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International Women's Day 2024

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Inspire inclusiveness and celebrate women in the arts.

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In celebration of International Women’s Day (IWD), we are proud to share artwork from Alberta based artist Karrie Arthurs

About the Artist

Karrie Arthurs received her B.F.A. with distinction from the Alberta University of the Arts in 2000. She had her first solo show entitled “Paper Weight” at the Christine Klassen Gallery in 2012. She continues to exhibit locally and internationally participating in solo and group shows. Her work is found in numerous private collections such as that of Paul Hardy Design, in Calgary.  
 

Karrie currently resides in Airdrie with her two children. She is a practicing tattooer since 2001, and has a shop in Calgary, Karrie is currently represented by the Christine Klassen Gallery. 

Watch Karrie talk about her artistic practice and her work in the AFA video "Diversifying the Collection":

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About IWD

International Women’s Day is celebrated annually on March 8 around the globe. IWD has been celebrated globally since 1911 and is an important day that highlights the social, economic, cultural and political achievements of women.

This year’s IWD theme focuses on inspiring inclusion. We encourage you to take part in an IWD event within your community and continue supporting women in the arts throughout the year.

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International Women's Day 2024
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Inspire inclusiveness and celebrate women in the arts.

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International Women's Day 2024
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Inspire inclusiveness and celebrate women in the arts.

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Image
Artist
Karrie Arthurs
Title
Revenant Portrait No. 3 Family Revenants
Year
2016
Medium
ink, charcoal, conte
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Karrie Arthurs
Revenant Portrait No. 3 Family Revenants
2016
ink, charcoal, conte

Women's History Month: Celebrating the diversity of women through the arts

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Celebrate women's history month by visiting local exhibitions curated by women and featuring artwork from the AFA Art Collection.

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Women's History Month
 

October is Women's History Month: a time to celebrate the achievements of the women and girls from our past and present. We encourage Albertans to celebrate women in the arts by engaging with local organizations and artists.

To celebrate this month, we are pleased to highlight three current Alberta-based exhibitions curated by women, and featuring a few artworks from the AFA's very own collection. 

Red Deer Museum + Art Gallery - Shirley Rimer: A Chronicle in Clay 
Curated by Mary-Beth Laviolette
On now until December 2, 2023

Installation view of Shirley Rimer: A Chronicle in Clay.
Images provided by Red Deer Museum + Art Gallery.

About the exhibition

A longtime Red Deer resident, Rimer is one reason why the city shines as a centre for ceramic art. A Red Deer College (Polytechnic) graduate, as an instructor, curator and cultural community builder, Rimer’s own artistic accomplishments are the highlight of this special exhibition of ceramic sculpture.

Featuring over 30 artworks made in the past 40 years, a chronicle about their making and Rimer’s personal discovery of clay traditions in other countries: Greece, Turkey, Mexico, India, France, Italy, China and America. They are about handbuilding in clay, reinterpreting the vessel, communicating with colour and reflecting on subjects like family, culture and heritage here in Alberta and abroad.

This exhibition features four Shirley Rimer artworks from the AFA Art Collection:

  • Body Language
  • Village Life
  • Red Fish
  • Purple Flowers

Calgary - Nickle Galleries - The Art of Faye HeavyShield
Curated by Felicia Gay
On now until December 9, 2023


Photo credit: Andy Nichols, LCR PhotoServices., courtesy of the MacKenzie Art Gallery.

Red Dress, 2008, nylon, cotton, metal and paper tags, glass beads.
Collection of the Alberta Foundation for the Arts
The Art of Faye HeavyShield, organized and circulated by the MacKenzie Art Gallery.
Financed by the Government of Canada. Curated by Felicia Gay.

About the exhibition

The Art of Faye HeavyShield will present work that spans forty years of her practice. The exhibition situates HeavyShield as a major contributor to contemporary Indigenous art through her creation of a new aesthetic vocabulary. While bearing a resemblance to conceptual installation, her work is rooted in the deep art history of the Canadian prairies and in personal/communal experience.

This exhibition features Faye HeavyShield's artwork Red Dress, which is from the AFA Art Collection. 

