Category: Installation

WATCH: Nuit Blanche Calgary 2012

Posted by – December 15, 2012

TEN QUESTIONS / Bogdan Cheta

Posted by – December 9, 2012

Please tell me a little bit about yourself and your practice.

I work two days a week, as a cleaner, on the weekends. Then I have the rest of the time in the studio and the decisions are mostly about what to do with my day – how to fill time. I don’t want to make art to fill time, so I start with cleaning things – objects, the floor and things begin to happen. I start reading books or people start calling, and then I get hungry and make an elaborate meal and then I need to find places where to nap or where to spend the night.

I’m always interested in how everything in the world is already connected and how things have the potential to arrange themselves if given the chance and space. I think the art part comes from these decisions on what to do with the hours in a day. How to spend time. It’s a kind of decision making that everyone goes through, and it’s not something that only an artist has to think about, but an artist is put in the position of questioning one’s lifestyle more than most people.

Taking an entire afternoon and drinking coffee and staring outside the window is as productive as making something. I’m always surprised by how I end up with a lot of work, and it’s like it happens when I look the other way. Sculpture has a way of sneaking up on me. And then I have to find space for these objects – sometimes I hide them, or move them somewhere so that I can catch up with the cleaning part. I’m drawn to how I don’t make decisions for myself anymore and how I become less able to make a decision; how things become complex by and from themselves. The challenging part of course, is that the world works differently and as an artist, you constantly have to find ways to take care of yourself. Maybe being in the studio is taking care of yourself, more so than it is about making something.

Where did you study? What kind of an influence has this had on your practice?

I studied at the Alberta College of Art & Design. I was there for 7 years. It was more like being in a state of retreat for 7 years. The challenge was to come out of retreat and then to find that state of being in the world again, after school was over. Going to ACAD helped me recognize ways to be confident, even if I don’t have a concept. Lately, I’ve been imagining that being a thinker is perhaps about not having concepts.

What have you been doing since graduating?

I’ve practiced ways to make up my own imaginary classroom. The streets make up the classroom. I find new teachers everyday – in homeless people, or in my mother, or in artists that have patience with me, or in people I meet at the gym, so it’s like school never ended. Lately I’ve been using the Knox United Church as a kind of private classroom. It’s open from 9AM to 4PM and I’m the only person that ever hangs around there so I have the whole church to myself. There’s an older man that cleans the place that noticed me, but he’s accepted me there and now gives me apples. There’s also a dressing room on the one side of the altar and it’s like my office. I’ve tried to read some of the books in that room because I’ve been thinking a lot about St. Francis and his relationship to poverty after encountering a video by Andrea Buttner who handed out cameras to nuns in a monastery so they can videotape themselves working on various craft projects. The nuns think of their crafts as little works.

My sculptures are little works too because I don’t want them to have weight – which is why I find the idea of selling them for $50 appealing. It’s enough to buy some smokes and a few art magazines, and then I can go to church and read. I think Annie Pootoogook is doing little works too. She was selling her drawings for $20 while living on the streets in Ottawa. And then Wednesday Lupypciw, through her relationship with various forms of labor, and with Calgary, is also making little works. I find it interesting how Wednesday is making up her own imaginary MFA program. Noel Begin and his relationship to the documentation of other’s work is also another interesting form of little work, in Calgary. I think the main development in my practice after school, was to realize that Calgary is an interesting place and that there are other artists working in a similar place that I am, and that I can learn from them.

What struggles do you face in your practice? Do you have any insecurities while making your work?

The vision I have for my practice is religious and magical, in the way that I want to inhabit a world in which one can simply make one’s work for purposes beyond career. The challenge is to navigate through situations where the expectation is that you are doing it as a career. I try to avoid situations where art is played – and I’m drawn to artists and circumstances that are real because I believe in art. I think that showing at AVALANCHE! was real, in the way that it too, is about creating a perfect world. I was reading this interview with Bruce Nauman a few days ago, on the train, and he referred to art as being serious because it can be, and it is, the difference between life and death – that kind of precarious form of excellence is what I’m drawn to, and perhaps guided by.

Do you find yourself attracted to work that is unlike yours, or work that is very similar?

