and exploring questions of identity, globalization, embodiment, community and being. What results is a raucous cacophony of colour, an overwhelming, in your face expression of vibrant twenty-first century life told through textiles. Stitched, stuffed and glued, knitted, knotted, pinned and printed, piled and hung, the works in this exhibition refuse any typifying notion of what textile art should be, instead filling the space, billowing and folding out through the Art Gallery of Mississauga. The delicate handling of thread in Kai Chan’s Mirage, where silk threads hang from nails in the wall, swaying slowly in the breeze created by passersby, the light shining off the spider-web-like knots in Ed Pien’s Corridor, Lyn Carter’s graceful manipulation of silk-like fabric over a metal frame in Bouquet, or Anne Wil- son’s animated threads moving in stop-motion animation across the screen, contrasts with the heaviness of Franco Arcieri’s Astral Noise Costume, the weighted, giant stitches pushing the heavy garment/sculpture into the gallery floor. Traces of community participation are found in Amanda Browder’s Future Phenomena and Cascading Mississauga, the cascading fabrics showing a moment in time or what she calls a memory cloth made from fabric owned by Brooklyn residents, and sewn together in a map of a particular space and time. Meantime, the sound of the fan in Claire Ashley’s spray painted PVC covered canvas sculpture reminds us that the three-dimensionality of another tasteless hunk is ephemeral. As soon as the fan is turned off, the sculpture will deflate, fold, and return to its flexible fabric roots. Michelle Forsyth’s paintings and scraps from her husband’s shirts show the mysterious transformation of mass-produced items of clothing into individual objects, replete with the memories of their Kirsty Robertson is an Associate Professor of Contemporary Art and Museum Studies at Western University, Canada. Her research focuses on activism, visual culture, and changing economies. She has published widely on the topic and is currently finishing her book Tear Gas Epiphanies: New relationship together. Looking like a series of t-shirt tails pinned to the wall, Hazel Meyer’s ding-dong Wall (…s to the Ball) adds texture and form to the white gallery walls, while the space itself is occupied through a series of performances: Catalina Gonzalez’s knobbled, over-stuffed body-suit exploring the boundaries of the female body, Frog in Hand bringing a circus-like atmosphere to the gallery, while Johannes Zits and Sandra Poczobut play out the opposite, using textiles to bind, contain and physically connect bodies to the gallery walls. At the meeting point of sculpture and textiles, the works in F’d Up! actively involve the viewer. Fabric is stretched, both physically and metaphorically, such that the works in the exhibition quite literally move off the gallery walls, block viewers’ movement through the rooms, and demand recognition. What is F’d up here are expectations, of textile-art, of sculpture, and of the coming together of the two. ● Economies of Protest, Vision, and Culture in Canada. More recently, she has turned her attention to the study of wearable technologies, immersive environments, and the potential overlap(s) between textiles and technologies. She considers these issues within the framework of globalization, activ- ism, and creative economies. Her co-edited volume, Imagining Resistance: Visual Culture, and Activism in Canada, was released in 2011, and her tri-authored volume Putting IP in its Place: Rights Discourse, Creativity and the Everyday will be released by Oxford University Press in January 2014. 5 Kendra Ainsworth Essay Assembly/ Abstraction: Michelle Forsyth’s Kevin’s Shirts Kendra Ainsworth 6 Amidst the many large, arresting installation pieces in the Art Gallery of Mississauga’s recent exhibition F’d Up!, Michelle Forsyth’s works might seem dwarfed or unobtrusive. But the significance of her art in the context of this exhibition goes far beyond the relative small scale of the works themselves. Taken from a larger series recently exhibited at Auxiliary Projects in Brooklyn, Forsyth’s Kevin’s Shirts makes poignant, if potentially conflicting statements on both our global and personal realities; the work offers a commentary on how as a society we are increasingly out of touch with our physical surroundings, and yet speaks to how we interact, on a very intimate level, with the people and objects we encounter in our day to day lives. Much of the academic and theoretical content of F’d Up! turned an eye on the nature and history of fibre-based art and the connotations associated with the medium. Not only must artists and critics alike contend with the tendency toward categorical distinction between