Artist Profile

Here & Now - Han Sungpil

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Han Sungpil's artworks, Frozen Fire 08 and Frozen Fire 16, is featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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About the artworks

These large prints capture the aftermath of a 2017 wildfire in Waterton Lakes National Park. (Click arrows above on either side of the image to see each work.)

These artworks are included in the Here & Now exhibition at the Royal Alberta Museum until September 29, 2024. Learn more about the exhibition.

The AFA acquired these two artworks through its Art Acquisition by Application program in 2023. This program is designed to acquire contemporary works of art by any eligible Alberta artist.

Artist statement

The following is an excerpt of Han Sungpil's artist statement. Read the full statement

I wanted to capture the almighty restoring force of nature at the affected site out to the audiences. While this piece delivers awe of nature to the viewers through artistic expression of the event in 2017, the compelling message that it also carries is the impact of environmental devastation which awakens advocacy for environmental protection for the public.

About the artist

Han Sungpil practices art mainly by means of photography, video, and installations, covering subjects such as environmental issues, originality and imagine, history, and the relation between the real and the represented. He also enjoys understanding diverse cultures and exploring nature further interpreting our everyday world. Sungpil’s sensibility in his work often includes a sense of humor, while including sublime elements of beauty.

His works have been exhibited and collected at notable museums and biennials around the world, including U.S.A, France, Germany, England, Spain, Italy, Belgium, Russia, Slovakia, Lithuania, U.A.E, Australia, New Zealand, Brazil, Cuba, Argentina, Mongolia, Japan, China and Korea.

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Han Sungpil's artworks, Frozen Fire 08 and Frozen Fire 16, is featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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Han Sungpil's artworks, Frozen Fire 08 and Frozen Fire 16, is featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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Han Sungpil
Frozen Fire 08
2023
Digital photograph on paper
Han SungpiL
Frozen Fire 16
2023
Digital photograph on paper
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Here & Now - Michael Leeb

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Michael Leeb's artwork, Creature from the Depths, is featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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About the artwork

Creature from the Depths, is a mixed media ledger drawing made using a variety of media and paper ephemera as collage.

This artwork is included in the Here & Now exhibition at the Royal Alberta Museum until September 29, 2024. Learn more about the exhibition.

The AFA acquired this artwork through its Art Acquisition by Application program in 2023. This program is designed to acquire contemporary works of art by any eligible Alberta artist.

Artist statement

The following is an excerpt of Michael Leeb's artist statement. Read the full statement.

Creature from the Depths is a mythical storm creature conjured from an imaginative act of drawing and collage inspired by artistic pareidolia and the use of a vintage nautical map of the pacific Westcoast. This piece is intended to be a metaphorical allusion to colonialism and transformation as depicted by the storm creature devouring a tall ship.

About the artist

Michael J. Leeb is a métis visual artist, writer, and poet (Chippewa Cree/German). Michael is a printmaker (drypoint copper etchings), a papermaker, and creates mixed media drawings/ink paintings and artist books.

His work is included in the collections of the Alberta Foundation for the Arts, the Bruce Peel Special Collections Library of the University of Alberta, Medalta Potteries, and the Ino-Cho Paper Museum (Japan).

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Michael Leeb's artwork, Creature from the Depths, is featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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Michael Leeb's artwork, Creature from the Depths, is featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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Creature from the Depths
2020
Ink and collage on paper

Here & Now - AJA Louden

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AJA Louden's artwork, Elsa Robinson, was featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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Like Me is a series of spray-painted portraits on wooden assemblages made from construction materials that celebrates artists who practice their craft in Edmonton. The reference images for the portraits were sourced from each artist’s social media feed and the materials are "purposely scrappy, as if they pulled off the street."

This artwork is part of a larger series of portraits by AJA Louden entitled Like Me.

This artwork was included in the Here & Now exhibition at the Royal Alberta Museum from April 17 to September 29, 2024. Learn more about the exhibition.