I think I am drawn to the things that touch me, and I learn as much from the arrangements that homeless people leave behind, as when I’m in a gallery. Of course, there is more critical content you have to sift through in an art space, but I find it more interesting to encounter art and the everyday, in a way that is not competitive, so that I can be in a position to receive something in return. I never see things in terms of bad, or different or similar because everything in the world already has something to offer, and the best part is to be surprised by it; that way learning never stops and it doesn’t become about being smart or something like that.

Bjork said somewhere that she wants to be stupid and I think that is the best attitude to learning things. The being smart part can be a weird obstacle. Maybe being stupid gives permission to being good, or to wanting to get better, and then being stupid lets you get away with things – like sleeping in one of those dark rooms, in a gallery, where videos are projected. I did that with the recent David Hoffos show. Sleeping in his installation, allowed me to be there for hours and I learned so many secrets about his work that otherwise one would never be able to notice. I also heard a lot of weird conversations in the dark. Later on, at his talk, Hoffos complained about how everyone usually shoves their face against the glass and then their surroundings slip unnoticed, and my approach to encountering his work was exactly in reverse of the way the situation was delivered because that’s what felt natural, as a viewer, to do – to subvert the darkness. It wasn’t a critical decision, but it became critical. That’s what happens during the night, when I need to find places where to sleep; the darkness is subverted and things offer themselves. I think Hoffos’ work is about that space in many ways – more so than the illusionary part, or the craft of the illusion; it’s real. That’s also what I find problematic about work that rests too much on illusion or made-up concepts – that it’s not real; and then it has this superficial weight as if art is not real.

Who are some other artists whose work you are interested in, or who have influenced your practice?

The other day I was back at ACAD, and pretended I was a student. I tagged along with a class that was touring the current faculty show at the Illingworth Kerr Gallery. Tia Halliday was talking about her latest painting, which is very good. It reminded me of a photograph of this ghost I found in a penthouse where I slept last summer. The way she talked about what she was doing was interesting because it felt real, like she dreams about painting. At one point she recognized me, and I had to camouflage myself further in the background.

Don Kottman was sitting in a chair listening and asking questions. It was like being inside a church with all that faith in art. Even though talking about painting feels foreign to me today, Don is the first person that taught me about having a language and a logic in relation to what I do. He has a very specific way of looking and sensing the world that seems to always use means that are already there, and being around that in school influenced me. I think what he does is magical and maybe unnoticed. It’s also very contemporary, because the will to create art isn’t the first thing you see. Eventually, I took that sense of vocabulary and logic I learned from Don to the street, and then began to recognize other language forms and systems that I could learn from. I think it’s interesting to think relationally in a connected way that comes from the everyday and not from reading the latest art magazines.

Isa Genzken for example, measures the reality of her sculptures in relation to the reality of sky-scrapers. I’m hoping that one day I can understand reality on that level where excellence is about a way of being in the world. Reading of course, is important – especially when books find you. I like it when someone gives me a reading list because that way they’ve made the decision for me on what to read next, and it usually relates to what I’m thinking at the time. That’s how I got into reading Virginia Woolf. I found her published journal in a house, and she has become a mentor since. I imagine her disappearing in a crowd just to learn things.

What music do you listen to while working in the studio, if any?

I found a suitcase full of CD’s that someone made, in the garbage a few weeks ago, so I’m currently sifting through them all, as a kind of sonic chore. It’s like a time capsule from 10 years ago, when you could still find CD’s and people were into burning CD’s from the library. Then I watch the Young & the Restless – everyday. The Banff Center has a really good podcast channel on I-tunes now.

Oh yeah – and satellite radio is interesting too. I found a station on there that I think British Airways uses on board, so it’s like you’re on a flight. My car picks up this channel from the airport too – it has a button called “weather band” on the dash and it sounds like ghosts are talking about the weather. Maybe all cars have it, I’m not sure, but it feels like an art project.

What are some of your favorite things to do in Calgary? Places to eat? Way to spend a day off?

I don’t have days off.

Do you have any upcoming exhibitions or projects?

I’ve been lucky enough to be selected to write for a project, which the Department of Forgotten Histories is assembling together in a book format, that will be released next year. The book will be titled “Knock on Any Door: A Century of Art and Social Engagement in Calgary AB” and is collectively edited by Eric Moschopedis, Mia Rushton, and Sharon Stevens.

