Visual arts & new media
Work of the Week celebrates World Photography Day
Celebrate World Photography Day with Colin Smith's camera obscura, Bow Lake.
Bow Lake
Colin Smith's Bow Lake is this week's Work of the Week. Smith turns his 1976 Boler trailer into a homemade camera obscura. Smith builds on location camera obscuras and creates projections that produce highly saturated, breathtaking imagery.
This work was acquired as part of the AFA’s Art Acquisition by Application program.
About World Photography Day
World Photography Day is the global celebration of all types of photography. Each year features an optional theme to focus on. The World Photography Day 2023 theme is Landscapes.
World Photo Day is founded by Korske Ara to commemorate the patent of the daguerreotype process and to inspire others to take meaningful photos.
About the artist
Quietly embedded in Alberta’s film community for over 20 years. As a Film technician and stills photographer Colin has worked on numerous projects for local and international productions.
Congruently working as a self taught photographer. Recognized with awards for travel and fine art photography, including multiple project grants from Alberta Foundation for the Arts.
Colin has proudly exhibited his photography in several galleries including:
Celebrate World Photography Day with Colin Smith's camera obscura, Bow Lake.
Celebrate World Photography Day with Colin Smith's camera obscura, Bow Lake.
Work of the Week: Happy International Dance Day
Celebrate International Dance Day! Established in 1982 by UNESCO International Theatre Institute, International Dance Day falls on Apr 29 every year.
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 French choreographer that brought about significant changes in ballet production.
Check out what's happening from Alberta Dance Alliance calendar of dance-related events.
About the artwork:
The drawing was acquired by donation to the AFA art collection from the estate of Steven Mack. The AFA was approached by the estate in 2009 to review the holdings and offered first selection. The AFA purchased five artworks at the time including a painting of a dancer posed by the artist’s favourite model, named Kathryn.
In 2016 the AFA continued to work with the estate and reviewed artworks from a commercial gallery that had closed. The artworks were from the same Dancer Series, including two paintings and two drawings that were preliminary studies for the paintings.
The painting that is featured in the slide was an AFA purchase. The painting was part of the interdisciplinary performance piece he executed with the model and musician Amir Amiri at The Grand Theatre in Calgary.
Check out 13 artworks by the artist showcasing the mediums of painting and drawing, ranging in date from 1993 – 2007 on the AFA's Virtual Museum (click button below).
About the artist:
Steven Mack studied at University of Alberta, Universitty of Calgary, Sorbonne University in Paris, and completed graduate work at the Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts. Mack occasionally taught at Mount Royal College, and the Alberta College of Art & Design. Mack passed away on August 26, 2009 at the age of 46.
The AFA's collected works by Steven Mack collection reference the moments when objects become brushstrokes, and brushstrokes become identifiable objects.
Image description
The first image shows a black and white sketch drawing of a dancer. The dancer is wearing a short sleeve shirt and pants where she has one arm raised up as she is posing.
The second image is a colour painting of the same dancer. She has short, tied-up black hair, and is wearing a green tank top and dark greyish-blue pants. She is in a dance studio and has one hand holding onto the wooden ballet barre (handrail). The background is a mirror showing her reflection and a black rope hanging from the ceiling.
Celebrate International Dance Day! Established in 1982 by UNESCO International Theatre Institute, International Dance Day falls on Apr 29 every year.
Celebrate International Dance Day! Established in 1982 by UNESCO International Theatre Institute, International Dance Day falls on Apr 29 every year.
Work of the Week celebrates taking a break
We remind ourselves to take a break with Gwen Alstad's Coffee Break.
Give yourself a break
It's easy to get lost in the busyness of the day. It's important that we provide ourselves time to take a moment and collect ourselves. To help with that reminder, we are privileged to share Gwen Alstad's painting, Coffee Break.
We remind ourselves to take a break with Gwen Alstad's Coffee Break.
We remind ourselves to take a break with Gwen Alstad's Coffee Break.
Henri van Bentum, 1929 - 2022
Spatial Rythms by Henri van Bentum marked a major transition in his artistic practice.
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.
- learn more about the AFA's collection development policy
Image description
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.
Spatial Rythms by Henri van Bentum marked a major transition in his artistic practice.
Spatial Rythms by Henri van Bentum marked a major transition in his artistic practice.
