Author Archives: jogervai

Systemic Evolutions – Advanced Sculpture

Systemic Evolutions

Systemic Evolutions is the outcome of sculptural investigations conceived and executed by the VISA 322 Advanced Sculpture class.

The works in this exhibition coalesce around themes of systems-based evolutions: how do materials, objects, spaces, data, and artifacts evolve as they take form as Sculpture? How do aspects of each individual sculpture change as they interact with each other within the exhibition, and with audiences? Can sculptural forms evolve from their existence as singular artistic expressions into socially-oriented material articulations of growth and change?

This exhibition explores sculpture’s potential to communicate beyond the physical limitations of each individual artwork. As the audience participates in, and contributes to, this process of change, each work becomes a system in a state of radical transformation.

We welcome you to this process.

Brock Gratz
Robyn Miller
Peter Navratil
Devanee Reynolds
Nicola Treat
Carmen Winther
Maggie Wyse

Homecoming Alumni Exhibition

Homecoming Alumni Exhibition

The Faculty of Creative and Critical Studies is please to host an exhibition of recent works by selected BFA and MFA alumni as part of Homecoming 2018.

Artists in the exhibition include Dylan Ranney (BFA 2012); Heather Leier (BFA 2012), Carin Covin (BFA 2003, MFA 2010); and Christian Nicolay (BFA 2001).

The exhibition will be on display in the FINA Gallery at the UBC Okanagan Campus from October 15th to 26th.

 

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Carin Covin is a drawer and a painter, her current research interests are in the intersection of creative writing and visual language.

Heather Leier is an artist and Assistant Professor based in Calgary. Her printmaking and installation work has been exhibited in many national and international exhibitions.

Christian Nicolay is a Canadian interdisciplinary artist based in Vancouver BC. His diverse body of work employs a wide range of media and techniques including drawing, painting, sculpture, video, sound, performance and installation – to create works that explore themes of paradox, politics, social activity, cultural identity and the origins of things.

Dylan Ranney is an  oil painter, sculptor, and drummer. With the combined mentorship of painter Shawn Serfas, and local sculptor Byron Johnston, Dylan found a voice in both mediums and enjoys inventing new ways to engage people with his work.

 

 

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Carin Covin | Lengths and Spools

Lengths and Spools explore the gendered politics of the everyday.  My gaze was redirected to these ideas by the printmaker Laura Widmer, who introduced me to Bronwen Wallace, the late Canadian Poet and Feminist thinker, writer and scholar[i].

These works exhibited here resulted from a collaboration with Widmer, when we worked towards a project titled “Pulp Fiction Paper Jam[ii]”, and this research came out of prior exhibitions[iii] that we have worked together on. Widmer has been investigating paper and the making of paper over the last five years and much of the work here is a result of repurposing sheets of her handmade paper, made from cotton clothing and harvested fibres from her garden.

Bronwen Wallace wrote and worked during the 1970’s and the 1980’s, and her feminist writings and poetry is placed within the second wave of Feminist ideas.  In a published correspondence with Erin Mouré[iv], Wallace articulates her personal and professional frustration regarding the limits of Academic discourse and the limits of Deconstructionist’s theoretical ideas with regards to anything and anybody outside of the Western European Male lens.

Through reading Wallace’s works and ideas, I was re-directed and re-acquainted with the ideas of the politics of the everyday, the repetitive and ritualistic work of frequently performed tasks.  These are not new Feminist tropes, however, the politics of the everyday continue to affect the quality of our lives in this busy 21st Century.  Wallace was intent on framing Feminist thought as a relocation, insisting that Feminism was for all of us and our families.

[i] Bronwen Wallace was born in 1945 in Kingston, Ontario.  She died of cancer in 1989.

[ii]Pulp Fiction Paper Jam” was an investigation of the ritualistic aspects of women’s work – the objects and persons that women attend to, the dishes in the sink lit by a passing storm, the dust that settles upon a crocheted lace, the tabloids one reads while waiting in the checkout line at the store, the grandmothers and grandchildren surrounding the table at mid-day- our exhibition was a visual poem dedicated to Bronwen Wallace.

[iii] Our first collaboration was my curatorial project titled “Local(i)ty” in 2015, which discussed the work of Nora Curiston, Brenda Feist and Laura Widmer.  This project was exhibited in Gallery 2, Grand Forks Art Gallery in 2016 as “Local(i)ty 2”, and in 2017 was exhibited in Headbones Gallery, Vernon in 2017 as “Local(i)ty 3”.  http://localityproject.weebly.com

[iv]Two Women Talking Correspondence 1985-1987” was published in 1994.

