Andreas Rutkauskas & Karen Zalamea discuss their exhibition GROUND TRUTH, at TRUCK Contemporary Art (July 6, 2012 – August 2, 2012)
Category: Calgary
WATCH / Seripop
Seripop discuss their exhibition THE OPTIONS THAT ARE OFFERED TO US: THE LEAST LIKELY / THE MOST TOLERABLE, at TRUCK Contemporary Art (September 7 – October 4, 2012)
WATCH / Instant Places
Instant Places discuss their residency BIG SKY, in the TRUCK Contemporary Art CAMPER (July 20 – July 30, 2012)
WATCH / Gwenessa Lam
Gwenessa Lam discusses her exhibition SHADOW, at TRUCK Contemporary Art (Nov. 2 – 29, 2012)
TEN QUESTIONS / Heather Huston
Please tell me a little bit about yourself.
I’m an instructor at the Alberta College of Art + Design where I teach in Printmedia, Fibre and First Year Studies. I enjoy teaching and even when I don’t, I get some great stories to tell about frustrating people doing weird things. I’m also the current president of the Alberta Printmakers’ Society because I love print and believe it to be a vital and spectacular medium. Non-art extras: I am a 2nd dan black belt in Tae Kwon Do and currently train as a light blue belt in Shorinji-Kan Jiu Jitsu. I also have a small parrot named Charlie who gives me enough stories about his over-enthusiasm and minimal vocabulary to pepper the most boring parts of my demos with hilarious anecdotes thus saving my students from droning-on demo hell. He also often asks “What are you doing?” which reminds me to get off Facebook.
Where did you study? What kind of an influence has this had on your practice?
I completed my BFA at the University of Calgary and my MFA at the University of Alberta, an all-Alberta all the time schooling. My BFA gave me a work ethic and a foundation in print. My MFA pushed my practice out of where I was comfortable and into diverse ways of visual thinking. Many of the connections that I made and experiences that I’ve had continue to influence my practice. I’m much less afraid about trying new approaches to making making work and try to consider what medium best suits my concept rather than trying to force my concepts into one medium or another simply because I like it.
What have you been doing since graduating?
I have been learning to re-invent my practice many times over, trying new ways of making work. I was the technician at the U of C for a couple of years and have now taught at ACAD for the past six or so. I’ve volunteered on the board of A/P for six years and taught in community centres. I’ve travelled when I can and have been through parts of central America, Asia and Australia. Its such an amazing way to get out of a rut and to just experience new things rather than worrying about the same old same old. I was invited to sit on the jury for the 8th Biennale Internationale D’Estampe Contemporaine de Trois Rivieres this past fall which was an amazing experience. The entire process was conducted in french which will please my grade school teachers greatly. I even gave an artist-talk in french which was a bit strange as certain concepts and words don’t quite translate but thinking about my work in such a concentrated way and working out new ways to speak about ideas (especially when the words don’t flow as easily) was an excellent experience. I’ve also done the usual boring grown-up stuff like get married, buy a house and invest in RRSP Mutual Funds.
What are some of the significant themes and ideas in your work?
I have worked a lot with miniatures and am interested in the concentrated way that we can project ourselves into these small spaces. I’ve been working lately with making work where the inside and the outside aren’t clearly distinguishable. Blurred spaces have this way of indicating both abandonment and invitation (since abandoned spaces are ones that you can explore) and I like the juxtaposition of very modern looking architecture with natural elements. In both my prints and my sculpture I try to create a sense of collapsed time, where its difficult to tell if a space is in the process of being built or torn down. Much of my recent work is a response to these cookie cutter neighbourhoods that are so popular in Calgary. I lived in one for awhile and the most interesting places were the ones under construction so I started trying to save them from becoming as boring as the structures next to them in my work.