Edmonton - Art Gallery of AlbertaSecond Skin 
Curated by Lindsey Sharman and Danielle Siemens
On now until December 31, 2023 


Photography by Charles Cousins, courtesy of the Art Gallery of Alberta

Left: Caitlin Thompson, Rhizome (Hot Gossip), 2017, Fabric, thread, fake nails, decoy eyes, rhinestones, tassels, cording, buttons, plastic, paint, Velcro. Collection of Alberta Foundation for the Arts. Installation view of Second Skin, Art Gallery of Alberta, 2023.
Right: Pamela Norrish, Outfit for the Afterlife, 2015. Glass beads, nylon thread. Collection of the Alberta Foundation for the Arts. Installation view of Second Skin, Art Gallery of Alberta, 2023

About the exhibition

The works in this exhibition trace the boundaries of the body and reference garments and adornment in many forms. These literal and symbolic objects of attire allow their ‘wearer’ to explore a myriad of issues including identity and representation, objectification and empowerment, mythology and history, imagined futures and the afterlife. 

This exhibition features two artworks from the AFA Art Collection: 

  • Outfit for the Afterlife - Pamela Noorish
  • Rhizome (Hot Gossip) - Caitlin Thompson

 

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Women's History Month: Celebrating the diversity of women through the arts
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Celebrate women's history month by visiting local exhibitions curated by women and featuring artwork from the AFA Art Collection

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Women's History Month: Celebrating women
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Celebrate women's history month by visiting local exhibitions curated by women and featuring artwork from the AFA Art Collection

Collections Database Image
Image
Artist
Pamela Noorish
Title
Outfit for the Afterlife
Year
2015
Medium
Glass beads, nylon thread
Collections Images Slideshow
Shirley Rimer
BODY LANGUAGE
1991
earthenware
Shirley Rimer
Village Life
2007
porcelain
Pamela Noorish
OUTFIT FOR THE AFTERLIFE
2010-2015
glass beads and nylon thread
Faye HeavyShield
Red Dress
2008
nylon, cotton, metal and paper tags, glass beads
Shirley Rimer
Red Fish
2007
porcelain
Shirley Rimer
Purple Flowers
2007
porcelain

Happy International Dance Day!

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Today's International Dance Day! Established in 1982 by UNESCO International Theatre Institute, International Dance Day falls on April 29 every year.

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Today is International Dance Day! Established in 1982 by UNESCO International Theatre Institute, International Dance Day falls on April 29 of every year, commemorating the birthday of Jean-Georges Noverre, a distinguished choreographer that brought about significant reforms in ballet production.
 

Stages across Alberta have been empty for the past year as the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has continued to shutter performance venues here and around the world. But dance is still taking place in our province! Resourceful dance companies have turned to performances broadcast online, and if you haven’t tuned in to one of these online performances, we highly encourage you to do so.  Alberta Dance Alliance has a calendar of dance-related events – check it out: abdancealliance.ab.ca/dancelink-calendar/.

Read inspiring messages from International Dance Day Ambassadors here: cda-acd.ca/en/programs-services/international-dance-day/2021.

We'd like to share an image from our art collection that depicts a dance style that seems almost synonymous with Alberta - Ukrainian dance! – as seen here in Carole Bondaroff’s Performance Suite – Shumka Dance.

Happy International Dance Day!

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International Dance Day
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International Dance Day
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AFA Virtual Museum
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Image
Artist
Carole Bondaroff
Title
A PERFORMANCE SUITE - SHUMKA DANCE
Year
1988
Medium
coloured etching on paper
Collections Images Slideshow

Celebrating Asian Heritage Month

May is Asian Heritage Month, a time to celebrate and recognize the achievements and contributions of Asian and South Asian communities across the country, and throughout the province.

The AFA is pleased to recognize a few individuals that have enriched, supported and diversified the arts within our province.

Artists featured in Here & Now

We are pleased to share artist profiles of two of the 12 artists featured in the AFA exhibition, Here & Now, at the Royal Alberta Museum. 

Raeann Kit-Yee Cheung

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.

Wei Li

Wei Li is a Calgary-based emerging Chinese Canadian visual artist, whose experience as an 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.

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.

AFA Board Directors

The AFA Board of Directors includes arts champions from across the province, appointed by the Government of Alberta.