Harry Kiyooka, RCA (1928 – 2022)
The AFA was saddened to learn of the passing of former board member and Alberta artist Harry Kiyooka on April 8, 2022.
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:
- SKY SCAPE (serigraph) is estimated to be created during the late 1960’s
- RED CONTIGUOUS was painted in 1972
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.
The AFA was saddened to learn of the passing of former board member and Alberta artist Harry Kiyooka on April 8, 2022.
The AFA was saddened to learn of the passing of former board member and Alberta artist Harry Kiyooka on April 8, 2022.
Work of the Week - an ode to spring
We celebrate the first day of spring with Jean Peters' Spring Thaw.
The AFA's Work of the Week celebrates the first day of spring.
While we wait for days with above 0° temperatures and prolonged time in the outdoors without fear of the elements, we can look to Jean Peters' Spring Thaw, to help us manifest a seasonal transition on this first day of spring.
About the artist
Jean Peters was born in Edmonton, Alberta and has lived in the area all her life. Her childhood years were spent in a rural community and it was there that she developed her sensitivity to natural beauty.
She started painting in 1975 and it developed into her passion. She has exhibited in Calgary since 1987, participating in many two or three person shows over the years.
Jean is a Senior Member of the Society of Western Canadian Artists (SWCA) and is also a member in good standing with the Artists Borealis Group.
Jean's work may be found in galleries in Edmonton and Calgary as well as private and corporate collections in Canada and the United States.
Peters has been teaching acrylic painting since 1998 and enjoys the interaction with her students.
Image description:
An acrylic landscape painting of a wooded pond, light blue sky, melting white snow, leafless and fallen trees and brown grass.
We celebrate the first day of spring with Jean Peters' Spring Thaw.
We celebrate the first day of spring with Jean Peters' Spring Thaw.
Work of the Week: "Girl's Head" by Roy Kiyooka
This week's Work of the Week is "Girl's Head" by Roy Kiyooka
This week's Work of the Week is Girl's Head by Roy Kiyooka.
Portraiture is a very old genre. Excellent examples of it can be found in ancient Egypt, where depictions of the pharaohs, priests and deities were common.
Portraits have always been more than just a record of a likeness. They have been used to show the power, importance, virtue, beauty, wealth, taste, learning or other qualities of the sitter. Early portraiture tended to idealize the sitter - portraying them in the best light by glossing over physical imperfections. However, this wasn't always the case, Domenico Ghirlandaio's An Old Man and His Grandson, comes to mind as an example of Renaissance portraiture that depicted its subject in a more natural style.
Portraiture tended to remain out of the reach of the general public due to cost until the advent of photography, which allowed the average person to finally have a likeness of their image created.
About the Artist: Roy Kiyooka (1926-1994)
Roy Kenzie Kiyooka was born in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan in 1926. He grew up in the prairies and lived in Calgary, but being of Japanese extraction, he and his family were required to register as enemy aliens during World War II, and Kiyooka spent the war years working on a farm. He studied at the Provincial Institute of Technology and Art (now the Alberta University of the Arts) in Calgary from 1946 to 1949 with Jock Macdonald and Illingworth Kerr, and in 1956, spent eight months in San Miguel de Allende in Mexico, where he studied the works of the great Mexican muralists Diego Rivera, Gabriel Orozco and David Alfaro Siqueiros.
After returning to Regina, Roy Kiyooka began teaching at the Regina College (now the University of Regina) and became a regular participant at the Saskatchewan Emma Lake Artists' Workshops in the 1950s, including one hosted by famous American abstract painter Barnett Newman in the summer of 1959. Later that year, he took up a teaching position at the Vancouver School of Art and subsequently played a leading role in the city's bustling cultural scene. During this period, he began writing poetry and over the years published many collections of his poetic works. He was hired to teach at the University of British Columbia, where he stayed from 1973 until his retirement in 1991. In addition to his teaching positions in Regina and Vancouver, Roy Kiyooka also taught in Montreal at Sir George Williams University (now Concordia University), and in Halifax at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design
Roy Kiyooka's career as a visual artist was rich and influential. His many exhibitions included shows in Montreal, Winnipeg, Toronto, Seattle, Minneapolis, Kyoto, Japan, and São Paulo, Brazil. In 1969, he was commissioned to create a sculpture to be displayed at the Canadian Pavilion at Expo 70’ in Osaka, Japan. In 1975 the Vancouver Art Gallery organized a major retrospective of his work.
