- July 15, 2014 to August 9, 2014
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Initiated by filmmaker Rodrigue Jean, Épopée is a collection of short films written and made in collaboration with male drug addicts and sex trade workers in Montreal. The installation L’État des lieux (The State of the Moment) and film screening of L’État du monde (The State of the World) was co-presented by grunt gallery, Queer Arts Festival and Dazibao.
By Épopée – Groupe d’action en cinéma, Rodrigue Jean - Curated by Tarah Hogue
Category | 313 Programs
Exhibition- September 11, 2014 to October 11, 2014
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Vancouver-based artist Hyung-Min Yoon presents a series of images that draws from an obscure collection of marginal religious illustrations by Albrecht Dürer. Originally used to surround religious texts, Hyung-Min Yoon re-imagines their placement and purpose by framing them around contemporary political jokes of various cultures in their original languages.
By Hyung-Min Yoon
The Book of Jests
- December 8, 2004 to December 24, 2004
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No description available
By Osmar Yero Montero
Summer’s Eyes
- November 1, 2014 to December 19, 2014
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grunt gallery kicks off our 30th anniversary programming with a residency and exhibition with Vancouver-based artist Julia Feyrer entitled, Kitchen. Taking the form of an evolving installation in the main gallery space, Feyrer’s work engages with materials and documentation from the grunt archives in the production of a new, site-specific environment.
By Julia Feyrer - Curated by Vanessa Kwan
Kitchen
- January 15, 2015 to February 21, 2015
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grunt gallery presents Crossed, an exhibition by artist Ahmad Tabrizi and curated by Makiko Hara. This multi-media exhibition creates a sense of portraiture compiled of Farsi script, piles of dressmaking pins, and glimpses of the artist himself – both visually and through audio.
By Ahmad Tabrizi - Curated by Makiko Hara
Crossed
- January 8, 2015 to March 15, 2015
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Mainstreeters: Taking Advantage, 1972-1982 is an exhibition, website and publication that takes a close look at a self-identified collective of socially and artistically motivated men and women who came of age on Vancouver’s Main Street—once the dividing line between a predominantly Anglo middle-class west side and a multicultural working-class east side. The exhibition at Satellite Gallery contributes to the larger project of bringing to light an under-recognized chapter of Vancouver art history. The Mainstreeters—Kenneth Fletcher, Deborah Fong, Carol Hackett, Marlene MacGregor, Annastacia McDonald, Charles Rea, Jeanette Reinhardt and Paul Wong—were an “art gang” who took advantage of the times, a new medium (video), and each other. Emerging from the end-stage hippie era, the gang drew from glam, punk and a thriving gay scene to become an important node in the local art scene. Their activities connect the influential interdisciplinary salon of Roy Kiyooka in the early 1960s with the collective-oriented social practices that emerged worldwide in the early years of the 21st century. Like the current “digital natives” generation, the Mainstreeters were the first generation to grow up with video cameras. The resulting documents bring into focus a decade of their lives, including forays into sex, love, drugs and art.
By Annastasia McDonald, Carol Hackett, Charles Rea, Deborah Fong, Jeanette Reinhardt, Kenneth Fletcher, Marlene MacGregor, Mary Janeway, Paul Wong - Curated by Allison Collins, Michael Turner
Mainstreeters: Taking Advantage, 1972-1982
- April 9, 2015 to May 16, 2015
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Eraser Street – Hubris, Humility and Humanity in the Making of a City! is an exhibition that mixes Robideau’s newest and oldest photographs of moments, milestones and monuments in Vancouver, tracing the character of the city and its residents during the last 40 years of non-stop growth. The work reflects upon the quality of life in Vancouver, the value of heritage, the economic engine of development, homelessness and the voice of the people. Robideau’s holographic satirical text charts history while critiquing the forces of government and commerce that have had a hand in shaping our urban environment. Handmade black and white gelatin silver photographs are juxtaposed with computer mediated digital inkjet prints, reinforcing the flux of change experienced in these images. Robideau’s narrative embraces a lament for what has been lost, a celebration for what has survived, and an admonition for the future of a city still in its infancy.
By Henri Robideau - Curated by Glenn Alteen
Eraser Street
- February 19, 1991 to March 9, 1991
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Jeannie Kamins moved from Vancouver to Montreal in 1987. In November of that year Anthony Griffin, a 19 year old black youth, was shot and killed by a Montreal policeman who had a history of racial violence. This incident sparked in Kamins an extended exploration into racism. Using the Griffin murder as a jump off poiint she explored racist incidents in Canada's past such as the Komagata Maru in the early 1900's, the national policy on Jewish Immagration during World War II (None is too many), and the ongoing racist polices around native people. Kamins series is a rich and personal exploration into racial and cultural differences. She provides herself a historical backdrop and present reality through her throughts on mulitculturalism she comes to the belief that racism and differences are used in a political way to divide populations. Never reaching a commonality and suspicious of the other, we are manipulated into war and wawy from the pressing social and environmental problems that are the concern of us all.
By Jeannie Kamins
Paintings
- May 2, 2018 to May 12, 2018
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Motion Within Motion, a two-channel video installation with immersive sound, is inspired by Persian-Islamic philosophy of change. Using the theory of ‘substantial motion’ (al-harakat al-jawhariyya) by philosopher Mulla Sadrā Shirazi (1571-1641) as a starting point, Emadi employs digital video and installation technologies to challenge human-centric assumptions of change, time and motion. The work engages two distinct points of view: a non-narrative documentary filmed in Iran and an altered variation that magnifies the footage to the pixel-level. The resulting installation is both synchronized and perceptually disjointed, demanding a simultaneous reading of both cinematic time/movement and the largely abstracted constituent parts of the digital image. Zooming in and out of focus, splitting images into units and using different modalities of time and motion, Emadi’s installation reveals the inner activities of the frame – and provides experience “from a pixel’s point of view.”
By Azadeh Emadi - Curated by Laura Marks