The AFA acquired this artwork through its Art Acquisition by Application program in 2023. This program is designed to acquire contemporary works of art by any eligible Alberta artist.

Artist statement:

The following is an excerpt of AJA Louden's artist statement. Read the full statement.

Elsa Robinson is a multifaceted artist and the matriarch of a family of important Edmonton artists. Elsa’s sculptural textile works, paintings and collages exploring representations of Black families are particularly inspiring.

As an educator and workshop facilitator, much of Elsa’s life work has involved making art and artistic practices accessible to communities in a way I wish I’d felt as a youth. Two of her children, Shima and Judah, are prolific artists in their own rights, and seeing Elsa’s expanding legacy imbued in her own lineage helped me understand the undeniable value of nurturing and nourishing emerging talent.

Artist profile

AJA Louden  (AJA sounds like 'Ajay', short for Adrian Joseph Alexander) is an artist based in amiskwaciwâskahikan (Treaty 6, Edmonton, Alberta). Born to a family tree with roots split between Jamaica and Canada, Louden is a child of contrast.

Bold and arresting freehand spray-painted portraits of pop culture figures from Jimi Hendrix and Richard Nixon to local heroes like Rollie Miles often alternate with hand-lettered designs and vibrant patterns borne of a background in graffiti. Louden looks to bring a multifaceted, collaborative, and multi-narrative approach to contemporary urban muralism.  

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AJA Louden's artwork, Elsa Robinson, is featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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AJA Louden's artwork, Elsa Robinson, is featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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AJA Louden
Elsa Robinson
2019
Acrylic spray paint on panel
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Here & Now - Claudia Jimenez Chagoya

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Claudia Jimenez Chagoya's artwork, Dama Charra con Traje de Gran Gala, is featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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About the artwork

This Dama Charra represents the typical attire known as “Gran Gala” (Grand Gala), characterized by the fine and ornate traditional garments. In the competitive Charreria events, there are nine activities for men and just one for women.

This artwork is included in the Here & Now exhibition at the Royal Alberta Museum until September 29, 2024. Learn more about the exhibition.

The AFA acquired this artwork through its Art Acquisition by Application program in 2023. This program is designed to acquire contemporary works of art by any eligible Alberta artist.

Artist statement

The following is an excerpt of Claudia Jimenez Chagoya's artist statement. Read the full statement

Damas Charras is a body of work that represents the cow folk culture in Mexico called Charrería and focuses specifically on women horse riders. The sculptures explore the rich traditions and guidelines that the Damas Charras need to follow for official social events, as well as executing tricks on horses during competitions. This series aims to showcase and elevate the role of these female figures in a male dominated environment.

About the artist

Claudia Chagoya is a Mexican interdisciplinary artist born in Zacatecas, Mexico, and based in Calgary, Canada. She holds an MFA degree from the University of Calgary, and a BFA from Instituto Allende in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico.  

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Claudia Jimenez Chagoya's artwork, Dama Charra con Traje de Gran Gala, is featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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Claudia Jimenez Chagoya's artwork, Dama Charra con Traje de Gran Gala, is featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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Dama Charra con Traje de Gran Gala
2021
Recycled cardboard boxes on acrylic base
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Here & Now - Wei Li

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Wei Li's artworks, Chilli Sauce and Spout Cup, is featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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About the artworks

Wei Li's artworks, Chilli Sauce and Spout Cup are part of a digital series, Vessels which explores the complex intersectionality of hybrid identity. (Click arrows above on either side of the image to see each work.)

These artworks are included in the Here & Now exhibition at the Royal Alberta Museum until September 29, 2024. Learn more about the exhibition.

The AFA acquired these two artworks through its Art Acquisition by Application program in 2023. This program is designed to acquire contemporary works of art by any eligible Alberta artist.

Artist statement

The following is an excerpt of Wei Li's artist statement Read the full statement.