The process of writing this paper is nearing 1 year and it represents the first time that I’ve given myself a year to write, research and think about something. I’ve always had a close relationship to writing things because I find a link between sculpture and writing, but it’s always been about random connections and too difficult to bring together into something that is meaningful. I think this essay represents the first time that I’ve been able to come to a conclusion – without trying to aim for it; like scavenged poetry.

I’ve also studied and learned a lot from the list of books that was suggested I should read and I am grateful for the things I’ve learned and keep learning as a result. If you’re curious, go check out “What we want is free: generosity and exchange in recent art,” edited by Ted Purves.

Website?

In the near future. I’m still trying to understand the internet in relation to my practice. I keep thinking of a website in terms of it being a kind of installation. I also like how there is a liminal, internet-based language emerging – like data-activism where hacking narrative, or hacking life expands and subverts what’s encoded in culture.

Bogdan Cheta’s exhibition I like it here. Don’t you? runs until December 16th at AVALANCHE! Institute of Contemporary Art. 1235 Macleod Trail SE, Calgary, AB

ARTIST TALK: Sarah Sze

Posted by – November 20, 2012

ARTIST OF THE WEEK: Kyle Petreycik

Posted by – November 19, 2012

Nice works by Brooklyn-based artist Kyle Petreycik:

All images via kylepetreycik.com

If you’re interested in being featured on Fresh Bread, send images and a brief bio to editor@freshbreaddaily.ca

Nuit Blanche Calgary

Posted by – September 15, 2012

Tonight is the first Nuit Blanche in Calgary!

Featuring work by BGL, Sophie Farewell (Eric Moschopedis, Mia Rushton, Heather Kai Smith, Shawn Dicey), Theo Sims, Emily Promise Allison, and Caitlind Brown, Nuit Blanche runs from 7PM – 3AM at Olympic Plaza in downtown Calgary.

The New Gallery, TRUCK, Stride, and MOCA will all have extended hours during Nuit Blanche as well, so be sure to stop by.

It’s all free and it’s going to be great so come check it out!

ARTIST OF THE WEEK: André Hemer

Posted by – August 27, 2012

Nice paintings and installations by Sydney-based André Hemer.

All images via andrehemer.com/

Interested in being featured as ARTIST OF THE WEEK? Send images and bio to editor@freshbreaddaily.ca

TEN QUESTIONS / Henry Gunderson

Posted by – July 23, 2012

Please tell me a little bit about yourself and your practice.

It is really hard for me to eat an apple. I like black socks. I don’t like cutting my fingernails. I can’t remember my social security number or my astrological sign. I don’t sleep with a pillow. My art practice is always growing but is predominantly painting and is the focus of mostly all energy. A lot of what I do is still a mystery to me that I’m solving and unsolving.

Where did you study? What kind of an influence has this had on your practice?

I studied at the San Francisco Art Institute. That place definitely influenced the way I think about art – there’s no other art school like it.

What have you been doing since graduating?

I graduated a couple months ago and drove across the United States with 3 other dudes in a van (see fecal face) and now I’m in New York for an indefinite period of time. I’ve been working on a series of drawings and doing a little bit of art production assistant work for MTV.

What struggles do you face in your practice? Do you have any insecurities while making your work?

It’s mostly a struggle. I’m usually pretty critical of everything I do and after finishing a piece I don’t want to look at it anymore. Whatever it is I’m trying to do is impossible but sometimes I get close.

Do you find yourself attracted to work that is unlike yours, or work that is very similar?

I’m attracted to a variety of things. I went to the Metropolitan Museum the other day and was attracted to a lot of things there which are very different than what I do, but I find interest in many things that I can’t necessarily relate to but can relate to on my own level and at the same time I really enjoy things that are more similar to what I do.

Who are some other San Francisco based artists whose work you are interested in? Artists in general who you are influenced by?

There’s too many to name – I’m influenced by a lot of my friends that make art.

What music do you listen to while working in the studio, if any?

Usually always listening to something. Today I recall listening to a lot of Flying Burrito Brothers and Lee Hazlewood.

What are some of your favorite things to do in SF? Places to eat? Way to spend a day off?

