AFA News

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":

IFrame

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

Increase to AFA artist grants

Eligible artists in Alberta can now apply to the AFA for a project grant for up to $18,000. The next deadline to apply is September 3. 

This increase is part of the AFA’s 2024-25 budget, which was increased by Alberta’s government in Budget 2024 by 18% to $30.1 million. Read more about our spending plan.

If you submitted your application before June 24

If you already applied to the September 1 deadline and you have questions about if this change impacts your specific application, please reach out to your grant consultant for more information.

As a reminder, project expenses incurred before final submission of your grant application are ineligible for AFA funding.

First time applicants

If you have never applied for an AFA grant, visit our website for Frequently Asked Questions and find additional grant resources for individual artists.

The AFA supports artists through seven discipline-specific Individual Project Funding Opportunities for Dance, Film & Video, Indigenous Arts, Literary Arts, Music, Theatre, and Visual Arts and New Media. Each funding opportunity supports arts activities in in art production (artistic and cultural creation), research, marketing, or training and career development.

The AFA only accepts applications through GATE Front Office online application system. First-time applicants will require a username and password. Email registrationafa@gov.ab.ca to obtain your login information at least five business days prior to the application deadline.

Please include:

  • your legal name
  • the funding opportunity to which you are applying
  • your email address

Your username and password will be sent to the email address provided.

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Artists can now apply to the AFA for up to $18,000 to support their activities through the Individual Project Funding Opportunities.

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Increase to AFA artist grants
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Artists can now apply to the AFA for up to $18,000 to support their activities through the Individual Project Funding Opportunities.

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Artists can now apply to the AFA for up to $18,000 to support their activities through the Individual Project Funding Opportunities.

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Work of the Week: Resting in Awareness by Gordon Harper

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The AFA will be closed for Family Day.

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The AFA will be closed today for Family Day. 
 

We are pleased to feature Gordon Harper’s, Resting in Awareness for the Work of the Week.
 

About the artist

Gordon Harper was born and raised in Medicine Hat, and began his formal studies in the Art and Design Program at Medicine Hat College. He received a B.F.A. from the University of Calgary and a M.F.A. from the University of Alberta.

He has lived and painted in Edmonton since then. His work has been displayed at commercial and public galleries, including the Art Gallery of Alberta, the Esplanade Arts & Heritage Centre and the Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies.

Gordon is represented by the Peter Robertson Gallery in Edmonton, Alberta.

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Work of the Week: Resting in Awareness by Gordon Harper
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The AFA will be closed for Family Day.

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WotW: Resting in Awareness by Gordon Harper
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The AFA will be closed for Family Day.

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Gordon Harper
Title
Resting in Awareness
Year
2011
Medium
oil on panel
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Gordon Harper
Resting in Awareness
2011
oil on panel

Happy Holidays from the AFA

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The AFA offices will be closed for the holidays from December 25, 2023 until January 2, 2024.

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This year's featured holiday artwork is The Last Canadian, An Era Ends by RFM McInnis

Watch AFA Board Chair, Paul Baay, introduce the artwork in a video holiday message.

AFA offices will be closed from Monday, December 25, 2023 until Tuesday, January 2, 2024.
 

See you in the new year, happy holidays!

While non-urgent government operations will be closed, services that affect the health, safety and security of Albertans will continue to be available over the holidays

 

 

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Happy Holidays from the AFA
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The AFA offices will be closed for the holidays from December 25, 2023 until January 2, 2024.

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Happy Holidays from the AFA
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The AFA offices will be closed for the holidays from December 25, 2023 until January 2, 2024.

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Artist
RFM McInnis
Title
The Last Canadian, An Era Ends
Year
1985
Medium
silkscreen on paper.
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RFM McInnis
The Last Canadian, An Era Ends
1985
silkscreen on paper.

Watch: The Art of Hide Tanning - an AFA Commemorative Art Project

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See the video of The Art of Hide Tanning: commissioned Indigenous artworks featuring the traditional hide tanning process taught at Portage College.

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The Art of Hide Tanning - Tradition Inspiring the Present and Future is a series of commissions to link the past, present and future of Indigenous art.