In my digital series, I look for a representational possibility that combines digital aesthetics with traditional art-making sensibilities. By replacing parts of ordinary objects with the human body/skin, I create grotesque anthropomorphic hybrid containers which trigger the viewer’s visceral and emotional responses. The gestures in my works are symbolic and metaphoric. I use the body/skin as material to activate social commentary on identity, diaspora, femininity, motherhood, and popular culture.

Artist profile

Get to know Wei as she shares the stories behind her new digital series, Vessels, and a bit about herself in her AFA Artist Spotlight.

Wei Li is a Calgary-based emerging Chinese Canadian visual artist, whose experience of being a new immigrant to Canada, provides her with crucial inspiration in her artistic practice. Her dual cultural background challenges her to integrate different cultural perspectives in her works and creates tensions through the contradictions inherent in forming a new hybrid cultural identity.

Li graduated in 2017 with BFA in Painting (with Distinction) from the University of Alberta and has participated in several exhibitions and artistic residencies across Canada and the United States of America, including the Sam and Adele Golden Foundation Artist Residency in 2021. Her first major solo exhibition, Curious Things was featured in August of 2017 in the Art Incubator Gallery at Harcourt House Artist Run Centre in Edmonton.

Li was a finalist in the 2017 RBC Canadian Painting Competition with her works showcased at the National Art Gallery in Ottawa. Recently, Wei has expanded her practice to the digital medium. She was the recipient of the prestigious Emerging Digital Artist Award in 2022, and her digital works were acquired as part of the EQ Bank’s digital art collection and were presented at the Trinity Square Video in Toronto.

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Wei Li's artworks, Chilli Sauce and Spout Cup, is featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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Wei Li's artworks, Chilli Sauce and Spout Cup, is featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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Chilli Sauce
2023
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Spout Cup
2023
Digital print on paper
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Here & Now - Lisa Brawn

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Lisa Brawn is represented with three artworks featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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About the artworks

The three artworks are carved and painted woodcuts on curved oak chair backs salvaged from the renovation of the Martha Cohen Theatre in Calgary. (Click arrows above on either side of the image to see each work.)

These artworks are included in the Here & Now exhibition at the Royal Alberta Museum until September 29, 2024. Learn more about the exhibition.

The AFA acquired these three artworks through its Art Acquisition by Application program in 2023. This program is designed to acquire contemporary works of art by any eligible Alberta artist.

Artist statement

Lisa Brawn is represented in the exhibition by three works. Excerpts from the artist statement for each work are below. 

Black Lagoon P.R. Reputation Laundering

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Black Lagoon P.R. pays homage to bottom feeder opportunists who are able to spin outrageously heinous actions into victimization and even saintliness. We can buy a team of lawyers and communications specialists to re-characterize our ruthless pillaging and carpet bombing as innocuous oatmeal cookies and daisy garlands. Maximalist Public Relation absurdities are an integral component of a dystopian mediascape, and low hanging fruit for parody. 

HELLO, my name is: Fact-based Reality

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With each of us in our bespoke algorithm-funnelled information silos, the concept of fact-based reality feels like a quaint relic. So elusive yet plausible, it could only be represented as a mythical beast. Is it real? Was it ever real? Once upon a time? Only in Paradise? 

Risk Management for Introverts

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Here is a viable coping mechanism as demonstrated by The Invisible Man ca. 1933. This one is personal. I have to devise elaborate workarounds to present myself non-anonymously in public. I am predisposed to introversion, and the world is particularly unsafe for LGBTQ2, which I discovered personally by coming out in high school in the 80s. 

 

About the artist

Lisa Brawn is a Calgary based artist specializing in painted woodcut blocks. Her work is in public collections such as The Alberta Foundation for the Arts, Calgary Civic Art Collection, and The University of Lethbridge collection, as well as in private collections across Canada, Europe, and the United States. Her work has been featured on banners for Calgary Bridges, Calgary Parks, and Fort Calgary, and there is a large scale permanent installation of her woodblocks at Inglewood’s Festival Hall.