art and “craft,” with fibre-based practice being consigned to the latter group, but more specifically, they must also grapple with the commonly held, if simplistic and potentially apocryphal association of work with fibre and textiles as historically “women’s” work. Here, Forsyth’s work creates an interesting starting point for discussion. Kevin’s Shirts consists of four 10” by 10” paintings which render the plaid patterns of Forsyth’s husband’s shirts in gouache on paper. The paintings are accompanied by several weavings, haphazardly strewn on the gallery floor, which once again transpose Kevin’s Shirts from their almost abstracted form in painting, back into textile. A cursory reading of the textile components of Forsyth’s work may lead the viewer to thoughts of female labour, either through the historical context of hand or industrial weaving; or more contemporary associations with the traditionally female domestic labour of laundry - the weavings call to mind a disorderly bedroom floor - but the artist counters this notion. In conversation with the author, Forsyth intimated that her husband was always the one to do the laundry in their household. And not only has she never viewed weaving or textile work as “women’s work,” here the textiles serve as an emblem of both how arbitrary these gendered associations are – heaps of cloth on the ground speak to the absence of Kevin and his domestic efforts – and of the intrinsically personal quality that objects take on in our lives. For Forsyth, the fibre elements in her work are more about intimacy than gender. Starting this particular series while her husband was away on sabbatical, Forsyth was looking to document, capture and remember her husband through the tangible traces he left in their living space – his clothing, a uniform of plaid shirts. She began painting, taking the mass-produced textile patterns and at once bringing them into the abstract, and at the same time reconnecting them with the artist’s or maker’s hand. Glenn Adamson asserts in The Invention of Craft that craft is something that was created alongside industry as its other, rather than something industry arose out of or advanced from. Forsyth produces a form of “craft” that not only acts as a foil for industrial production but that “others” it. Mass-produced clothing goes through so many processes, places and machines in its travels from the designer’s sketchbook to our closets, and yet it is so ubiquitous and normal that we frequently don’t consider the global industries and impli- 7 8 cations of its production. Through her paintings, Forsyth takes these products, rich in material history and political and economic significance, back to their most basic component parts: colour, line, and pattern, rendering the original reference preternatural in the process. In creating a simulacrum of these shirts, which themselves epitomize our age of industrial facsimile, Forsyth calls attention to how removed we are from the production of items we use every day. Our disassociation, or abstraction from the Real is effectively countered through painterly abstraction. Although Forsyth’s paintings are inherently representative, this second order abstraction - as it serves to dissociate and decontextualize the component elements of Kevin’s Shirts , and by extension all manufactured products, from their original ground - forces us to slow down and contemplate the process of this new form of creation. This forced change of perspective is also compounded by the stylistic elements of the paintings, which call to mind the meditative quality of Agnes Martin and similar artists associated with abstract expressionism. And ironically, it is this abstraction that actually reintroduces the idea of the maker or creator back into the process of production. Upon close inspection, the artist’s hand is visible in the subtle irregularities of paint and composition – making visible the labour of creation; a physical inscription of the methods of production into the picture. This maker is brought even more evidently to the forefront as the paintings are transcribed from the page to the loom, and back to the very roots of textile work, to the traditionally “hand-made.” Interestingly, Forsyth, a painter, only learned to weave for this project, feeling that the paintings just needed to become textiles. Where she enjoys the doubling and tripling of the same pattern, each version with its attendant variations, this transposition of the simulacra back (or forward) into fibre re-contextualizes the original subject. And even as Kevin’s Shirts move through these artistic iterations and are abstracted further and further from both the intent and implications of their initial form, to Forsyth, all forms are her husband’s shirts. In this