Le Bo

Le Bo is the Vice Chair of the AFA's Board of Directors. He has a passion for learning and volunteerism.He actively organizes and leads community events and participates in cultural events and exhibits. Le Bo is a successful entrepreneur who founded and served as the CEO and Chairman of an oil and gas company that was eventually listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange after 15 years of operation. In addition, Le Bo has founded multiple private companies in IT, robotics, and software.

Hear Le Bo speak on the importance of creating diversity in the arts. 
Watch

Nabil Malik

Nabil Malik a Member of the AFA's Board of Directors. A resident of the Wood Buffalo region, Nabil is a progressive and creative contributor to the cultural fabric of his community.  In his work as a community development planner by day and an active volunteer by night, he advocates for the vital role the arts play in placemaking, creating vibrant communities, and fostering a sense of identity and belonging. 

Hear from Nabil on the importance of the arts and the role of the AFA.
Watch

Shana Yang

Shana Yang is a Member of the AFA's Board of Directors. She is a passionate and active member of Calgary’s music and arts communities. Shana received the Queen Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee Medal, and has over 20 years of experience in vocal training and choral conducting. She is currently the Artistic Director of an Alberta registered non-profit choral organization she founded in 2004, and a music instructor at the Mount Royal Conservatory. Shana looks forward to helping local art communities strengthen and flourish.

Hear from Shana as she shares how the arts can grow in Alberta.

Watch

As we celebrate those that have supported and enriched the arts in Alberta, we encourage you to take part in any and all events recognizing and honouring Asian Heritage Month.

Learn more about how the AFA is addressing equity, diversity, inclusion and accessibility in and through the arts. 

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Celebrating and recognizing the achievements and contributions of Asian and South Asian communities throughout the province.

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Celebrating Asian Heritage Month
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Celebrating and recognizing the achievements and contributions of the Asian and South Asian communities throughout the province.

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Celebrating Asian Heritage Month
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Celebrating and recognizing the achievements and contributions of the Asian and South Asian communities throughout the province.

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Recognizing 15 years of curation

Curator, Collector, Educator, Artist.

After serving for 15 years as a Traveling Exhibition (TREX) Curator and Manager, Shane Golby retired in December 2023. During his tenure, he curated more than 60 exhibitions, showcasing over 120 artists in over 500 venues. The AFA interviewed Shane as he bid farewell, discussing his experiences with TREX, his artistic career, and his aspirations for the arts in Alberta.

Shane also featured in, Episode 3: Sharing the Collection, part of the five-part series highlighting the history of the AFA Art Collection.

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The AFA conducted a farewell interview with former TREX Curator/Manager, Shane Golby.

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Recognizing 15 years of curation
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The AFA conducted a farewell interview with former TREX Curator/Manager, Shane Golby.

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Recognizing 15 years of curation
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The AFA conducted a farewell interview with former TREX Curator/Manager, Shane Golby.

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Spotlight on Arts Audiences - Wave 1 Results

The AFA is supporting a two-year research project conducted by Stone-Olafson on current engagement of arts audiences in Alberta. We are pleased to share the first set of results ("Wave 1").

This work was developed for the arts sector exclusively and is designed to provide specific, relevant, and reliable facts to support the leaders in the arts sector as they seek to understand their audiences and grow attendance.

Key topic areas for Wave 1 include:

  • understanding current behaviours, habits, and patterns
  • understanding current attitudes and perceptions towards the arts
  • understanding barriers to engagement and support
  • exploring programming and communication preferences
  • understanding perceptions of value

Results

Watch the team from Stone-Olafson report on the findings from the first wave of research in the Spotlight on Arts Audiences project

Download the reports:

About the project

The AFA has partnered with the Rozsa FoundationCalgary Arts DevelopmentCalgary FoundationEdmonton Arts Council, and Edmonton Community Foundation, to support the Spotlight on Arts Audiences research project. The work will survey arts-inclined audiences in Calgary, Edmonton, and across the province to provide data that is useful and timely for arts leaders and organizations three times per year over the next two years.

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First set of results of a long-term study on understanding Alberta arts audiences. Watch a presentation of the report.

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Spotlight on Arts Audiences - Wave 1 Results
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First set of results of a long-term study on understanding Alberta arts audiences.

