- September 6, 1997 to September 28, 1997
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No description available
date | 12 Programs
Dates 1997- August 28, 1997
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No description available
By Andrew Power, John Boehme, Jonathan Wells, Neil Eustache, Stephen McIlvenna, Warren Arcand - Curated by J. McLaughlin
Making it Big
- July 29, 1997 to August 14, 1997
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On July 29th, Reeve will present a lecture exploring the man-nature relationship from the perspective of the visual arts. Whilst Reeve pays respect to an understanding of the historical and social cration of the so-called man-nature understanding of the historical and social creation of the so-called man-nature paradox, indeed of the category 'nature' itself, her main aim in this lecture is to highlight both the pitfalls and potential strengths for contemporary artists taking the natural environment as their subject. The lecture will also include some explanation of Reeve's own methodology in creating performances and static works which explore nature and potential language forms laid in its services.
By Hester Reeve
Artist Talk
- July 8, 1997 to July 26, 1997
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No description available
By Julie Oakes
The Venice Series
- June 26, 1997
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No description available
By Marlene Madison Plimley
Solo Performance
- June 20, 1997 to July 15, 1997
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No description available
By Eugenio Polgovsky - Curated by Glenn Alteen
Eugenio Polgovsky- Photographs
- June 11, 1997 to June 28, 1997
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No description available
By Priscilla Yeung - Curated by Glenn Alteen
Wildflowers And Weeds
- May 8, 1997 to May 24, 1997
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An installation featuring Leather's machine of confinement and restraint. This apparatus, the result of many years research and experimentation, speaks of obsession on many levels.
By J.G. Leathers - Curated by Glenn Alteen
Mindsexpansion
- April 15, 1997 to May 31, 1997
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No description available
By Danyele Alain, Gilles Morissette, Paxcal Bouchard, Sonia Robertson
Paysages Inter Sites
- March 18, 1997 to April 5, 1997
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In "Transvisceral Borders", I use the human skin as a metaphorical magnet, to gather opposing elements from within the human psyche. The skin's ambiguous role as "link" and "barrier" to the external world, universally draws physical reaction and mental reflection. "Transvisceral Borders" probes the shadows between fascination and abhorence, between instinct and ethics. Like Entrapment I and II (shown in the video), this project continues to explore the duality in human nature.
By Haruko Okano