sense, all the components of Kevin’s Shirts are a paean to the intimate connections that we have with everyday objects. Forsyth notes that artists are well placed to call our attention to these connections and relationships; painters often work alone in the studio, seeing and using the same objects every day, imbuing them with almost a magical, ritualistic significance. Indeed it is these objects that she saw every day that served as inspiration for Forsyth – objects that, although ordinary and mass produced, were already inherently ripe with significance in their status as markers of absence. Kendra Ainsworth, Assistant Curator at the Art Gallery of Mississauga, is an interpretive planner and curator. She has a Masters in Museum Studies and a B.A in Cultural Anthropology from the University of Toronto, and has been working in the arts and culture sector for over six years. She is strongly committed to making If we view craft as a process, a way of doing things, and something that is inherently tied to material experience, perhaps it is fitting that Kevin’s Shirts is entirely dependent on process – the transformation of artifact to painting and then to textile sculpture. Here, Forsyth’s artistic practice in and of itself serves to reinvigorate our notions of what craft is. Not a lesser cousin to “art” nor an essentially gendered practice, it is a way of thinking through the world, and our personal connections to our surroundings. And that is something that we can all appreciate. ● museums and galleries of contemporary art and craft intellectually, physically and emotionally accessible spaces for visitors. Through creative curation and interpretation, Kendra aims to remove both intangible and tangible barriers to public engagement with contemporary art, and allow it to serve as a catalyst 9 for community building and intellectual development for people of all ages. Past projects have included exhibitions at the Burlington Art Centre (The Art of the Cut: Papercuttings by Lini Grol, 2013), the Gardiner Museum (Sugar and Spice, 2011) and the Art Gallery of Ontario (At Work: Hesse, Goodwin, Martin, 2010). Works Franco Arcieri Astral Noise Costume, 2007 Performance Rope, fabric, contact microphone, amplifier, standard microphone, cassette tape, tape players 122 x 183 x 91 cm 10 11 Claire Ashley another tasteless hunk, 2013 Spray paint on PVC coated canvas and blower fan 274 x 305 x 305cm 12 13 Amanda Browder Future Phenomena, 2010 Donated fabric from citizens of Brooklyn, NY Unfolded 609 x 1158 cm Folded 91 x 152 x 152 cm 14 15 Amanda Browder Cascading Mississauga, 2013 Donated fabric from citizens of Brooklyn, NY 2 pieces 122 x 91 x 107 cm 16 17 Lyn Carter Bouquet, 2012 Fabric and aluminum 274 x 244 x 244 cm 18 19 20 21 Lyn Carter Skirt, 2011 Peau de soie silk and aluminum 262 x 34 x 119 cm 22 23 Lyn Carter Dummy, 2012 Polyester knit fabric and Styrofoam 155 x 335 x 335 cm Kai Chan What It Is I Came for, I Turn and Turn, Part VI, 2004 Incense 244 x 915 x 36 cm 24 25 Kai Chan Mirage, 2008 Silk thread, nails 178 x 229 (variable) x 2 cm 26 27 Michelle Forsyth Kevin’s Shirt: Boxfresh, 2012 Gouache on paper 25.4 x 25.4 cm Kevin’s Shirt: Arrow (Made in the USA), 2012 Gouache on paper 25.4 x 25.4 cm Kevin’s Shirt: Diamonds, 2012 Gouache on paper 25.4 x 25.4 cm 28 Kevin’s Shirt: The North Face, 2012 Gouache on paper 25.4 x 25.4 cm 29 Hazel Meyer ding-dong Wall (…s to the Ball), 2013 Fine gauge, circular knit jersey 30 31 Frog in Hand Wall, 2013 Photo: Voitek Pendrak Cotton and wool, wooden support structure; dance performance 32 33 Ed Pien Corridor, 2010-2012 Rope, video projection, drawing Variable dimensions 34 35 Anne Wilson Mess, 2006 Anne Wilson and Shawn Decker collaboration A single projection video and sound installation derived from Errant Behaviors Animator: Cat Solen; Post-production Animators and Mastering: Mark Anderson and Daniel Torrente Copyright 2006 Anne Wilson 36 37 Artist Profiles Artist Profiles Franco Arcieri is a sound based, 38 performance and installation artist, originally from Peterborough Ontario and now based in Toronto. His practice focuses on the tension inherent in dichotomy and notions around otherness. When something or someone is identified as something specific, they/it are no longer something else. Arcieri is interested in enacting or representing otherness and the absurdity of categorization. He manifests the physical aspects of his work through sound, performance and the use of textiles and fibres techniques either in sound performances or interactive sound installations. He has shown work and performed in galleries in Peterborough and Toronto, such as Art Space, The Blue Tomato, The Cannery, and Creatures Collective. He also also worked as a studio assistant to the video and electronic