This project features new works by Amy Malbeuf and Ruby Sweetman created through the traditional thirteen-step Woodland Cree hide tanning process taught at Portage College in Lac la Biche, Alberta. The completed works will be exhibited at the Museum of Aboriginal Peoples' Art and Artifacts at Portage College. Learn more about the hide tanning process on Portage College's website.

Ruby Sweetman is of mixed Cree ancestry and has been a professional artist and an instructor in the Native Arts and Culture Program for over 20 years.

Amy Malbeuf is an award winning Métis multidisciplinary visual artist from Rich Lake, Alberta who works in a variety of mediums such as caribou hair tufting, beadwork, installation, performance, and video.

  • Scroll through the slideshow above to see images of the artists and their works.

If you cannot make it up to Lac la Biche to see the exhibition in person, fear not; you can see a preview of the artworks and the hide tanning process in the video below. 

Portage College also made a video about this Commemorative Art Project. Watch it on their YouTube channel.

These works travelled to Edmonton and were exhibited at the Alberta Craft Discovery Gallery, from April 14 until May 26, 2018.

Check out other AFA Commemorative Art Projects.

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Watch: The Art of Hide Tanning - an AFA Commemorative Arts Project
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See the video of The Art of Hide Tanning: commissioned Indigenous artworks featuring the traditional hide tanning process taught at Portage College.

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See the video of The Art of Hide Tanning: commissioned Indigenous artworks featuring the traditional hide tanning process taught at Portage College.

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Artist
Ruby Sweetman
Title
Traditional hide tanning materials
Year
2017
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Ruby Sweetman
Traditional hide tanning materials
2017
Ruby Sweetman
Traditional Ladies Hand Bag
2017
home tanned smoked elk hide, porcupine quill, red melton trade cloth
Amy Malbeuf (Photo Credit: Jordan Bennett)
between yesterday and tomorrow
2017
Home tanned smoked moose hide, polyurethane tarp, caribou hair tufting, plastic beads, antique and new glass beads
Amy Malbeuf (Photo Credit: Jordan Bennett)
between yesterday and tomorrow (detail)
2017
Home tanned smoked moose hide, polyurethane tarp, caribou hair tufting, plastic beads, antique and new glass beads
Amy Malbeuf
Traditional Hide Flesher
2017
Moose bone and hide
Ruby Sweetman
Traditional Hide Tanning Tools
2017
Moose bone, deer bone, birch wood sapling, metal

DataLog : Art Encoded - An Emerging Curator Exhibition

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DataLog : Art Encoded fully embraces and uses the resources of the digital realm to exhibit selected artworks from the AFA Collection

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DataLog: Art Encoded is curated by Jane Edmundson, and generously funded through the Alberta Foundation for the Arts Emerging Curator Fellowship. Click through the images in the exhibition above, then scroll down to learn more about the pieces.
 

Explore this exhibition on Google Arts & Culture.
 

The medium is the message.”

-Marshall McLuhan, Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man, 1964

Our online experiences are mediated by streams of code that most of us never see. This invisible data facilitates all of our technological interactions and enables work, entertainment, education, and creation. The off/on, negative/positive Boolean patterning of binary computing code is a contemporary cousin to the printing press, Pierre Jaquet-Droz’s 18th century automatons, and the Jacquard Loom. The relationship between technology and creative production is visible today in Photoshop hobbyists,Maker Faires, and the coded meanings of conceptual art.

The ability to instantly access a wide variety of information and platforms for an enriched, interactive experience is one not easily achieved by an exhibition in a conventional, physical art gallery space. DataLog : Art Encoded fully embraces and uses the resources of the digital realm to exhibit selected artworks from the AFA Collection while discussing the existence of art inside the technological landscape. The selected artworks employ patterning, code, negative/positive space, layering and pixelation to deliver messages to the viewer that are further influenced by the online platform that gives us access to them. The interdependent relationship between information and the technologies that facilitate its spread was predicted by Marshall McLuhan in pre-internet 1964, when he argued that the structure of a medium influences the way the messages it delivers are perceived. McLuhan believed that the information we receive is altered by the type of platform that delivers it to us; that knowledge consumed via book, radio, television, or computer, will be remembered and used differently.