What struggles do you face in your practice? Do you have any insecurities while making your work?
Time. Specifically, finding enough of it. It would be great to be able to work (or relax) instead of sleep but I hear meth has some serious consequences so I will just continue as I am. The exhibition that I currently have up at Stride was a departure for me as it involves electronics and programming language which is way outside of my comfort zone. In making it, I kept having large pauses in making the work. I was unsure of it and what to do with it. In general, there’s always the little awkward voice in my head that repeats phrases like: “is this interesting? Is my work moving forward? Why can’t you stop eating Lindt dark chocolate with sea salt?”
Who are some other artists whose work you are interested in or influenced by?
David Hoffos’ work made an impression on me a long time ago and continues to impress me with its inventiveness and immersive qualities. I love Julie Mehretu complex images relating to the city. Doris Salcedo’s complex tributes to disappeared people move me greatly and exemplify the power of everyday objects to make strong statements. Sean Caulfield’s prints and collaborative projects push the limits of print with beautiful, strange images and technical prowess.
What kind of music do you listen to while working in the studio, if any?
I mostly listen to podcasts in the studio as the repetitive nature of print making is well suited to listening to stories as you work. My favourites are This American Life, 99% Invisible, The Memory Palace and Planet Money. When I need to concentrate more, I range from Max Richter, Joanna Newsom (engaged to Andy Samberg WHAT) and the Tune Yards to music with a dancy beat like Azealia Banks and Jay-Z (despite my inability to relate to the life of a p i m p) to get me through late-night printing sessions.
What are some of your favorite things to do in Calgary? Places to eat? Galleries to visit? Way to spend a day off?
I am mostly a boring homebody as it allows me to re-charge and get work done; I am chronically busy. I also have a tree house in my yard so that I can spy on my neighbour’s pigeons (true story: he raises show pigeons and racing pigeons) so my house is pretty interesting to me except when I have dishes to do (which is almost always so take that how you will). I make the circuit of artist-run centres when I can and have a few restaurant faves such as The Coup, Namskar and Shikiji.
Do you have any upcoming exhibitions or projects?
My work is currently being shown in the Project Room at Stride Gallery (www.stride.ab.ca) until March 22nd (the work was funded by the Alberta Foundation for the Arts). My work is in some touring exhibitions right now including BIMPE VI (next stop Kelowna), Global Matrix III, and the 8th British International Miniprint exhibition. An exchange exhibition between Taiwanese printmakers and Canadian printmakers is currently being organized by Guy Langevin in Trois Rivieres and is just in the beginning planning stages for 2014. I also have prints at Pomp and Circumstance in downtown Calgary if you want to see some of my work in real life.
Website?
I web it up at www.hhuston.com. Find me and Charlie on twitter @heatherhuston.
TEN QUESTIONS / Kuh Del Rosario
Please tell me a little bit about yourself and your practice.
I was born in Manila, Philippines and grew up in Calgary, AB. A couple of years after post secondary, I moved to Vancouver, BC which is where I am now. Currently, I have an art studio at The Dynamo Arts Association, which I am also a board member, treasurer and occasional curator.
I use a lot of very random objects in my work, harvested from the junk pile at the studio, off the streets, plastic things bought at dollar stores and construction materials at hardware stores. I just moved to a new apartment, and everything that didn’t go to the new place, went to the studio. My solo show at the Positive Negative Gallery that just closed early February reaped the benefits, in which several sculptures were almost exclusively built from all my old stuff.