artist Steve Daniels who is currently the head of the new media program at Ryerson University. Claire Ashley is from Edinburgh, Scotland. She received a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Gray’s School of Art, Aberdeen, Scotland in 1993, and a Masters of Fine Arts in 1995 from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Her work has been shown nationally and internationally. Selected venues include: DeCordova Sculpture Park and Museum, Lincoln, MA; The Icebox at Crane Arts, Philadelphia, PA; The Museum of Contemporary Art and The Chicago Cultural Center, Chicago, IL; Plug Projects, Kansas City, MO; Terrain, Oak Park, IL; Carthage College, Kenosha, WI; SideCar Gallery, Hammond, IN; Rockford Art Museum, Rockford, IL; and Hyde Park Art Center, Chicago, IL. International venues include: gallerA1, Edinburgh, Scotland; and The Highland Institute for Contemporary Art, Inverness, Scotland. She currently teaches at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in the Department of Contemporary Practices, and Department of Painting and Drawing. claireashley.com Born in Missoula, MT in 1976, Amanda Browder currently lives in Brooklyn, NY. She received her MFA/ MA from the University of Wisconsin at Madison in 2001, and taught at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago from 2001-07. She has been awarded grants from the Brooklyn Arts Council and the Chicago Community Arts Assistant Program. Amanda has exhibited internationally and nationally in exhibitions such as: The Dumbo Arts Festival, Brooklyn; Nuit Blanche Public Art Festival / LEITMOTIF in Toronto; Mobinale in Prague, Czechoslovakia; Nakaochiai Gallery, Tokyo, Japan; Lothringer 14, Munich, Germany; White Columns, New York; No Longer Empty in Brooklyn and The Hyde Park Art Center, Chicago. She is also a founding member of the art-podcast badatsports.com. amandabrowder.com 39 Artist Profiles Lyn Carter Lyn Carter is based 40 near Grand Valley, Ontario. She has exhibited across Canada, in the U.S.A., Australia, Britain, Spain, Mexico and China. In 2008 she created a sitespecific work for the Third Guangzhou Triennial in Guangzhou, China. Her work is represented in a number of permanent collections, among them the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, U.S.A., the AstraZeneca Collection in Mississauga, Ontario, Cambridge Galleries, Cambridge, Ontario and the Dalhousie Art Gallery in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Carter teaches Sculpture in the Art & Art History Program, a collaborative Honours B.A. Program between Sheridan College and the University of Toronto Mississauga. lyncarter.ca Kai Chan is a graduate from Ontario College of Art and has exhibited across Canada, the United States, Japan, Australia and Europe. He has received numerous grants from the Canada Council and the Ontario Arts Council, as well as awards, including the Jean A. Chalmers National Crafts Award, and the Saidye Bronfman Award for Excellence in the Fine Crafts. Chan’s work is in the collection of Musée d’art de Baie-Saint-Paul, Québec; Musée d’art de Joliette, Québec; Museum London, Ontario; Mendel Art Gallery, Saskatoon; Musée des Arts Decoratifs de Montréal; the Canadian Museum of Civilization; the Library and Gallery, Cambridge, Ontario; Nordenfjeldske Kunstindustrimusem, Norway and the Canada Council Art Bank. He is represented by David Kaye Gallery, Toronto, Galerie Elena Lee, Montréal and Galerie Ra in Amsterdam. kaichan.ca holds a longstanding interest in ways of working that require time and patience. Working in silence, the artist exploits durational and repetitive activities. She associates her process with mourning, and through making, she works to express an identification with the vulnerability of others. Forsyth holds an MFA from Rutgers University (New Brunswick, NJ); and a BFA from the University of Victoria (Victoria, BC). Her work has been exhibited internationally at venues including: Mulherin + Pollard, (New York, NY); Zaum Projects (Lisbon, Portugal); Pentimenti Gallery (Philadelphia, PA); Auxiliary Projects (Brooklyn, NY); The Hunterdon Museum of Art (Clinton, NJ); The Charleston Heights Arts Center (Las Vegas, NV); and Deluge Contemporary Art (Victoria, BC). She has been the recipient of two grants from the Canada Council for the Arts and her work is included in Carte Blanche, Vol. 2 - Painting (2008). She currently teaches painting at OCAD U (Toronto, ON). Michelle Forsyth michelleforsyth.com 41 Artist Profiles is a graduate of Sheridan Institute’s Crafts and Design Program (Textiles), and the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Her studio work has earned numerous awards and been shown across Canada and Internationally. Hamlyn was selected to represent Canada at the