Length IV – (for the bells that still can ring) by Carin Covin

Detail of Length IV – (for the bells that still can ring) by Carin Covin

Cyano Length II
Knitted Widmer cyanotype paper 14 x 15 inches
2018

Cyano Length I
Knitted Widmer cyanotype paper
13.5 x 12 inches
2018

Length Ill -(for Carroll)
Knitted Widmer Paper 25 x 42 inches
2018

Spools by Carin Covin

Spooled Widmer and Stonehenge Paper 10 x 16 inches
2017

 

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Heather Leier | Young Lady

Through the consideration of traumatic experience as unrelenting, Young Lady is a portfolio of works centred on two coping mechanisms I continually employ: looking down and projecting happiness outward. By recording my experience negotiating public space through writing and gathering objects and ephemera I see while looking down, I have developed an archive of material in which these prints are derived.

By pairing collected items and internal utterances with celebratory imagery, I am creating visual and conceptual relationships between internal struggles and outward projections of joy and am asking what goes unnoticed and unattended to when we are merely coping.

Ironically titled, Young Lady, this work suggests the consideration of the depreciating language we use to frame our complex identities and the subtle ways in which this continually oppresses.

the numbness starts in my baby toes by Heather Leier

the numbness starts in my baby toes
Inkjet, chine-colle, screenprint
14 x 18 inches
2017

prepare by Heather Leier

prepare
Inkjet, chine-colle, screenprint
14 x 18 inches
2017

it was the only think I could do by Heather Leier

it was the only think I could do
Inkjet, chine-colle, screenprint
14 x 18 inches
2017

I wonder if anybody knows by Heather Leier

I wonder if anybody knows
Inkjet, chine-colle, screenprint
14 x 18 inches
2017

he overstayed his welcome by Heather Leier

he overstayed his welcome
Inkjet, chine-colle, screenprint
14 x 18 inches
2017

that I didn’t really want it at all by Heather Leier

that I didn’t really want it at all
Inkjet, chine-colle, screenprint
14 x 18 inches
2017

go back by Heather Leier

go back
Inkjet, chine-colle, screenprint
14 x 18 inches
2017

we protected his horns with sponges by Heather Leier

we protected his horns with sponges
Inkjet, chine-colle, screenprint
14 x 18 inches
2017

the numbness starts in my baby toes by Heather Leier

it was the only think I could do
Inkjet, chine-colle, screenprint
14 x 18 inches
2017

 

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Christian Nicolay | The Day Job

The Day Job started in 2003, this is the first excerpt from hundreds of hours of footage over the years. What started out as a day job has now become part of my routine, hiding art in hard to find places. To notice the unnoticeable, to look where no one does, like a quasi-archeological expedition of absurdity and truth, quixotic adventures of surprise and play. Remember, whatever you are looking at is just the surface layer. Peel it like an onion and see what you can find.

The Day Job by Christian Nicolay

(First excerpt, 2016)
Single channel video
06:56 min
2003 – Ongoing

The Day Job by Christian Nicolay

(First excerpt, 2016)
Single channel video
06:56 min
2003 – Ongoing

The Day Job by Christian Nicolay

(First excerpt, 2016)
Single channel video
06:56 min
2003 – Ongoing

The Day Job by Christian Nicolay

(First excerpt, 2016)
Single channel video
06:56 min
2003 – Ongoing

 

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Dylan Ranney | Homecoming 2018

Homecoming is a series of self-critical visual musings. I would love to leave them mostly open to interpretation, however I can provide pieces of context, fragmented as the sketchbook thoughts therein derived: A study of the psychological state of a try-hard artist and charismatic intellect descended from his moral high ground. A memory of Jerusalem- the ramblings of a holy-rolling prophet of God self-assured of his significance; the hint of a disturbing question. The longing for familial connection when you find yourself performing on the road for weeks; the struggle within. These struggles are connected by the pathways paved around ‘higher education’ and the conclusive realization of a world with no answers. What questions will we dare to ask?

 

Homecoming #1 - Come Down From the Mountains by Dylan Ranney

Homecoming #1 – Come Down From the Mountains by Dylan Ranney

Homecoming # 5 – Evelyn’s Front Yard by Dylan Ranney

Homecoming # 5 – Evelyn’s Front Yard
Oil on Canvas
24 x 24 inches
2018

Homecoming # 2 – Jerusalem Syndrome, the Ballad of Randolph Wyatt Caine by Dylan Ranney

Homecoming # 2 – Jerusalem Syndrome, the Ballad of Randolph Wyatt Caine
Acrylic and Oil on Canvas
42 x 60 inches
2018

Homecoming # 3 – 2 Weeks on the Road by Dylan Ranney

Homecoming # 3 – 2 Weeks on the Road
Oil on Canvas / Mixed Media
42 x 60 inches
2018

Homecoming # 4 – Kevin’s Blue Mind by Dylan Ranney

Homecoming # 4 – Kevin’s Blue Mind
Oil on Canvas / Mixed Media
42 x 60 inches
2018

Cool Cats Project

The Cool Cats Project is a partnership between Cool Arts Society and the Okanagan Cat Coalition (OKCC). The project is aimed at increasing awareness about the estimated 18,000 feral cats living in the Central Okanagan. The OKCC assists by spaying and neutering cats, then re-homing or releasing them to live out their lives without perpetuating the overpopulation problem.

