- April 16, 1985 to April 27, 1985
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No description available
By Group Exhibition
medium | 87 Programs
Medium Mixed MediaA term describing works composed of different media.
- September 29, 1984 to October 15, 1984
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"The Pope Show features the works of 15 artists, each work a comment on Pope John Paul II's visit to Canada or the Catholic Church or organized religion. Many were satirical, many were political" (from Voice article).
By Danielle Peacock, Dawn Richards, Garry Ross, Hillary Wood, Jean McRae, John Crossen, Kempton Dexter, Lalo, Lorna Mulligan, Maggie Putnam, Spike, Susan McKinley
The Pope Show
- July 5, 2013
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On July 5th, 2013, artist Lisa Simpson transforms grunt gallery during a full-day performance involving sewing, music and sound, and social interaction. The project, Agente Costura, questions clothing consumption habits, bringing forth a discussion around the sustainability of the fashion industry.
By Lisa Simpson
Agente Costura
- 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
- June 2, 2014 to July 5, 2014
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Play, Fall, Rest, Dance, is an installation that continuously changes based on the creative output by children with disabilities. Valerie Salez creates an environment that encourages artistic freedom, exploration and installation-making over the course of several weeks.
By Amélie Andres, Deshik Chowdhury, Henry Yu, Isabelle Ghioda, Solange, Valerie Salez
Play, Fall, Rest, Dance
- September 5, 2013 to October 12, 2013
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A multimedia exhibition with work by artists Bracken Hanuse Corlette and Csetkwe Fortier. The artists turn our attention toward the stcuwin (salmon) as a traditional food source via process and connection. The decline of cultural harvest due to disease, climate change and overfishing has left both animal and human in a struggle to survive; the exhibition investigates this topic with new works in painting, drawing, sculpture and digital media. The artists acknowledge an active and ongoing mentorship with artist, Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun, throughout the creation of this exhibition. Bracken describes the relationship as multifaceted. “He has given us invaluable tips and tricks that have helped our technical process in painting and we have had good talks about concept, form, Indian politics and life, art world dealings, and the history of Indigenous art on the coast and in the Interior [of British Columbia].
By Bracken Hanuse Corlett, Csetkwe Fortier
Don’t Go Hungry
- January 1, 1994 to January 6, 2016
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The Al Neil Collection includes materials on artist, musician, and writer Al Neil whose long and storied career has included grunt's Al Neil Project (see 2005.1015ALN) as a part of the LIVE Biennale of Performance Art 2005, features in brunt Magazine and the web project Ruins In Process: Vancouver Art in the 60s, and continues with grunt's involvement with the relocation, preservation, and reactivation of Al Neil and Carole Itter's cabin from the Dollarton shore. The Al Neil Collection includes physical copies of Neil's music recordings, photocopied and original articles on Neil, and various ephemera related to Neil's life and work.
By Al Neil
The Al Neil Collection
- September 10, 2015 to October 10, 2015
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Castillo's work refers to a cultural past and contemporary present, fusing a hybridized aesthetic to engage issues about migration, historical trauma, identity, and memory. His narratives express a multifacted, interlocking and non-linear approach. Consequently, the body of work revises and casts new personal interpretations on memory-building as a form of resistance, political commentary and healing.
By Osvaldo Ramirez Castillo
Catastrophe, Memory, Reconciliation
- May 10, 2013 to June 8, 2013
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A retrospective and collaborative project based on Background/Vancouver, a photo-mapping expedition of Vancouver by Michael de Courcy with Taki Bluesinger, Gerry Gilbert, and Glenn Lewis on October, 30 1972. The project consists of the four artists walking three separate paths documenting their experiences in photographs. On October 30, 2012, Vancouver artists, Emilio Rojas, Guadelupe Martinez, and Igor Santizo, revisited this conceptual project. 40 years to the day, these three artists came together to forge a new, fourth path that intersects with the original paths which revisits ideas about Vancouver's identity and history. The retrospective project is entitled, ThisPlace/Vancouver
By Emilio Rojas, Gerry Gilbert, Glenn Lewis, Guadelupe Martinez, Igor Santizo, Michael de Courcy, Taki Bluesinger
Background/ ThisPlace
- September 6, 2012 to October 6, 2012
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Villeneuve makes poetic machines by assembling familiar materials that he barely transforms. His works move, emit light and produce sounds in ways that challenge one’s assumption about it’s imaginary function.
By Jonathan Villeneuve