DataLog : Art Encoded is organized into three thematic sections – ‘01100001 01110010 01110100’, ‘[re]generation of the image’, and ‘The Work of Art in the Age of Digital Reproduction’ – that explore concepts applicable to the worlds of both art and technology, including coded meaning, absence/presence, Pointillism, obsolescence and the evolution of visual media. Walter Benjamin’s influential 1935 essay “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction” is re-examined within the context of digital creative methods and held up as a mirror to current discussions around artistic authenticity in a technologically-mediated age. Hyperlinks to related articles, YouTube videos, artist websites, interactive portals and streaming apps situate the selected artworks within the diversified multimedia of contemporary life, where our browsers (and brains) regularly have countless tabs open simultaneously.

Artwork Descriptions

01100001 01110010 01110100

Jane Molnar, Hoola Hoopers, 1979, photo-engraving on paper, 1981.068.001
Molnar’s repeating clusters of figures holding hula hoops are reduced to the bare contrasts of greyscale in this optical-illusory print. The white spaces of arms, legs, and hoops blend together against the black and grey shadows as the figures become exponentially tinier, disappearing into the perspectival plane of the image. As the viewer’s eye travels into the image’s depth, the figures give way to abstraction, creating a pattern of positive and negative space.

Marion Nicoll, The Audience, 1973, ink on paper, 1981.155.218
Nicoll is most known for her hard-edge abstractions, but the repetition of curving lines and circles in The Audience communicate the essential, stylized features of faces. The shapes are further anthropomorphized by gestural strokes added beneath the “noses,” breathing personality into a highly simplified and stripped-down composition that ties this drawing back to Nicoll’s large-scale abstract paintings.

John Will, Sads and Happy,1994, lithograph on paper, 1999.118.016
The binary opposition created by Will in this lithograph stacks his American-bred happiness against the frowns of 21 international faces. Will’s art practice is tongue-in-cheek and often uses autobiography as source material. Despite his statement that much of his work is “about nothing”, Will frequently draws on philosophical thought, art history, and politics, punctuating headier concepts with absurd excerpts from daily conversation. As a sort of self-portrait, Sads and Happy positions the artist as the literal “one” amongst emotional zeroes.

Mary Kavanagh, Tarnish: Silver Drawings, 2005, linen napkins, silver polish residue, tags, 2009.056.001
Tarnish is the conceptual twin to Kavanagh’s polish, where a long table of 1000 silver-plated household objects were displayed in the gallery space. The items were collected by the artist over a three-year period from prairie flea markets and antique shops, and painstakingly classified and labeled with identification tags. A linen napkin was assigned to each object and over the course of exhibition in four venues, the silverware was polished clean. The traces of the performances are made visible in tarnish, where the dark remnants of domestic, repetitive action stand out against the stark white napkins. Kavanagh sewed the cloths together to form a tapestry that brings to mind a quilt, or the clean tablecloth that the objects were initially displayed on.

Eric Cameron, Thin Painting: Chris’s Thread and Needle, 2007, acrylic gesso, spool of thread, needle, 2009.041.001
Cameron has been creating a body of work he calls “thick paintings” since 1979. Everyday objects are covered in hundreds of layers of gesso that he applies on a daily basis, brushstroke by brushstroke. Each coat of acrylic marks the passage of time, and contributes to the evolution of a pair of shoes, a rose, a head of lettuce (or in this case, a needle and spool of thread) into mysterious and amorphous sculptures. The object at the core of the sculpture ceases to exist in its original form, translated by its shroud of paint and requiring a new language to be read.

[re]generation of the image

C. Bryn Pinchin, Pieced of an Image, 1988, woven wool, linen, 1989.106.001.V&R
Pinchin’s weaving predates the computerized manipulation of images that we have grown accustomed to in media, advertising, art, and our personal snapshots, but still captures the hard-edged patterning of pixelation associated with digital files. The textile is designed to be viewed from both sides, creating a positive/negative, inverted spectrum mirror. The interlocking threads of black and white wool make a gridded image that brings to mind both analog newspaper printing techniques and our contemporary computer screens and smartphones.