Where did you study? What kind of an influence has this had on your practice?
In 2003, I received my BFA in Painting at The Alberta College of Art and Design. Before ACAD, I have always
thought of myself as a painter; art school opened up a whole new way of looking and thinking about art, which I have always appreciated.

What have you been doing since graduating?
I’ve learned to sew window screens into pouches for pillow stuffing and use plastic spoons as scales. I’ve been transforming comforters into crusty glittering canopies to drape over walls. I’ve been making skeletons out of pool noodles and plastic clothes hangers used as claws.

What struggles do you face in your practice? Do you have any insecurities while making your work?
There is not enough room. Working as a sculptor and living in Vancouver, it is difficult to find sufficient and affordable space. Ideally, I want to be able to expand and work on several huge pieces simultaneously. I want to be able to look up and let my work tower over me. It would be freeing not to think about scale.
Insecurities and struggles will always be present, but sometimes if harnessed correctly, can be used for
tension that makes the work interesting.

Do you find yourself attracted to work that is unlike yours, or work that is very similar?
In the studio, I liken my process similar to some kind natural phenomenon, weathering the objects I’ve found through erosion, break-down and build-up. Materials undergo a metamorphosis; boulders and crystallized forms grow to create a specific experience, one that peak the senses. I find I gravitate towards artists whose work also create a sensory experience. This element may be the only similarity, but an important one for me.

Who are some other artists whose work you are interested in, or who have influenced your practice?
Phyllida Barlow, Martha Rosler, Shary Boyle, Franz West, Richard Tuttle, Rachel Whiteread and David Altmejd
to name a few.

What music do you listen to while working in the studio, if any?
I tend to let a movie play in the background when I’m alone in the studio. If any of my other studio mates are there, stories of what happened the night before, or random music can be audible.

What are some of your favorite things to do in Vancouver? Places to eat? Way to spend a day off?
Art openings, speakeasies, beef brisket chow mein, gin & soda, Third beach and afternoon naps.

Do you have any upcoming exhibitions or projects?
I am looking forward to exhibiting at AVALANCHE! (Calgary, AB) in March, with Calgary based artist Sarah Van Sloten, called Wet Country. In April, I will be exhibiting at the Black & Yellow Gallery (Vancouver,BC), in
collaboration with an artist, Jessica Yeandle-Hignell. In the summer, I will be taking part in The Corbin Union Residency (Corbin, AB). Late in 2013 or early 2014, I will be returning back to Calgary for a solo show at Truck Contemporary. Please stay tuned!

Website?
TEN QUESTIONS / Cassandra Paul
Please tell me a little bit about yourself and your practice.
I graduated in 2010 from the painting program at the Alberta College of Art + Design. I am currently the Administrative Director at AVALANCHE! Institute of Contemporary Art, administrator for the Calgary Allied Arts Foundation and a full time business marketing student at SAIT Polytechnic. I have shown my work both locally and nationally and maintain both a solo and collaborative practice.

Where did you study? What kind of an influence has this had on your practice?
I went to ACAD and the best part for me was sharing communal studios once you got to third and fourth year. You get to really watch how other people work and have a lot of casual conversations about ideas as they progress. I think this kind of studio structure has seeped into our post-grad life with both the Bakery and AVALANCHE! studio spaces and become a really integral part to how a lot of us work.
I also think the community formed at ACAD was incredible, we all went to Seattle in third year and funded our own trip to San Francisco after we graduated. I think being so close during ACAD has allowed us to continue collaborating on projects and supporting each other’s practices going forward.

What have you been doing since graduating?
I took the year after graduating to start up the Bakery studio spaces with Matthew Mark and Nate McLeod. We really wanted to keep the momentum from school up and for us that meant getting studio spaces and keeping that kind of community feel we had at ACAD. We started in the old Alberta Boot Factory building and had an opportunity to move to the Seafood Market studios the following summer. I was working at a modern furniture and decor store which influenced a series of work where I was examining relationships between humans and animals and the amount of material possessions people keep.
I decided to go to SAIT to take Business Administration with a focus in Marketing the following September. ACAD was amazing but I felt like I needed more experience and education to compete and gain the professional experiences I wanted. Also co-managing the studio spaces sparked an interest in business and I was bored so I started school in the Fall of 2011 and I’ll be graduating this Spring.

What struggles do you face in your practice? Do you have any insecurities while making your work?
I think everyone is insecure about their work or ideas to some extent. I feel like some of the best work I make has nothing conceptual to go with it whereas the best ideas I have don’t translate into interesting work. I also have so many unrelated ideas a lot of the time. I’ll become obsessively interested with something that has nothing to do with my practise and then a month later I’ll be really excited about something else, so I find it difficult trying to build up this consistent body of work without getting really bored and wanting to do something completely different – which probably explains the pretty radical shift this show has taken since my last show in the summer.

