Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Final showing of The Game: Another Take on the Exquisite Corpse

SDABC website.  Click on highlighted words to link to other websites/blogs. Click on images for a larger view.


The final installment of The Game: Another Take on the Exquisite Corpse, opened at Seymour Art Gallery in Deep Cove, North Vancouver, on Tuesday, August 30th. It runs until September 5th, 2011. Check out our website for an explanation of the concept behind this exhibition. These works were all created by BC and Yukon members of the SDA, and invited friends. Each piece combines the work of three artists.




Below pic shows members of the exhibition committee who attended the opening: Catherine Nicholls, Ros Aylmer, Brigitte Rice and Jennifer Love.

The Exquisite Corpses always spark animated conversation and have been a great hit with the general public - who were given a chance to create their own pieces in Play the Game, next door to the exhibition.
Playing the Game at SAG
Play the Game results from the Leigh Square Community Arts Village show
The BC SDA would like to thank the staff of all three venues for this exhibition: the Leigh Square Community Arts Village in Port Coquitlam, FibreWorks Gallery in Pender Harbour, and the Seymour Art Gallery. Their enthusiastic support has been much appreciated.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

SHIFT: Michelle Sirois-Silver at Crafthouse Gallery


SDABC website.  Click on highlighted words to link to other websites/blogs. Click on images for a larger view.





Michelle Sirois-Silver's exhibition Shift, opened at Crafthouse Gallery on Granville Island in Vancouver, on Thursday, July 21, 2011. It continues until September 1st. By all accounts the opening reception was very well attended and I`m sure there were fascinating discussions about the concept behind the show as well as Michelle`s beautiful work.


Bettina, Michelle & Eleanor
From the curatorial essay that Bettina Matzkuhn wrote for the exhibition :

If a rug is not on the floor is it still a rug? If it has been altered materially, so it will not stand up to wear, what shall we call it? If a perfectly serviceable hooked rug is framed behind glass, how does it function? Michelle Sirois-Silver has used her skill in the traditional folk art practice of rug hooking to make these handsome works; she has used strategies from contemporary art theory to force these questions. The rugs on the wall might still be rugs, they have simply been presented differently for us to admire their textured and graphic power.




` “Hit and Miss” is a stream-of-consciousness way to use up short bits of fabric. Bright and subtle line up in short clips, like words in text, to create run-on sentences... Sirois-Silver has mounted a large, vibrant ‘hit and miss’ rug on a white card backing, and framed it in a shallow shadowbox behind glass.



Daniel Bush inspecting Large Squares


Tufted (detail below left)

















www.michellesirois-silver.com
email:  bigdogrugs@yahoo.ca; 
phone: 604-253-4372