David Garneau, Lac Ste Anne, 2008, acrylic on canvas, 2009.021.001
Garneau draws on a 19th century optical painting technique to capture a dreamlike atmosphere in Lac Ste Anne, named after the pilgrimage of great spiritual significance to the Cree and Métis peoples of Central Alberta. Pointillism harnesses the human eye’s ability to blend distinct dots of contrasting colours into tonal planes, creating gradients of light and shadow that can be perceived as depth. The same principles are used in CMYK printing and RGB television and computer monitors. Garneau builds this image by overlaying a swirling pattern of dots in neutral tones over simplified shapes painted in a warm palette, communicating the memory of a fleeting moment of family bonding and sacred healing.

Elliot Engley, Walterdale Bridge, 2008, acrylic on canvas, 2010.011.001
Rendered in an autumnal palette and thick, horizontal brushstrokes, Engley’s Waterdale Bridge brings to mind a TV channel half-lost to static, or a MagicEye autostereogram where the two-dimensional plane obscures a secret image of depth. When viewed up close, the architectural elements dissolve into an Impressionistic patchwork; at a distance, the image falls into focus, allowing the painting to serve as a record of the century-old thoroughfare that spans the North Saskatchewan River in Edmonton. The Impressionists aimed to capture temporary moments in time and space; similarly in Waterdale Bridge, Engley chooses to visually preserve an urban landmark that is scheduled for demolition in 2015/2016.

Chris Cran, Gold Woman 2, 2012, enamel, acrylic gel on board, 2013.004.001
Created as part of his recent Chorus series, Cran’s Gold Woman 2 is a hybrid of techniques and concepts the artist has been working with throughout his career. Cran has moved between photorealism, formalism, Op and Pop Art for over 30 years; his canvasses hover between representation and abstraction. Cran often uses blown-up imagery from the cartoons and advertising of the 1950s and 60s that were originally made with the Ben-Day dot analog printing process, regenerating these images to simultaneously form and dissolve in the eye of the viewer.

Megan Morman, Rita McKeough (Calgary), 2010, mixed-fibre yarn on plastic canvas, 2013.021.001
In her portraits of queer contemporary Canadian artists, Morman translates the pixelation of digital photographs into stitches of brightly-coloured yarn and fusible plastic beads. To immortalize Calgary-based art star and musician Rita McKeough, Morman used the gridded framework of “plastic canvas” needlepoint crafts (a common craft material for children of the 1980s). The resulting fuzzy edges and terraced gradients recall the graphics and animations of the early Internet, the work’s kitschy combination of craft and outdated tech triggering warm feelings of nostalgia.

The Work of Art in the Age of Digital Reproduction

“... for contemporary man the representation of reality by the film is incomparably more significant than that of the painter, since it offers, precisely because of the thoroughgoing permeation of reality with mechanical equipment, an aspect of reality which is free of all equipment. And that is what one is entitled to ask from a work of art.” – Walter Benjamin

David Hoffos, Nature Walk, 1995, colour photographs, nail on plywood, 1999.001.002
The collaged photographs that make up Nature Walk both capture a sense of place and document fleeting moments in time. The highly saturated colours transport the viewer back to a sunny day, but as the grid becomes imperfect across the rolling hills, the memory is fragmented. Hoffos’ combining of photographs shot in sequence predates current digital panoramic stitching software, while following the tradition of the painted panoramas and cycloramas of the 18th and 19th centuries. The “mechanical equipment” used by Hoffos is made plain by the individual snapshot size of the photographs, fabricating a hyperreality that, instead of being “free” of mechanism as Benjamin describes, makes the process of its creation clear.