Cool Arts artists have created art, using cats as a theme, in various mediums (painting, clay sculpture) under the mentorship of local artists Lee Claremont, Sharilyn Kuehnel, Sarah Parsons, Potters Addict Ceramic Art Centre, and Rena Warren.

Check out @coolartssociety #coolcatsproject on display now @fccs.ubco FINA Gallery. The Cool Cats Project in partnership with the @okanagancatcoalition is aimed at bringing awareness about the feral cat issue in the Okanagan. Do you think art has a role to play in bringing awareness to important issues? Share your voice. View the exhibit, add your creativity to the collaboative work, take a selfie with your favourite Cool Cat artwork and share your thoughts. #Coolcatsproject #artforchange #coolartssociety #diversabilities #outsiderarts

The project will culminate with the hosting of four public exhibitions of the artwork, (including the FINA gallery here at UBCO), each with an educational element focusing on increasing public awareness of feral cat issues in our community and how the OKCC is working to address these issues.

MFA thesis Exhibition – Tania Willard

Anthro(a)pologizing

Drawing from multiple anthropological sources that framed Secwepemc culture/language and governance my work explores specific sites of rupturing the ethnographic gaze. Citing ideas of refusal and Indigenous futurity to locate agency and land rights struggle within the possible readings of ethnographic subjects this body of work attempts to reassert naming, locating, negotiating and connecting to material culture and ethnographic data in museum and institutional collections.

 

Objects in Suspension

Meg Yamamoto is an MFA student at UBC Okanagan, completing her degree in the summer of 2018.

Meg’s research explores the process of connecting to place through creating place-based art, particularly in the perspective of an artist surrounded by an unfamiliar environment. Her work looks at the various lifeforms observed in the Okanagan (both native and alien) and how they contribute to the Okanagan’s place identity. She examines how the process of encountering, observing, identifying, and appreciating the lifeforms of the environment in order to establish familiarity over time plays an important role in the development of one’s “sense of place”. Through heuristic reduction (the method of overcoming the taken-for-granted attitude by viewing the world through the eyes of wonder), Meg illustrates the ordinary and commonplace of nature as significant and definitive aspects of the Okanagan.

Meg ‘s MFA thesis exhibition, Objects in Suspension  was in the FINA Gallery from June 16 to 29, 2018.

 

She installed a previous installation of Objects in Suspension in the Alternator Centre for Contemporary Art from April 13 to May 5, 2018. 

 

 

Jo-Anne McArthur and We Animals


Jo-Anne McArthur & We Animals 

Jo-Anne McArthur is an award-winning Canadian photojournalist and the founder of We Animals. For fifteen years, she has travelled the world, documenting our complex relationships with animals. We Animals images have been used by hundreds of organizations, publishers, and academics to advocate for animals. McArthur is a sought-after speaker and is the author of two books, We Animals (2014), and Captive (2017). She was the subject of an award-winning documentary, The Ghosts in Our Machine, released worldwide in 2013. In 2017, McArthur and the We Animals team launched the We Animals Archive, a resource where thousands of images are made available for free to anyone helping animals.

weanimalsarchive.org

weanimals.org

joannemcarthur.com

Please Don’t Turn Away

“Powerfully disturbing. These images take us to dark and hidden places visited by only a few determined and courageous individuals like Jo-Anne McArthur. They reveal the secret practices that many people will not want to know about. For the animals’ sake, I beg that you will not only look but feel.” – Dr. Jane Goodall

 

Images of animals as they exist in the human world show the depths of human cruelty, but also the boundlessness of our compassion. Looking at – and truly seeing – the pain of animals trapped in cages on factory farms, held in chains behind a circus tent, reaching out from between the bars of a zoo’s exhibit; seeing these realities is the first step towards acknowledging humanity’s complicity with the suffering experienced by these individuals. To simply show suffering is not enough, however; the storyteller who seeks to make change for animals must create images that challenge the viewer to look, but compelling enough that the viewer does not turn away. The dark reality of our treatment of animals is contrasted by the tireless work of those working to liberate them, and by the lives of the rescued, rehabilitated, and respected animals. Through both stories of suffering and stories of hope, McArthur’s images are crafted to inform and to inspire. Thank you for your courage. Thank you for not turning away.