International Craft Biennale in Cheongju, South Korea and the Love Lace International Lace Competition at the Power House Museum in Sydney, Australia. Her work has been shown at the Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad, and is part of the permanent collections of the Cambridge Art Gallery, the Peel Board of Education, the Japanese Paper Place and the Cleveland University Hospitals. Highlights of 2013 include a small solo show at the Art Gallery of Mississauga’s X-It Room, participation in the Biennale Internationale Du Lin de Portneuf, and featured artist at Mississippi Mills 2013 Fibre Fest just outside of Ottawa. She will be showing in Japan in November in A Commitment to Washi - a show featuring Canadian artist working with Japanese Washi paper. Noelle Hamlyn 42 has explored dance both nationally and internationally; she trained, toured and performed with the Canadian Contemporary Dance Theatre (CCDT) in Toronto and at Ladmmi in Montreal. In England she completed a Masters in Contemporary Dance with distinction at the London Contemporary Dance School. Snell has worked with a vast range of Colleen Snell dance practitioners, including the Hofesh Shechter Dance Company, Paul Smith, Michael Trent, Sue MacLennan and Andrew Harwood. She is an artistic associate with TOES for Dance, a New York-Toronto dance exchange with Julliard alumni. She has received choreographic commissions from Cawthra Park Repertoire Ensemble, Port Credit Buskerfest (2012, 2013), Mississauga Arts Council, TOES for Dance and Mississauga Waterfront Festival (MWF). In December 2013, Snell will undertake a research residency combining martial arts and dance at Movingeast in London, England. She is fascinated by the written word and hopes to pursue trans-disciplinary practice-as-research as well as performance. About Frog in Hand Founded by two sisters, Noelle Hamlyn and Colleen Snell, Frog in Hand informally began in 1990 with a backyard performance featuring a frog circus. From this seminal performance springs our belief that art is lived experience and can be found in the most humble places – including the mud and grass of the backyard. Since our modest beginning we have sought out a large group of collaborators – dancers, musicians, actors, textile and visual artists who come together to create multi-disciplinary performances in unusual spaces. Our company members have national and international professional experience, having trained and performed in Canada (Ottawa, Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal), the United States (Chicago, Miami, New York), Japan, China, Korea, Ireland, Israel, Australia and England. On our travels we have taken our thought provoking, fun, spontaneous stories to the streets, with support from the Ontario Arts Council, Celebrate Ontario, the Art Gallery of Ontario, National Youth Arts Week, the London School of Contemporary Dance, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and the City of Mississauga. We aim to create accessible productions with a high degree of artistic merit. 43 Artist Profiles is an artist and sports enthusiast based in Toronto. She draws, makes comics, letterpress prints, screen-printed multiples, felt banners, videos, broadcasts, and constructs physical environments that can be used for performance, collaboration, workshops and amateur athletics. From the monumental to the modest her projects range from installations, intended to TAKE UP SPACE, to small woven tags meant for an audience of one. She holds an MFA from OCAD University (Toronto), a BFA from Concordia University (Montréal) and in her spare time pumps iron. Hazel Meyer 44 Recent exhibitions include Separation Penetrates at Dutch Art Institute (Netherlands), More Than Two (Let It Make Itself), curated by Micah Lexier, PowerPlant, (Toronto), No Theory No Cry at Art Metropole (Toronto), Schlaegermusik with Annesley Black for Zukunftsmusik (Stuttgart), Walls to the Ball at La Centrale (Montréal), All Hands on the Archive : An Audience of Enablers Cannot Fail, with Logan MacDonald at F.A.G. (Toronto), and flex your textile, John Conelley presents (New York). hazelmeyer.com has shown work at the Drawing Centre; the V&A, London; The Goethe Institute, Berlin; AGO, Toronto; Musée des beaux arts and Musée d’art contemporain, Montreal; Songzhuang Art Centre, Beijing; and the National Art Gallery of Canada, Ottawa. He recently participated in the Sydney Biennale and “Oh Canada”, at MASS MoCA. This fall, Pien is presenting a Ed Pien new installation at the Moscow Biennale entitled Imaginary Dwelling. His work is in collection that are included at FRAC Lorraine, Metz, France; The National Art Gallery of Canada; Art Gallery of Ontario; Musée d’art contemporain de Montreal. Musée des beaux arts, Montreal; Mendel