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Spotlight on Arts Audiences - Wave 1 Results
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First set of results of a long-term study on understanding Alberta arts audiences.

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Henri van Bentum, 1929 - 2022

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Spatial Rythms by Henri van Bentum marked a major transition in his artistic practice.

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Former Alberta artist, Henri van Bentum, passed away peacefully in Victoria at age 92. 

Immigrating from the Netherlands to Canada in 1957, Henri practiced in Alberta, Ontario, and B.C., as well as internationally. His work is included in more than 200 private and public collections, and he has had solo exhibitions in galleries in Paris, New York, Banff, Mexico City, Toronto and Montreal.
 

An obituary is published on the McCall Gardens website. Our condolences to his wife Natasha van Bentum, and his family and friends. 

About the artwork

The AFA has one artwork by Henri van Bentum in the AFA Art Collection: Spatial Rhythms (1982). This artwork is representative of a major transition in the artist's practice, as explained in his obituary:

While painting ‘en plein air’ at Moraine Lake, two faculty members of the Banff School of Fine Arts came upon him unexpectedly. When they saw what was on his easel, Henri was invited to attend the school’s summer session (which he didn’t know existed). Having no money, they waived the usual fees.

Ironically it was in the Rocky Mountains that Henri discovered he was a born abstract painter, and left representational art behind, never turning back. (...)

Later, back in the Rocky Mountains 1980-85 where [his wife] Natasha worked at The Banff Centre, Henri embarked on a new series in watercolour, “Spatial Rhythms” and gave a solo exhibition at the Peter Whyte Gallery.

In the AFA's 2020-25 Collection Development Plan, one of the selection criteria of artwork by artists assessed to be core to the collection, includes "strong example of the artist's work [...] reflecting the pinnacle of a transition or paradigm shift in an artist's oeuvre..." (page 11).

In this respect, Spatial Rhythms is a good example of how the AFA uses its collection to help tell the stories of the artists who have lived and practiced here, and contributed to the development of visual arts in Alberta. 

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Five rows of pink, purple, lavendar and blue painted lines on a light pink background. While the lines on the top row are mostly vertical, the rows below include lines painted at different angles, giving the impression of movement or of falling.

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Henri van Bentum, 1929 - 2022
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Spatial Rythms by Henri van Bentum marked a major transition in his artistic practice.

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Henri van Bentum, 1929 - 2022
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Spatial Rythms by Henri van Bentum marked a major transition in his artistic practice.

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AFA Virtual Museum
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Artist
Henri van Bentum
Title
Spatial Rhythms
Year
1982
Medium
Watercolour on paper
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Harry Kiyooka, RCA (1928 – 2022)

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The AFA was saddened to learn of the passing of former board member and Alberta artist Harry Kiyooka on April 8, 2022.

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The AFA was saddened to learn of the passing of former board member and Alberta artist, Harry Kiyooka, on April 8, 2022. 
 

From the news posted on the Kiyooka Ohe Arts Centre:

Born in Calgary in 1928, Harry overcame prejudice and poverty to become an artist. He eventually received four degrees, including a Bachelor of Education, a Bachelor of Fine Arts, a Masters of Art, and a Masters of Fine Arts, all before turning 30 years old. In 1958, Harry left Canada to study art in Italy. Upon his return to Calgary in 1961, he began a teaching position at the new University of Alberta, Calgary campus. In 1988, Harry retired from the University of Calgary after 27 years with the rank of Professor Emeritus of Art.

Harry co-founded the Kiyooka Ohe Arts Centre in 2007 with his wife, sculptor Katie Ohe. 

The AFA's connection to Harry Kiyooka

Harry served on the board of the Alberta Art Foundation (AAF) from 1977 through 1981. The AAF was one of three government art foundations that were eventually combined to form the Alberta Foundation for the Arts (AFA) in 1991. (Learn more about how the AFA was founded.)

The AFA Art Collection currently holds 17 artworks by Harry Kiyooka, and the Government of Alberta holds an additional six of his artworks in provincial art collections.

The two artworks featured on this post are from the AFA Art Collection:

Harry was heavily influenced by the 'Op and Pop' art movement during this period. He was one of the first artists in Canada to use the medium of serigraphy in  a contemporary style. The artworks employ bold colours, hard edges and geometric shapes to create an optical experience.