Lurk, bomb hills, breathe, I never know what to do with my free time so I probably just work in the studio. I’m not really a big food person but I eat a lot of food from Trader Joes or maybe Taqueria Cancun, Chicos Pizza, Inn n Out Burger. I sure do miss SF.

Do you have any upcoming exhibitions or projects?

I have an upcoming two person show with Eric Shaw at FFDG in September and will be one of 100 artists in a group show in Portland, OR at Breeze Block Gallery curated by Sven Davis, and I will be constructing an apocalypse hideout shelter at Ever Gold Gallery in SF, December 21st 2012.

Website?

henrygunderson.tumblr.com/home

Around Town

Posted by – June 15, 2012

There are some great exhibitions opening this Friday – be sure to check them all out:

New Alberta Contemporaries at Esker Foundation
444, 1011 – 9th Avenue S.E.
JUNE 15 – AUGUST 29, 2012

The New Alberta Contemporaries is the inaugural exhibition for the Esker Foundation. One of its primary objectives is to celebrate the creative potential of recent fine arts graduates from all the degree granting institutions across Alberta. The 47 artists were chosen for the ability with which their practice moves across disciplines in the emerging post-disciplinary and post studio age.

Painting 101: a solo exhibition of new work by Kent Merriman Jr, at Haight Gallery
2018 24th Avenue NW
JUNE 15 – JULY 7, 2012

Ghostown, Steven Nunoda, at Stride Gallery Main Space
1004 Macleod Trail SE
JUNE 15 – JULY 27, 2012

GHOSTOWN combines object-based work with installation, audio and video to recall and memorialize the internment of 22,000 persons of Japanese descent during the Second World War. Two hundred and twenty miniature tarpaper models in the installation refer to the cramped shacks hurriedly built by Japanese Canadian workers for their own incarceration.

Called “ghost-towns,” the camps had lasting effects on the internees and their descendants. This work comments on immigrant experiences and issues of human rights, displaced populations and racism, and is intended to provide a focus for remembrance made crucial as the event passes out of living recollection.

Perpetual Passage, Nate McLeod, in the Stride Gallery Project Room
1004 Macleod Trail SE
JUNE 15 – JULY 13, 2012

NATE MCLEOD’s PERPETUAL PASSAGE invites viewers into an immersive space – a space that draws one in and seems to infinitely stretch the Project Room in both directions. As the viewer moves through the space the work appears to transform, creating a dialogue between artwork, exhibition space, and viewer. Expanding upon Théophile Gautier’s concept of “l’art pour l’art” (translated as “art for art’s sake”), the artwork does not provide extraneous information and the viewer is left to consider this three-way dialogue and the experience of viewing the artwork.

Lane Shordee – Hello Neighbour

Posted by – June 14, 2012

Currently on view at Pith Gallery is Lane Shordee‘s Hello Neighbour, an exhibition featuring sculptures, paintings, video, and handcrafted artifacts. This project sounds really great so be sure to get down to Pith (1018 9th Ave SE) before July 7th to see it.

Clare M. Duckett sent over this excellent article on the project, and on Lane’s practice in general. Following the article is a fun mini-doc Caitlind r.c. Brown made about Lane’s handmade shotgun – on display in the exhibition.

scAVENGER

Lane Shordee is a gentle genius. The unassuming sort who keeps to himself and works
under cover of basement and garage. His capable limbs are waxed with grime and greased
with earth, his hair caulked and caked with a goodly amount of organic filth — matted with
the very material that comprises his practice, his discipline: soot, sawdust, sweat, various
lingering chemical binding agents and VOCs — the sentimental sediment that lingers once
he has foraged for, forged, and encouraged a thing into being. He is creator. He is carpenter.
He is carbon-basted.

This man is a scavenger artist: a DIY dynamo of the surest capacity. He favours his forearm
to the conventional tape measure. His lungs act as terrariums for the same grit and moss that
clog his nail beds: indeed, his hands breathe life into those scrapped beams blessed enough
to be chosen as his apostles. He is building a church. One that espouses Goodwill and
champions the pioneer. Lane Shordee, in short, is a prophet.