A major component of Lisa’s art practice has been exploring the possibilities for alternative art venues and project spaces. Starting in 2001, her artmobile in a 1935 vintage travel trailer was followed by an art salon in Calgary’s Grain Exchange building. Lisa then collaborated with Milo Dlouhy and Angela Inglis to transform a downtown warehouse into an artist-run gallery and Museum of Oddities.

In 2007, Brawn, Dlouhy, and Inglis collaborated on a storefront museum in Art Central, and in 2009 and 2010, Brawn and Inglis collaborated with Jane Grace on an interdisciplinary project space in a hundred year old cottage. In 2009 Brawn transformed a 1962 Airstream into a second mobile gallery, The Bambi Media Machine, which was featured in the film “I Liked You Better Before” directed by Michal Lavi. From 2007 to 2012, Lisa curated a window gallery with Inglis and Grace, known as La Fenêtre.

In her twenty year career as a professional artist, Lisa has been featured in 25 solo exhibitions and participated in more than 40 group exhibitions from Victoria, Seattle and Los Angeles, to Halifax, Chicago and New Orleans. She received international attention for her large scale interactive, solar-powered sculptural installation, Helios, at the Leighton Art Centre, which was featured on CBC’s As It Happens, and picked up by media outlets from Canada to Brazil.

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Lisa Brawn is represented with three artworks featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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Lisa Brawn is represented with three artworks featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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Lisa Brawn
Black Lagoon P.R. Reputation Laundering
2022
Acrylic on carved wood
Lisa Brawn
HELLO, my name is: Fact-based Reality
2022
Acrylic on carved wood
Lisa Brawn
Risk Management for Introverts
2022
Acrylic on carved wood

Here & Now - Raeann Kit-Yee Cheung

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Raeann Kit-Yee Cheung's artwork, If We Could Meet Again, is featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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About the artwork

If We Could Meet Again is an appropriation consisting of three exposures onto one medium-format frame. The resulting silver gelatin print was subsequently painted with yellow water colour.

This artwork is included in the Here & Now exhibition at the Royal Alberta Museum until September 29, 2024. Learn more about the exhibition.

The AFA acquired this artwork through its Art Acquisition by Application program in 2023. This program is designed to acquire contemporary works of art by any eligible Alberta artist.

Artist statement

The following is an excerpt of Raeann Kit-Yee Cheung's artist statement. Read the full statement.

The people in the image are Mr. Wong Quai Lun and his wife in the centre, their son, Calvin, and their daughter, Debbie. When Mr. Wong first arrived in Canada in 1921, he worked in the CPR camps. He also worked as a bus boy before he opened his own general store in Royalties, Alberta. The notion of the yellow steam on the image illustrates Mr. Wong's involvement with the CPR and how he never revealed his early immigrant experiences to his children. The recreation of the family portrait is a way to imagine what Mr. Wong might say to his children today, now that they are both adults.

About the artist

Born in Hong Kong and raised in Canada, Raeann Kit-Yee Cheung is a photographer who leans on a dual heritage to create work that is both personal and universal. Having immigrated almost five decades ago, Raeann has come to accept she is neither Chinese nor Canadian, but rather someone who embodies a rich ambiguity that helps her confront melded identities to resolve inner complexities.

Raeann holds a MA in contemporary photography (2021) and resides in the traditional territories of the Treaty 7 region in Southern Alberta, which includes the Blackfoot Confederacy as well as the Tsuut’ina First Nation, and the Stoney Nakoda.

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Raeann Kit-Yee Cheung's artwork, If We Could Meet Again, is featured in the 2024 AFA exhibition Here & Now at the Royal Alberta Museum.

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If We Could Meet Again
2022
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Congratulations JUNO Awards recipients!