Visit the AFA's Virtual Museum (click button below) to view the rest of Harry's works in the AFA's collection.

Sky Scape will be included in the upcoming Alberta Society of Artists (ASA) Travelling Exhibition (TREX) entitled, Montgeries: Montages and Memories from the AFA Collection. The exhibition is scheduled to begin touring in September 2022 and will travel throughout Alberta for three years. The theme of the exhibition is based on the AFA Art Collection's 50th anniversary.

Image descriptions

Sky Scape - The image is dominated by block of solid bright yellow colour, interrupted by a series of vertical bands of different widths and colours to create an uneven rectangle. The bands of colour include peach, green, orange, grey and blue, and there is also a thin horizontal line of blue placed across the top of the yellow block. 

Red Contiguous - The image contains a series of red, maroon and grey horizontal bands of colour with gaps of space in between each band. A vertical band of dark grey runs through the middle of the painting, which disrupts the horizontal gaps, causing them to diverge in a variety of angles.

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Harry Kiyooka, RCA (1928 – 2022)
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The AFA was saddened to learn of the passing of former board member and Alberta artist Harry Kiyooka on April 8, 2022.

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Harry Kiyooka, RCA (1928 – 2022)
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The AFA was saddened to learn of the passing of former board member and Alberta artist Harry Kiyooka on April 8, 2022.

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Harry Kiyooka
SKY SCAPE
n.d.
Serigraph on paper
Harry Kiyook
RED CONTIGUOUS
1972
Acrylic on canvas

Work of the Week celebrates International Women’s Day

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Celebrate International Women's Day via Alberta's arts and culture scene.

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In celebration of International Women’s Day (IWD), we share the work of artist Miruna Dragan.

IWD is a time for us to recognize, celebrate and reflect on the achievements, stories and creativity of the many unique women of our past and present.

About the artwork

The artwork's title, When We Stand On the Threshold Between Two Worlds Our Soul Is Engulfed With Dreams, is a direct quote from Iconostasis, a book by Russian Orthodox theologian Pavel Florensky.

The artist, Miruna Dragan, responds to observed synchronicities towards subjective re-imaginings of archetypal myths and potent landscapes. Her work thematically reflects dispersion and transcendence. This artwork, like her others, offers itself as a tool for mystical experience while challenging assumptions about nature and culture.

About the Artist

Miruna Dragan, born in Bucharest, received an MFA in painting/printmaking from Rhode Island School of Design in 2001. She has been an Associate Professor at the Alberta University of the Arts since 2009. Dragan is a post-conceptual artist whose work investigates themes of locality and transcendence.

About IWD

International Women’s Day is celebrated annually on March 8 around the globe. IWD has been celebrated globally since 1911 and is an important day that highlights the social, economic, cultural and political achievements of women.

There are many great women storied and unsung that have greatly influenced Alberta’s art scene, helping to make it what it is today. We encourage you to celebrate women by taking part in an IWD event near you.

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Work of the Week celebrates International Women’s Day
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Celebrate International Women's Day via Alberta's arts and culture scene.

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Work of the Week celebrates IWD
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Celebrate International Women's Day via Alberta's arts and culture scene.

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Artist
Miruna Dragan
Title
When We Stand On the Threshold Between Two Worlds Our Soul Is Engulfed With Dreams
Year
2016
Medium
phototransparency, plexiglas, LED lights, walnut, power cord
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Miruna Dragan
When We Stand On the Threshold Between Two Worlds Our Soul Is Engulfed With Dreams
2016
phototransparency, plexiglas, LED lights, walnut, power cord

Celebrating the life of Mary Shannon Will

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Celebrating the life of Alberta artist Mary Shannon Will, who passed away on October 20. An exhibition celebrating her career is on until Nov. 27.

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WILL, Mary Louise Shannon
September 9, 1944 – Sampson, New York
October 20, 2021 – Calgary, Alberta
 

Mary Shannon Will, an artist known for colourful, witty ceramic sculpture and vibrant abstract painting, died of ALS on October 20 at Chinook Hospice in Calgary. A senior member of the Calgary art community, she was 77.