Do you find yourself attracted to work that is unlike yours, or work that is very similar?
Both! I love work about spaces and architecture and houses and destruction, but ultimately my favorite work is portraiture. People who can paint mega realistically just blow my mind. Artists who can paint that well and still include abstract elements in their work or create portraits in environments are my definitely my favorites!

Who are some other artists whose work you are interested in, or who have influenced your practice?
James Olley, Ben Grasso, Ehryn Torrell, Cornelia Parker, Yves Marchard & Romain Meffre, George Webber. I’m mostly really bad at falling in love with peoples work and never writing down who they are.

What music do you listen to while working in the studio, if any?
Usually just my ipod on shuffle. For “Estate Sale” I was listening to a lot of xiu xiu which is pretty dark and strange so I guess that fit with the theme of the show

What are some of your favorite things to do in Calgary? Places to eat? Way to spend a day off?
This is a hard question because I don’t really feel like I have days off. Even my days off I’m working on applications, or doing admin work for other companies – I don’t know. I eat a lot of french onion soup when I can! James Joyce has the best french onion soup, made with puff pastry. Kensington Pub is always a close second!

Do you have any upcoming exhibitions or projects?
Yes! I will be showing at AVALANCHE! with Slavek Pytraczyk in April. There are some other projects in the works but nothing confirmed yet so I’ll keep those on the D-L.
Website?
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Photos via Stride Gallery (Photo 1), Cassandra Paul (Photos 2-8)
WATCH / Mike Tod
Great video of Mike Tod playing his song, Cover Your Lamp, Babe.
Mike is currently touring Western Canada – if you’re in the area, go see him, he puts on a fantastic show.
TEN QUESTIONS / Michael Abel
Please tell me a little bit about yourself and your practice.
I was born and raised in a small town called Didsbury, Alberta. It is a small hockey town with under 3000 people which led me to play a lot of sports. I didn’t really make art growing up besides in the two art courses I took in high school. Thinking back on it, it seems like my upbringing made a bigger impact on my practice then I imagined. My last series of paintings proposed to paint the most iconic building [in my eyes] in North American cities in the theme of their NBA team. Right now I’m dominantly ‘concerned’ with the icon and monument.
Where did you study? What kind of an influence has this had on your practice?
I studied at the University of Calgary and it has had an immense influence on my practice. I was able to finish with a Bachelors in Fine Arts and minor in Architectural Studies: both which changed the way I work technically, and mentally. I had the chance to take a lot of independent studies and courses with Eric Cameron which was an immeasurable experience. His mentorship is something that will influence me my whole life.
What have you been doing since graduating?
I got the token trip to New York out of the way and then went back to school. I am currently trying to balance a painting practice and my Masters in Architecture at the University of Toronto.
What struggles do you face in your practice? Do you have any insecurities while making your work?
My work strives off insecurities. I can never make up my mind, so I end up using various styles, imagery, text, and references…which results in a painting in one form or another.
Do you find yourself attracted to work that is unlike yours, or work that is very similar?
Both.
Who are some other artists whose work you are interested in, or who have influenced your practice?
Trudy Benson, Ronny Quevedo, Francis Bacon, David Hockney, Dan Colen, Vladimir Dubossarsky & Alexander Vinogradov, Kim Dorland, Caitlin Cherry
What music do you listen to while working in the studio, if any?
I mainly listen to old hip-hip or house music. Jazz in the morning.
What are some of your favorite things to do in Calgary? Places to eat? Way to spend a day off?
I usually skateboard. My favourite restaurant in Calgary is Mercato.
Do you have any upcoming exhibitions or projects?
I have my first solo exhibition called Monumental Contradiction coming up in December as a result of a scholarship from private donors in remembrance of Dorothy Mcfarlane. The exhibition will be curated by Jenna Swift and the opening is on December 14th in the Art Point Gallery space. (the First Professional Exhibition Scholarship was juried by Christine Sowiak – curator, Nickle Arts Museum, Richard Gordon – former curator, Illingworth Kerr Gallery, and Geoffrey Simmins – art historian and Associate Dean of Arts, University of Calgary.)
Website?
www.michaelabelstudio.com