We're pleased to share a special shout-out to Alberta artists who brought home 2022 Juno awards. Congratulations to all of the incredible artists on their wins:

  • Maria Dunn: Traditional Roots Album of the Year 
    • She received two AFA Music Individual Project Funding grants for her Joyful Banner Blazing album: art production grant to assist with the recording; and marketing grant for publicity. Catch her live in Leduc and Sherwood Park in 2022/2023.
  • Andrew Wan: Classical Album of the Year (Small Ensemble)
  • Brett Kissel: Country Album of the Year   
    • Brett celebrates win in his What is Life? album. Catch Brett on tour in Alberta this summer (Calgary and his hometown, St. Paul).
  • Caity Gyorgy: Vocal Jazz Album of the Year
    • Originally from Calgary, Catiy won for her EP Now Pronoucing: Caity Gyorgy.
  • Fawn Wood: Traditional Indigenous Artist or Group of the Year 
    • Fawn is a Cree and Salish musician from Saddle Lake who won for her album, Kakike.
  • Garth Prince: Children's Album of the Year 
    • Edmonton-based African artist won for his Falling in Africa album.

For a complete list of the winners and nominees, check out junoawards.ca. All the best to them on their future endeavours! We're proud of their talents and appreciate their magnificient work for all of us to continually enjoy! 


 

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Congratulations to Alberta Juno Awards 2022 recipients on May 15, 2022!

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Congratulations to Alberta Juno Awards 2022 recipients on May 15, 2022!

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Congratulations to Alberta Juno Awards 2022 recipients on May 15, 2022!

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Alberta Artist Profile | Marigold Santos

Marigold Santos. Photo credit: Stacey Watson

Get to know an Alberta artist! There are more than 1,700 Alberta artists included in the AFA collection, and many of them are new or emerging contemporary artists. We are taking an opportunity to highlight some artists from the collection whose artwork is currently on exhibition or on tour. 

By Kimberly Van Nieuvenhuyse, Writer/Social Media Officer

Meet Alberta artist Marigold Santos

Born in Manila, Philippines and immigrating to Canada in the late 1980s, Filipinx-Canadian artist Marigold Santos is an interdisciplinary artist. Her practice ranges from drawing, painting, sculpture, installation and tattoo.

I had an opportunity to ask Marigold a few questions about her artistic practice, how her work as a tattoo artist influences her other artistic work and what her favourite part of the art-making process is!

Alberta Foundation for the Arts: How did you start making art?

Marigold Santos: I’ve always been creative and found myself drawn to making things ever since I was a child. I went through a period in my early post-secondary education where I stubbornly fought off my inevitable journey into art school by taking social sciences and religious studies in the first couple years of school. But when I realized that I was denying what comes most natural, I took some time off and went back to school to do my Fine Arts degree at the University of Calgary, and then I never looked back.

AFA: What is it like being an artist in Alberta?

MS: The art communities in Calgary and Edmonton are the ones I am the most familiar with as they are the cities I spend the most time in, and I find the people engaged and involved and quite open and supportive of each other. The greater public of Alberta also seem to be keen on supporting the arts.

Marigold Santos, Flight, 2013. Collection of the Alberta Foundation for the Arts.

AFA: What is a misconception people have about artists?

MS: There are two misconceptions that I find most often and they relate to each other. The first is that art making is easy and that the life of an artist is less tiresome than other professions. And the second would be that artists are able to ‘channel’ their negative (and positive) experiences into their work and therefore your art is always an outlet. To address the first one, art making involves so much personal management and discipline, research, exploration and experimentation, and a lot of trial and error that is not for the faint of heart. There is also so many behind-the-scenes aspects of art making, from grant writing and proposals and submissions, to art storage and shipping, to coordinating and communicating with galleries that require balance and attentiveness on the part of the artist. And in terms of the second misconception—if it were only that easy.

AFA: Tell me about your practice.