“Even the most perfect reproduction of a work of art is lacking in one element: its presence in time and space, its unique existence at the place where it happens to be. This unique existence of the work of art determined the history to which it was subject throughout the time of its existence...The presence of the original is the prerequisite to the concept of authenticity.” – Walter Benjamin

Faye HeavyShield, rock paper river, 2005, paper, digital photography, wax, 2009.141.002
rock paper river challenges Benjamin’s statement that reproduced images lack the capacity to embody authenticity and presence, as in this case (and in much of HeavyShield’s artistic practice) the “original” is made of many reproductions of digital photographs. HeavyShield often incorporates geographical elements into her work to reflect on her personal history and the cultural lineage of the Kainai Nation. References to the connection between land and body are visible in her most recent installations, where monochromatic photographs of skin, earth, and water are printed onto paper that is then folded or cut into multiplying, minimalist forms. The spatial relationships she creates between the viewer and the objects in these environments foster the “unique existence” Benjamin advocates; an authentic presence enabled, rather than prevented, by the reproduction and multiplication of the “original” image.

“Distance is the opposite of closeness. The essentially distant object is the unapproachable one. Unapproachability is indeed a major quality of the cult image. True to its nature, it remains "distant, however close it may be." The closeness which one may gain from its subject matter does not impair the distance which it retains in its appearance.” – Walter Benjamin

Geoffrey Hunter, Cloud Nine, 2014, acrylic on canvas, 2014.017.001
Benjamin refers to a philosophical distance between the viewer and the elevated, authentic work of art. Hunter’s Cloud Nine creates an optical distance with a layered screen of lines that partially covers the familiar image of a realistic cloudscape. Hunter achieves the illusion of depth in his paintings by applying and scraping away layers of paint in geometric patterns laid over top a source image, referencing both the history of Neoclassical art and contemporary digital image manipulation. The space between the viewer’s eye and the artwork compresses with the struggle between the representation of the sky in and among the abstraction of repeating vertical bars.

“A painting has always had an excellent chance to be viewed by one person or by a few. The simultaneous contemplation of paintings by a large public, such as developed in the nineteenth century, is an early symptom of the crisis of painting, a crisis which was by no means occasioned exclusively by photography but rather in a relatively independent manner by the appeal of art works to the masses.” – Walter Benjamin

Shelley Ouellet, Johnston Falls, 2012, plastic beads, plastic wrapped steel wire, 2014.030.001
Benjamin’s argument that the aura of painting was depleted once artworks began to be contemplated by a large public has interesting implications when applied to 19th century campaigns that used landscape paintings to promote Canada to a wide, international market. Picturesque nature scenes of unpeopled lands were made to sell the concept of a Canada ready for European consumption (despite the reality that many of the “empty” landscapes were already occupied by First Nations peoples). Johnston Falls is the follow-up to Ouellet’s Wish You Were Here… beaded curtain series that draws on historical paintings by artists Lucius O’Brien, Fredrick Edwin Church, and Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith. Ouellet replicates these icons of Canadiana on a grand, glittering scale to examine our relationships with constructed national identity, tourism, and an idealized natural world. She has employed computer mapping in the planning and assembly stages of her work since the mid-1990s, breaking source images into gridded components based on colour palette and then constructing the reproduction out of diverse, mass-produced materials including activist ribbons, plastic bugs, sequins, and Lite-Brite pegs.

“Mass reproduction is aided especially by the reproduction of masses. In big parades and monster rallies, in sports events, and in war, all of which nowadays are captured by camera and sound recording, the masses are brought face to face with themselves. Thls process, whose significance need not be stressed, is intimately connected with the development of the techniques of reproduction and photography. Mass movements are usually discerned more clearly by a camera than by the naked eye....This means that mass movements, including war, constitute a form of human behavior which particularly favors mechanical equipment.” – Walter Benjamin


Jonathon Luckhurst, Mudbank V, 2010, silver gelatin fibre print, 2010.055.001
Luckhurst uses the mechanical equipment of film-based photography to communicate subtleties in human interaction and the divide between built and natural environments. His commitment to traditional photographic methods in the midst of the popularity of digital cameras and software has commonalties with Benjamin’s belief in the authenticity of classical artistic methods over technological reproductions. Ironically, Luckhurst remains faithful to film-based techniques that, in Benjamin’s time, were viewed as a threat to artistic authenticity – what was once new and considered dangerous to the lineage of fine art is now, in some circles, seen as protecting it from the invasion of Photoshop hobbyists. In Mudbank V, however, Luckhurst does depict the subject Benjamin argues is most suited to photography – the mass movement of human bodies. But unlike literal reproduction or stark documentation, Luckhurst aims to inspire an emotional response in the viewer by prompting the degradation of the image, where people in the crowd are rendered anonymous by blurring, grain, and interventions in the printing process.