+++++++++++++++++++

He suits up before going out on one of his retrieval quests, like some nouveau folk-
superhero. His accoutrements, utilitarian: tool belt, backpack (homemade). His sidekicks,
totems: magpie, raccoon (homeboys). “You kind of feel like you’re going into battle and can
take anything on. But I try to keep it low-key. Like, I’ll go after-hours and try to be as
stealthy as possible. Usually, I’ll scope things out and figure out how to get a certain item
home — if I need a friend’s help. If it’s been there for a week, I figure it’s fair game.” He
speaks of this urban hunter-gathering as a sort of rescue mission, though jokes, “I don’t save
anyone except myself”.

He carries on his person a small notebook. It is filled with intricate engineering schematics.
Innovative blueprints in red and black ink, he employs drawing as a means to filter and
explore and acquaint himself with nascent ideas. A breast-pocket incubator. “I need to take
things apart.  Figure out how the thing works. That’s really important to me. Take it apart
and put it back together. Eventually you get pretty good at it. You get to know all the pieces
pretty intimately. You can animate them in your head.”

His bicycle is equipped with a small trailer, a “Particle Accelerator”, to transport his finds
back to his workshop, his garage menagerie. A veritable tinderbox of garbage delights, it
fosters many aging orphans: turnstiles, reticulated foam, tarpaulin, a fire hose, chunks of
gymnasium floor. It is a dumpster diver’s city of dumpster diversity. Wood is the most
prolific disciple of his discipline: a kind of kindred kindling. Piles of disposed lumber, biting
with nails and staples and splinters, are carefully graded and sorted for desirable traits. “It’s
available you know? I consider it a natural resource. To me, it’s my duty. Everything I pick
up, I feel a responsibility to, to use it; every little bit deserves, to me, something more. Yeah.
I feel good about it — I feel like I’m saving it, a little bit. It’s what I can do to help things
out.”

This inheritance of inherent nuance will be reborn as ornaments to grace the homes of a
society who rejected their components. Functional objects borne of abjection. The refuse of building projects, projected, with a new focus, into a new light. He is their Messiah.

“I like the searching, because you never know what you’re going to come across. You go to
the hardware store and you pick out exactly what you need. They either have it or they don’t.
With scavenging, you sort of have to be patient. It’s not immediate, and that’s the joy of it.
Things will show up if you’re constantly looking for them. Sometimes I feel the universe is
good to me in that way. It will provide for me, even when I forget about a certain item. It’ll
give me an idea or a solution for how to make something work. It’s a longer process, but it’s
more interesting to just grab what’s available and go with it and cut it down and shape it and
try to piece it together. I’ll have things sitting around in my studio or workshop and they’ll
work well with these new things I’ve brought in. I don’t fight that; when it’s going good you
shouldn’t deny or second-guess your motions. I try to have a good method. I try to let the
garbage inspire me.”

Lane Shordee is Caractacus Potts. He is Davy Crockett. He is Robert Baden-Powell.
He is Swiss Family Robinson.

His technique is industrial and industrious: a bricolage of clumsy thrift, wrought of rot —
brutal, beautiful, beatified. Reminiscent of Rauschenberg’s Combines, his sculpture, his art
of acting artefacts, illuminates the common trope “One man’s trash is another man’s
treasure”. He is philosopher-anthropologist.

“Hello Neighbour” is his first solo exhibition. It spits of chewing tobacco and boot polish.
After coming across a lone bullet of indeterminate age in his garage [a former carriage-house]
he decided to build a rifle that might be able to fire it. Ammunition with a new mission. The
gun he tailored is rife with semiotic, semi-automatic implications, its stock cut from “No
Trespassing” and “Private Property” signs, the word “Risk” (presumably once accompanied
by the sequence “Enter at your Own”) shocks in all-caps beneath the barrel of reclaimed
pipe-and-tube-bits. He has built a horse-drawn carriage from plank and stave salvaged from
Western Canada High School.  His work subscribes to the school of functional aesthetics.
The gun really fires and the carriage really carriages.  “I’ve had it in mind for a long time. I
just didn’t have the space or the storage to accumulate materials. It’s nice not having to
bypass a really good find.”