MS: My work is informed by my diasporic experience and is presented in many drawings and sculptures, paintings and installations that address self-hood and identity as a result. The focus is in the many ways our landscapes (social, geographical and psychological) can shape us and how in turn the multiplicity and fragmentation of self that can occur when navigating various experiences can be something celebrated and embraced.

AFA: What inspires you?

MS: Part of reflecting on my family’s immigration is considering what we ‘take’ with us and what we ‘leave’ behind, and in my situation because I was a small child, I realized that what I took with me was the folkloric stories of the Philippines that I was told as a child. Specifically, the character of the asuang (also spelled aswang), who is a scary and evil creature of folklore who takes on many shapes and personalities depending on who is telling the narrative and what region it comes from. In my work, the asuang becomes reconfigured from a malevolent creature, to one of strength and empowerment. And in my work, the asuang becomes a way for me to address contemporary issues of fragmented and multiple self-hoods. 

Marigold Santos, Of Wicker, acrylic on linen, 2016. Collection of the Alberta Foundation for the Arts. 

AFA: You are also a tattoo artist—how does that influence your other artistic work?

MS: Tattooing came to me because it was another way to make a mark. I have been receiving/collecting tattoos since I was 18, and it was an important way for me to create an image-symbol on my skin that represented something important in my life along the way.

I didn’t consider being the person to give the tattoos until a couple years ago, and I decided I wanted to incorporate the technique into my practice, as it was a way for me to acknowledge the importance of ink in my pre-colonial heritage of the Philippines where there was a rich hand-poke tribal tattooing tradition. It was also a way for me to give access to my work in a different way than conventional ways, to open up my art-making practice where there is an intimacy between someone else and myself through the act of tattooing, as well as to enrich my knowledge base and to learn a new skillset through trading and sharing knowledge with other tattoo practitioners, who are, for the most part, women.

AFA: What is your favourite part of the art-making process?

MS: My favourite part of art-making is how selfishly absorbed I am in the process from beginning to end, and watching a work develop, and really only being able to digest it once it has been completed. Sometimes I am so hyper-focused when making a work that when it is finally finished, I often forget how I got there because, as silly as it might sound, I sometimes feel like I was in a trance!

AFA: What do you want viewers to take away from your work?

MS: That I am a feminist.

AFA: Your work is in the AFA art collection. How does that make you feel knowing that your work is part of an art collection that belongs to all Albertans?

MS: I think it’s very cool that I am part of the AFA collection, because it makes me feel woven with the culture and community that helped me create foundations in my art experience. It is rewarding to be recognized as a practicing artist whose dedication and commitment to their research, experimentation, and work creates an impact worth investing in.

AFA: Who is your favourite Alberta artist?

MS: I don’t have just one favourite, but to list some Alberta artists who I find hardworking and inspiring are Amy Malbeuf, Robin Arsenault, Kablusiak, Jane Trash, Stacey Watson, Foonyap, Nicole Kelly Westman, Tia Halliday, and Katie Ohe.

You can see Marigold Santos’ most recent exhibition, MALAGINTO at the Dunlop Art Gallery in Regina. It is on view until January 12, 2020.

Explore the AFA Collection.

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Alberta Artist Profile | Karrie Arthurs

Get to know an Alberta artist! There are more than 1,700 Alberta artists included in the AFA collection, and many of them are new or emerging contemporary artists. We are taking an opportunity to highlight some artists from the collection whose artwork is currently on exhibition or on tour. 

By: Kimberly Van Nieuvenhuyse, Writer/Social Media Officer

Meet Alberta artist Karrie Arthurs

Karrie Arthurs is a Calgary-based artist who works with paper, ink and… skin! A long-time tattoo artist, Karrie says her two artistic practices influence one another—almost melding together.

I had an opportunity to find out more about Karrie’s artistic practice and why she has a special connection to the paper she uses in her artwork.

Alberta Foundation for the Arts: What is your background?