Shannon Will was born in Sampson, New York in 1944. Her childhood was spent in Seattle, Washington and then in Madison, Wisconsin, where Mary completed high school. Mary credited her father, an amateur artist who served in the US Navy and later worked in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the University of Iowa in Iowa City, for encouraging her creative bent. After a year at Coe College, a liberal arts college in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, she studied ceramics at the University of Iowa (1964–1967), the Tuscarora Pottery Summer School (1966–1967), and the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque (1970–1971). Mary moved to Calgary with her husband, artist John Will in 1971, and immediately set up her ceramic studio at their home in Lower Mount Royal.

Albuquerque was Mary’s life-long second home, a place she returned to annually. She loved taking trips into Santa Fe with her sister Michelle and her dogs to comb second-hand stores for unique pieces of turquoise jewelry and collectibles. While traveling throughout the southwestern United States and Canada, rarely would Mary and John miss a roadside attraction where a postcard, souvenir “floaty pen,” antique thermometer, or western-themed café cup and saucer would await them. Trips to New Mexico often included visits to Taos, Chaco Canyon, Acoma, Frijoles Canyon, and other ancient Pueblo sites that are home to the diverse Indigenous peoples of the Southwest and are places Mary held dear since first visiting them with her parents. Over the years, the people, light, colour, and cultures of the Canadian Prairies, New Mexico, and the Southwest intertwined to weave a strong network of relations and experience that shaped Mary’s life and art.  

Mary made art for over 50 years. During the 1960s and early 1970s she made functional studio pottery, but her pots quickly morphed into brightly coloured ceramic sculptures that recall sensuous botanical and biological organisms. Around 1980 Mary visited the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design while John taught summer classes there. Here her existing interest in systems, rules, and chance blossomed to guide her use of colour and pattern in a series of abstract geometric ceramic sculptures made between 1978–1985. These works with their glowing glazed surfaces of solid and graduated colour precisely patterned with hundreds, sometimes thousands, of tiny dots and dashes mark the trajectory of her practice for the years to come.

Mary began to make prints, drawings, and paintings using highly subjective systems and processes from the mid-1980s on. In the mid-1990s, Mary was an artist resident at the Banff Centre for the Arts where she discovered a synergy between the pixelated digital technology of Photoshop and her method of working with generative systems, patterns, chance, and colour. After much trial and error—and good-hearted collaborative toil with the computer technicians—Mary began producing archival inkjet and mixed-media works with paint where grids of digital pixels glitch and dissolve under the artist’s subjective systems.

From 2005 on Mary returned exclusively to painting small, intimate, and square works where the layers of colour glow and shimmer to create a jewel-like depth. These works are intuitive responses to the people, places and things that shaped the artist’s experience and perception of the world in which she lives: a trip to India with her friends Gisele Amantea and Peter White, a place in New Mexico, a residency with Jeffrey Spalding at the Tao Hua Tan International Artist Retreat and Residency (China), a shape from a doodle done while watching film noir. Mary, being a bit of a rascal, was unlike other conceptual artists and never allowed the system to completely override her personal responses to the process or materials. Beauty was her endgame.

Mary, you are as unique, eclectic, and colourful as your work. We will sorely miss you Mary but are truly grateful to have shared in your life. Thank you for the rich legacy you have left us in your work, through it the depth and richness of your life will live on in full colour.

Mary Louise Shannon Will is survived by her husband John Arnold Will, her sister Susan Michelle Shannon (Los Angeles, California), her brother John Thomas Shannon (Missoula, Montana), and is predeceased by her brother Robert William Shannon.

You can view more of Mary's artworks in the AFA's collection through the AFA Virtual Museum.

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Celebrating the life of Mary Shannon Will
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Celebrating the life of Alberta artist Mary Shannon Will, who passed away on October 20. An exhibition celebrating her career is on until Nov. 27.

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Celebrating the life of Mary Shannon Will
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Celebrating the life of Alberta artist Mary Shannon Will, who passed away on October 20. An exhibition celebrating her career is on until Nov. 27.

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AFA Virtual Museum
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Mary Shannon Will
COWGIRL
2001
Inkjet on paper (Collection of M.N. Hutchinson)
Mary Shannon Will
TAJ MAHAL
2005
Acrylic, glass on wood