 

 

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DataLog: Art Encoded - Emerging Curator Exhibition
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DataLog: Art Encoded - Emerging Curator Exhibition
Art discipline
Collections Database Image
Image
Artist
Megan Morman
Title
Rita McKeough
Year
2010
Medium
mixed-fibre yarn on plastic canvas
Collections Images Slideshow
Jane Molnar
Hoola Hoopers
1979
photo engraving on paper
Marion Nicoll
The Audience
1973
ink on paper
John Will
Sads and Happy
1994
lithograph on paper
Mary Kavanagh
Tarnish: Silver Drawings
2005
linen napkins, silver polish residue, tags
Eric Cameron
Thin Painting: Chris's Thread and Needle
2007
acrylic gesso, spool of thread, needle
C. Bryn Pinchin
Pieced of an Image
1988
woven wool, linen
C. Bryn Pinchin
Pieced of an Image
1988
woven wool, linen
David Garneau
Lac Ste Anne
2008
acrylic on canvas
Walterdale Bridge
Elliot Engley
2008
acrylic on canvas
Chris Cran
Gold Woman
2012
enamel, acrylic gel on board
Megan Morman
Rita McKeough (Calgary)
2010
mixed-fibre yarn on plastic canvas
David Hoffos
Nature Walk
1995
colour phographs, nail on plywood
Faye HeavyShield
rock paper river
2005
paper, digital photograph
Geoffrey Hunter
Cloud Nine
2014
acrylic on canvas
Shelley Ouellet
Johnston Falls
2012
plastic beads, plastic wrapped steel wire
Jonathan Luckhurst
Mudbank
2010
silver gelatin fibre print on paper

Public art walking tours of Capital Boulevard on Culture Days

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AFA partnered with The Works International Visual Arts Society to offer free guided walking tours of public art during Alberta Culture Days 2017.

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The AFA was pleased to offer guided interpretive walking tours of the Capital Boulevard Legacy Public Art Project – Canada 150 on Capital Boulevard in Edmonton during Alberta Culture Days 2017. 

Each tour included an in-depth look at five new original landmark sculptures created by Albertan artists along 108 street in downtown Edmonton between 99th and 104th avenue. (Click slideshow arrows above for more images.) Saturday and Sunday tours were open to the public, while Friday tours were reserved for Edmonton school groups.
 

Tours featured:

  • appearances by Ken Macklin, Sandra Bromley and Voyager Art & Tile (Dawn Detarando and Brian McArthur)
  • included a tour of the projects' Maquette Exhibit
  • included a tour of the Alberta Legislature's summer art exhibit, "The Dream We Form By Being Together" at the Borealis Gallery

Each tour was approximately 90 minutes, and was wheelchair accessible. 

More about the Capital Boulevard Legacy Public Art Project

The five commissioned sculptures are a legacy for Canada’s 150th anniversary of Confederation. With these sculptures, Alberta artists contribute to the interpretation and storytelling of Canada’s past, present and future. The sculptures reflect Canadian landscapes, culture, history and/or values such as diversity, inclusion, reconciliation, and inspiring youth. The artworks are a symbol of community collaboration and partnership as citizens come together for Canada 150. In addition, these five sculptures will become part of the Alberta Foundation for the Arts Collection.

The five selected artists are:

  • Leo Arcand of Alexander First Nation
  • Sandra Bromley of Edmonton
  • Firebrand Glass (Julia Reimer and Tyler Rock) of Black Diamond
  • Ken Macklin of Gunn
  • Voyager Art & Tile (Dawn Detarando and Brian McArthur) of Red Deer

This Project has been funded in part by the Government of Canada, with matching investments from partners: the Alberta Foundation for the Arts, and the City of Edmonton; and support from the Downtown Business Association, and The Works Society.