KA: I received a BFA with Distinction, major in Drawing, from the Alberta Art and College of Design (now the Alberta University for the Arts) in 2000. I’ve had representation with the Christine Klassen Gallery since 2012. I have been actively tattooing for almost 20 years and have had my own shop since 2007 in Calgary. 

AFA: How did you start making art?

KA: As far back I can remember making art was essential to survival. It assisted me in problem solving and trying to understand issues that effected me. It gave me a voice and a means of expression.

Karrie Arthurs, Locked Doors, mixed media on antique charcoal portrait, 2016. Collection of the Alberta Foundation for the Arts.

AFA: How does living in Alberta impact your art?

KA: I’m always inspired by my immediate surroundings and life experiences. Particularly in Alberta it’s the landscape and the people that effect my practice; the mountains, the vivid seasons, the harsh winters, the steadfast settlers, the driven pioneers.

AFA: What is like being an artist in Alberta?

KA: I have never lived anywhere else so being as artist in Alberta is all I know. Seems pretty great to be honest. There is a good community here.

AFA: What is a misconception people have about artists?

KA: That it’s hobby and not a career. And we are either brooding or whimsical.

AFA: Tell me about your practice?

KA: For several years now I have sourced and collected a large amount of “antique” paper, envelopes, documents, portraits etc. Some dating 150 years old or more. This is the material I drawn on with ink, charcoal and chalk primarily.

AFA: What inspires you?

KA: Everything inspires me. Music, a phrase of words, my personal relationships, the landscape, how I feel in relation to others, my childhood...everything.

AFA: You are also a tattoo artist—how does that influence your other artistic work?

KA: Being a tattooer and an artist I get a lot of visuals, sometimes it’s over-saturated. One bleeds into the other because I’m inspired by both. Since I’ve been doing both for so long now the two practices sort of meld into one another and they no longer look very separate. It’s all mark making in the end whether it’s commission based or for my own practice.

Karrie Arthurs, Family Revenants, mixed media on antique charcoal portrait, 2016. Collection of the Alberta Foundation for the Arts.

AFA: What is your favourite part of the art-making process?

KA: Probably when I’m in the process executing the image in my head into something tangible.

AFA: What do you think sets your work apart from other artists?

KA: I think what sets me apart is my relationship with the paper I’m using. It’s like a person. It’s been kept and treasured and had many hands on it, it almost has a soul. I like to keep the papers as much as I do use them to make art.

AFA: How do you want people to feel about your art? What do you want them to take away from your work?

KA: I want memories evoked. Past memories. When the viewer can see something in my work and relate it to a memory of their own that’s incredible. I want to viewer to also think about time, aging, death, tradition, transition and other things related to the past.

AFA:  Your work is in the AFA art collection—how does that make you feel knowing that your work is part of an art collection that belongs to all Albertans?

KA: When I was in college I was able to go through the AFA Collection in its entirety in person, alone. It was humbling and memorable. Having my work in this collection is a dream come true. To be recognized by Albertans to leave a mark for all Albertans is incredible. I’m very humbled.

Karrie Arthurs, Sleeping Ghosts, mixed media on antique charcoal portrait, 2016. Collection of the Alberta Foundation for the Arts.

AFA: Who is your favourite artist?

KA: I’m a Chris Cran fan.

AFA: Tell us a fun fact about yourself.

KA: Well I probably don’t look like any other artist in the collection. I have nice face tattoos and four gold teeth, haha!

AFA: Is there anything else you’d like to add?

KA: Just thanks a million, for liking my work enough and seeing something in it that you wanted to share with Albertans.

You can see Karrie’s work in person as it travels the province as part of the TREX exhibition Permanence of Ink. The exhibition is curated by Danielle Ribar of the Art Gallery of Grande Prairie and is on tour now through 2020.

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Get to know Alberta artist Karrie Arthurs! Learn more about Alberta artists included in the AFA art collection

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