- November 4, 1986 to November 15, 1986
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"These works are large (4 x 5) paintings on canvas. The mediums are acrylics, pencil, collage, pastel, and modelling paste. Four of these paintings portay important historical women. The others represent 'types' of women."
By Laurie Papou
date | 27 Programs
Dates 1986- September 8, 1986
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No description available
By Violet Costello
Artifact – Artists For Action
- January 22, 1986 to February 1, 1986
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No description available
Behind Eyes
- May 28, 1986 to June 11, 1986
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"Beyond the Border", the title of the exhibition, refers to both the real borders containing the works and to the imaginary border between reality and the places the artist is trying to describe or intimate with his pieces."
By Colin Fraser
Beyond the Border
- March 18, 1986 to March 29, 1986
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No description available
Birds
- March 18, 1986 to March 29, 1986
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"Imagine seven giant flightless birds, like emus made out of straw and chicken wire, with foot-long shocks of straw shooting out ffrom their heads like punk haircuts.... run a sinuous, graceful river of eggshells diagonally across a popcorn beach......a three-minute looped tape of drums and screetching violins that Catherine characterizes as "the sound of thos birds talking and singing."
By Catherine Costello, Violet Costello
Birds
- September 19, 1986 to October 20, 1986
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No description available
By Anne Beesack, Bill Rennie, Jackie Hoffman, Linda Neville, Spike McKinley - Curated by Bill Thompson, Danielle Peacock, Glenn Alteen, Glenn Lewis
Brewery Creek
- February 18, 1986 to March 1, 1986
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"...glass assemblage by Jean Mcrae. On a textural background of various cloths, and using an overlay of glass in various shapes and sizes, she place found objects in the form of copper or bits and pieces collected. The resulting abstract is alive visually with each layer visible and accounted for."
Built on Glass
- December 8, 1986
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"The Chilean government is a military regime that seized power in the coup of 1973, murdering Salvador Allende the democratically elected president, along with a conservatively estimated 15,000 civilians." The film chronicles the emergence of mass opposition to the military dictatorships in 1983.
By Clandestinley made by Chileans
Chile: I Do Not Take Your Name in Vain
- July 8, 1986 to July 23, 1986
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"Celli's installation stands garish and threatening, seeming at first to be an obvious comment on the politics of our time Considered more closely, the piece reveals the artist's concern with aesthetics and the assignation of "values and morals" to art."
By Vilio Celli