Tours during  Alberta Culture Days were made possible through funding by the Alberta Foundation for the Arts.

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Capital Boulevard Legacy Public Art Project
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AFA partnered with The Works International Visual Arts Society to offer free guided walking tours of public art during Alberta Culture Days 2017.

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Capital Boulevard Legacy Public Art Project
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AFA partnered with The Works International Visual Arts Society to offer free guided walking tours of public art during Alberta Culture Days 2017.

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Julia Reimer and Tyler Rock, Firebrand Glass
Title
Transect
Year
2017
Medium
Collection of the AFA
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Julia Reimer and Tyler Rock, Firebrand Glass
Transect
2017
Collection of the AFA
Julia Reimer and Tyler Rock, Firebrand Glass
Transect
2017
Collection of the AFA
Ken Macklin
world enough, and time
2017
Collection of the AFA
Ken Macklin
world enough, and time
2017
Collection of the AFA
Dawn Detarando and Brian McArthur, Voyager Art and Tile
Star Gazer - Koo-Koo-Sint
2017
Collection of the AFA
Dawn Detarando and Brian McArthur, Voyager Art and Tile
Star Gazer - Koo-Koo-Sint
2017
Collection of the AFA
Sandra Bromley
Sentinel
2017
Collection of the AFA

Watch: Iinisikimm - an AFA Commemorative Arts Project

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See the video of Iinisikimm, a nighttime lantern performance and homecoming for the buffalo of Banff National Park.

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Iinisikimm is an immersive puppet-lantern performance that celebrates the reintegration of buffalo into the natural ecosystem of Banff National Park. Learn more about Iinisikimm here.

This past August, audiences in Banff and Calgary experienced outdoor performances featuring hand-made lantern puppets, drumming from Eya-Hey Nakoda, and performances by the Czapno Theatre Ensemble. The puppets shared the story of the buffalo, told by Blackfoot trickster God Napi.

The Iinisikimm group will also be producing a comic book, estimated to be released later in 2018.

If you missed the performances, fear not; you can experience a taste of Iinisikimm through the video below. 

Iinisikimm was created with support from the Alberta Foundation for the Arts Commemorative Art Projects funding. Stay tuned to our news feed for more videos from the other Commemorative Art Projects.

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Iinisikimm - an AFA Commemorative Arts Project
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See the video of Iinisikimm, a nighttime lantern performance and homecoming for the buffalo of Banff National Park.

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Iinisikimm
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See the video of Iinisikimm, a nighttime lantern performance and homecoming for the buffalo of Banff National Park.

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Peter Balkwill and the Czapno Ensemble
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Iinisikimm
Year
2017
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Peter Balkwill and the Czapno Ensemble
Iinisikimm
2017

A Q&A with artist Peter Hide

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The AFA sits down with artist Peter Hide for a Q&A.

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On Monday, October 30, the AFA installed Peter Hide's Squashed Freemason sculpture in its new location outside the Misericordia Hospital's revamped emergency department in Edmonton. Artist Peter Hide was on-site to assist with the installation and made some time for the AFA to ask him few questions about the artwork and his career.
 

The AFA has acquired several of Peter Hide's artworks for its Art Collection, some of which are displayed publicly. View all of Peter Hide's artworks in the AFA Art Collection.

Q: As an artist you want as many people as possible to engage with your work. How would you describe what it's like to have your artwork available to so many people?

A: You like it because lots of people can see it. Maybe it will stay there for ages and ages. These days things don't always last but the AFA has quite a few of my sculptures all over the place and I'm very grateful for that.

Q: The artwork that was just reinstalled at the Misericordia Hospital was started in 1983. Would you say your artwork has been able to stand the test of time?

A: Yes. That artwork has been in several different places. I think at one point it was in a private collection back in 1986.

Q: How much does the artwork weigh?

A: One ton. Roughly one ton.

Q: Is it difficult for you to part with an artwork after spending so much time working on it?

A: Not really. Do I treat them like children and I don't want to let them go? No, not really. I like it if it goes to someone. So, no I like when they go. I mean, I quite like having them and if they are around I tend to keep working on them, refining them. So, in a way, I'm a bit of a slow worker but I have made quite a few sculptures.