As a freelance Alley Custodian, he has had to defend his practice to the authorities on a few
occasions, enter into a custody battle: in effect, martyr himself. “The cops don’t really know
what to do with me; they have their obligation to investigate. All in all, contractors are pretty
understanding, too. It’s no skin off his back if I free up some space in the container he’s
renting. It’s the proprietors, it’s their bosses who get up in arms. Sometimes it’s liability,
sometimes [in the case of store-owners] it’s just that they paid good money for the right to
throw that thing away. They don’t want it getting into the hands of someone who might get
the same use out of it without paying for it. They’ve hexed it. If they can’t have it, no one
can.” The same honest-modest nonchalance governs his artistic approach: “When you go
through the proper channels, you lose a lot in that process. …I’d rather just go ahead and do
it and see what happens. Then improve on that. You have to go through that struggle.”
Where others might be deterred, he is determined.

Shordee is well-seasoned with coarse-grade salt-of-the-earth. A man of waste-not, want-not
ideals and steady temperament, he is more of the depression era than generation X. He is a
dirty-thirty-something with a clean-your-plate mentality. Calm-sturdy, humble-noble, he
illustrates his speech with calloused gesticulation; he is wise and well-worn — he wears it
well. His hands are stained with the royalties of toil: oil, soil. His clothes, choked with chalk.
He is a gypsum gypsy. A trueblood mudlark. He is Ally of the Alley, here to avenge the
leftovers of a prodigal society. It is a sweet convenience that his first name should be
synonymous with his stomping grounds. Take heed.

scAVENGER

TEN QUESTIONS / Lowell Smith

Posted by – May 16, 2012

1. Please tell me a little bit about yourself and your practice.

Well, lets see. Currently I am working as a Banker, Bartender and Artist. I also fix friends’ broken iphones or laptops for some side money.

My main medium that my practice focuses on is using technology and electronics. Using them in a creative way to express my own concepts and ideas.

2. Where did you study? What kind of an influence has this had on your practice?

I received my BFA at the Alberta College of Art and Design in Calgary, Alberta in 2010. The school, faculty and peers had a huge influence on my practice. That is where things started, where I threw out the paint brush and picked up a LED. I really did get my first introduction to electronics at ACAD, and since have always wanted to work every project into that medium.

3. What have you been doing since graduating?

I left the country, got a scholarship to go traveling in Europe for the summer and then ended up in Thailand as an Extra in the film “The Hangover 2.” Then I came home about a year later. Broke and full ideas I wanted to get into a studio and start creating. It has taken me some time to get back on my feet and start producing projects regularly but things are starting to happen.

4. What struggles do you face in your practice? Do you have any insecurities while making your work?

The main struggle I do face is that I just don’t know enough. I want to know more of the technical details of the projects I am creating. To fix this problem I am taking some technical training. In the fall I am starting a 2 year diploma in Electronics Engineering and Technology at the Southern Institute of Technology. Getting the technical knowledge in electronics will help me to expand my ability in creating and will help me to master my own medium. Insecurities that I have would be that the project has to work. There is a lot of chance of failure in my medium, its more of an all or nothing.

5. Do you find yourself attracted to work that is unlike yours, or work that is very similar?

I always have a soft spot for electronic, interactive or digital work. I am not sure if I just find it more interesting because I feel I understand more of whats going on than I do with other artworks. Or that I just get bored of starting at a painting for more than 10 seconds.

6. Who are some other Calgary-based artists whose work you are interested in? Artists in general who you are influenced by?

Local: Kenneth Merriman Jr.

This Dutch Duo Lernert and Sander

7. What music do you listen to while working in the studio, if any?

Recently I am enjoying Epic Classical, like Richard Strauss or Mozart’s Requiem. They really make me feel passionate about anything I am doing.

8. What are some of your favorite things to do in Calgary? Places to eat? Way to spend a day off?

Sleeping in the park on a nice sunny day. Eating in China Town, Thi Thi Subs. Oh but I did just find out about this great Noodle place, Shikiji on Centre Street and 16th Avenue.

9. Do you have any upcoming exhibitions or projects?

Currently I have a show at the Stride +15 Gallery titled, “End of Analog.” Features analog televisions with a 3D camera capturing the viewers and putting them into the television static. I have a few small summer projects planned for the summer, one in particular might burn some bridges with painters.

Closing Reception for the Stride show is Thursday May 17th from 7-8PM

10. Website?

http://www.lowellsmith.ca/