Art Gallery; Weatherspoon Art Museum, University of North Carolina, Greensboro, North Carolina, USA; as well as other institutions and private collections. Pien is represented by Birch Contemporary, Toronto; Pierre-François Ouellette Art Contemporain, Montreal; Galerie Maurits van de Laar, The Hague. Pien is based in Toronto and teaches part-time at the University of Toronto. edpien.com has been an exhibiting fibre artist, a freelance teacher, exhibit organizer and volunteer with many organizations for 40 years. She was a faculty member at OCA, Toronto in 1990, an Assistant Dean for 8 years, and an Associate Professor retiring in 2009. That year her work was shown in Unity and Diversity at the Cheongju International Craft Biennale in Korea and at the Fibre Festival in Oakville where she was a juror. She had exhibitions, Piece by Piece at the VAC in Bowmanville in 2010, Pattern & Beyond at the Lindsay Gallery and Fabrication:The Textile Work of Judith Tinkl at Georgian College in Barrie 2011 and Soft Geometry at the Esplanade Gallery in Medicine Hat, Alberta in 2012. She has been president of both the Ontario Crafts Council and Surfacing the now defunct textile organization. Her work is always on display at Tinkls’ Gallery in Brock Township north of Toronto. Judith Tinkl tinklsgallery.com 45 Artist Profiles is a Chicago-based visual artist who creates sculpture, drawings, performances, and video animations that explore themes of time, loss, private and social rituals. Her artwork embraces conceptual strategies and handwork using everyday materials -- table linen, bed sheets, human hair, lace, thread, glass, and wire. Wilson’s artwork is in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; The Art Institute of Chicago; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; the Detroit Institute of Arts; the Victoria and Albert Museum, London; and the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art in Kanazawa, Japan, among others. She is the recipient of grants from the NASAD, the Driehaus Foundation, Artadia, the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Illinois Arts Council. She is currently Professor in the Fiber and Material Studies Department at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Anne Wilson 46 annewilsonartist.com This exhibition also includes periodic and durational performances by Catalina Gonzalez, Sandra Poczobut and Johannes Zits. is a Colombian/ Canadian visual artist who crosses the boundaries of the worlds of fashion, art and performance. Her expanded notions of sculpture seek to challenge the limits of the body and manipulate the body’s natural structures to invent novel anatomical structures and adornments. Also known as the “Body Builder,” Gonzalez carries on a dialogue between the female body and its perimeters. Devising an emblematic, at times mythical evolutionary silhouette of the female body, her work blurs and extends the female body to uncharted territory. Seeing where the skin ends and the near environment starts, her work resonates with visceral metaphors of change, rebirth and transformation. Catalina Gonzalez Still Life, 2013, Performance at the Art Gallery of Mississauga. Photo by Voitek Pendrak. 47 Artist Profiles is an installation/ performance artist and educator born in Poland. Sandra grew up in the prairies of Alberta and has worked internationally in South Korea, Bosnia & Herzegovina and currently resides in Port Stanley, Ontario. Sandra studied Visual Arts at the University of Alberta and has completed an interdisciplinary Masters Degree from the University of Western Ontario merging critical educational pedagogy with postmodern art production. She is active member of the Art Gallery of Mississauga as a roster artist for “Roots and Branches”, works as an instructor in the Continuing Studies Department at OCADU, and creates programing for Internationally Trained Architects at JVS Toronto. Johannes Zits is a multi-disciplinary artist who explores art making through various media, including video, digital imaging, performance and collage. Since graduating with a BFA from York University in 1984, Johannes Zits has shown his work across Canada as well as internationally in a variety of venues. Sandra Poczobut 48 Sandra’s work looks theoretically at issues relating to self-identity, immigration, diversity, gender and the dichotomies of nature and manufacture. Recent exhibitions include installations at the “World of Threads International Fiber Arts Show”, and at “The Artist Project”. Connect/Contain, 2013, Performance at the Art Gallery of Mississauga. Photo by Ferit Onurlu. Models: Phoebe Wang, Janada Hawthorne DeSilva. Johannes Zits johanneszits.com Bande, 2013, Performance at the Art Gallery of Mississauga. Photo by Ed Pien. 49