Work of the Week: "Furthur" by Jeff Nachtigall
This week’s Work of the Week is "Furthur" by Jeff Nachtigall.
This week’s Work of the Week is Furthur by Jeff Nachtigall. Nachtigall’s work draws on a wide range of traditions, and is laden with references to graffiti, pop culture, modernism, architecture and fine art.
About the Artist: Jeff Nachtigall
Jeff Nachtigall is a multidisciplinary artist, curator, activist, and speaker. His curatorial practice focuses on community-based projects that challenge the stereotypes and stigma surrounding those living with special needs. He is equally committed to both artistic excellence and inclusivity, and the artist work that emerges from his participants, as well as the positive impact on their lives, is a testament to this.
While working as the full-time artist-in-residence at an assisted living facility in 2006, Nachtigall developed the Open Studio model for healthcare. This inclusive, non- hierarchal, client-centered strategy challenges the traditional clinical approach of art therapy and pushes the boundaries of the arts in health care. This model has evolved and grown into a community-based practice, engaging marginalized groups throughout North America in art interventions that act as a catalyst for social change.
Nachtigall is also the inventor of the Mobile Painting Device (MPD), an adaptive technology that transforms the wheelchair into a giant paintbrush, giving people living with neurological deficits opportunity to express themselves on a very large scale. The MPD has been used in a number of communities and projects throughout Canada and the United States.
Work of the Week: "Drop City, 1964" by Josée Aubin Ouellette
This week's Work of the Week is "Drop City, 1964" by Alberta Francophone artist Josée Aubin Ouellette.
March is Alberta Francophonie Month! So for this week's Work of the Week, we are sharing an artwork by one of the Francophone artists in the AFA collection - Drop City, 1964 by Josée Aubin Ouellette.
About the Artist: Josée Aubin Ouellette
Multi-disciplinary artist and curator Josée Aubin Ouellette describes herself as “interested in the dynamics between artist and institution [and] the relationship of artworks to their exhibition space.” She earned her BFA in Painting and Drawing at the University of Alberta (2007), during which time she undertook a “Works to Work” curatorial internship at Edmonton’s The Works Art & Design Festival (2006) and another internship with the Art Dealers’ Association of Canada at the Scott Gallery (2007). After receiving the Natalka Horeczko Scholarship in Painting and Print-Design through the University of Alberta (2006) and the Jason Lang academic achievement scholarship through the Government of Alberta (2007), she undertook her MFA at the Glasgow School of Art (2012). She completed the Society is a Workshop Visual Arts Residency at the Banff Centre for the Arts (2013) and the Gushul Studio Trap/door collaborative residency with Erik Osberg at the Crowsnest Pass in Blairmore, Alberta (2014).
While running her own fashion design business La Fabrique since 2009, she’s served as curator for the Hydeaway All Ages Art Space in Edmonton (now closed), the Blue Plate Diner restaurant, the NextFest Emerging Artist Festival, and her own Institute Parachute.
Aubin Ouellette has participated in numerous group exhibitions, including Skirt the parlour and shun the zoo... at The Walter Philips Gallery in Banff, Don’t leave me This Way at the Künstquartier Bethanien in Berlin, and Autonomous Supports (with Aideen Doran) at Generator Projects in Dundee, Scotland. She’s mounted solo shows in Glasgow, including BODY BLOCKS/Electric Blanket at the Govanhill Baths Ladies Pool and Provisional Structure Gallery at the Shipping Container Gallery, and several one-woman programmes in Edmonton including Sick Room at the Art Gallery of Alberta, MILK at Harcourt House, and Object Theatre Paintings for The Works Festival.
Aubin Ouellette’s prizes include an arts bursary from the Edmonton Arts Council and the Florence Andison Friedman Award in Painting from the University of Alberta. She has received two nominations for the Professional Arts Coalition of Edmonton (PACE) award at the Mayor’s Celebrations of the Arts (2009, 2010) and in 2014 received The Lieutenant Governor of Alberta Emerging Artist Award. She lives and works in Glasgow, Scotland.