Q: How many would you say you've made?

A: Four or five hundered. My teacher and mentor Anthony Caro was much more famous than I. I think he's made about 8,000. He works in a different way. He works with quite a lot of technicians but he's quite a great sculptor.

Q: Can you describe what it was like the first time one of your sculptures was selected for public display?

A: The first one that was on public display was when I was student at St. Martins in London. It was in an art gallery but it was also a chemist shop I think. It was in Chelsea though and it sold for 33 pounds that was in 1966. It was great. I thought maybe just maybe I might make it.

Q: Are you currently working on anything?

A: I'm working on tons. I have two warehouses and they're both full. You know, art is difficult: it's open to fashion. When I was 25, I was very well known in England and I sold quite a lot of sculptures there but it passed. That's why I came over the pond. Then it all happened all over again.

Q: Your artwork is part of the AFA Art Collection. Can you describe what that means to you as an artist?

A: I'm very pleased about that. They've really looked after the work. I think they've been very good for me.

Q: Do you have any advice for artists when it comes to large scale sculptures?

A: I think people have to find their own way. When I was an art student, I followed Anthony Caro and he made large spreading sculptures, so I tried to make that as a student. My problem was trying to find out how small I could go. Making sculptures as large as a room didn't suit me very well. Caro would stretch things out. He would stretch sculptures and I wanted to compress the sculpture. I was more traditional in a sense, more like I was a wood carver to start. I had a carver's idea about sculpture.

Q: You've been working as an artist for a long time, can you describe one of your favorite moments as an artist living in Alberta?

A: Oh, that's hard. That's a difficult one you know. I think the first public thing I had was in the Edmonton Art Gallery (now the Art Gallery of Alberta) as it was in those days. I had an exhibition there after I had been here for nine months. That was very pleasing and I thought that I might want to stay here. Everything was new. In New York and London things had moved on and in Edmonton it was fresh. There were many good artists and there was quite a range of people creating. Painting and making sculptures.

Q: You did a bit of maintanence on Squashed Freemason before the re-installation, what was it like to work on it again?

A: It was quite interesting. It's changed. It's been outside for many years and I liked that it got more and more rust on it and it looked like a big monument that was made out of stone or granite. It feels like a monolith.

Q: The artwork has been installed at the Misericordia for a number of years. Now it has been moved in front of the new emergency room. So, something old will be part of something new. What are your thoughts on this?

A: It will get a lot of traffic where it is now. Before it was a bit tucked away. A lot of people will get to see it and I like the idea of that.

Q: What was it like to be part of the installation?

A: It was cold! 

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A Q&A with artist Peter Hide
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The AFA sits down with artist Peter Hide for a Q&A.

Twitter title
A Q&A with artist Peter Hide
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The AFA sits down with artist Peter Hide for a Q&A.

Art discipline
Location
Collections Database Image
Image
Artist
Peter Hide
Title
Squashed Freemason
Year
1983-1986
Medium
welded steel
Collections Images Slideshow
Peter Hide
Squashed Freemason
1983-1986
welded steel
Peter Hide
Squashed Freemason
1983-1986
welded steel
Peter Hide
Squashed Freemason
1983-1986
welded steel

Work of the Week honours Indigenous Veterans and Remembrance Day

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Acknowledging both Indigenous Veterans Day (November 8) and Remembrance Day (November 11).

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To acknowledge both Indigenous Veterans Day (November 8) and Remembrance Day (November 11), the AFA has selected Thomas Wong’s Poppy #1 for the Work of the Week.

Please note that our offices are closed on November 13.

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Work of the Week honours Indigenous Veterans and Remembrance Day
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Acknowledging both Indigenous Veterans Day (November 8) and Remembrance Day (November 11).

Twitter title
WOTW honours Indigenous Vets + Remembrance Day
Twitter description

Acknowledging both Indigenous Veterans Day (November 8) and Remembrance Day (November 11).

Art discipline
Collections Database Image
Image
Artist
Thomas Wong
Title
Poppy #1
Year
1984
Medium
colour photograph on paper
Collections Images Slideshow