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WATCH: The Further Apart Things Seem: Artists' Roundtable
May
4
5:00 PM17:00

WATCH: The Further Apart Things Seem: Artists' Roundtable

 
 

Artists’ Roundtable

Watch Rhonda Weppler and Trevor Mahovsky  in discussion with artists Anna Binta Diallo, Atanas Bozdarov, Barbara Hobot, Adriana Kuiper & Ryan Suter, Brendan L.S. Tang and Couzyn van Heuvelen. This roundtable explores various thematic threads that connect and resist within the exhibition—The Further Apart Things Seem

Introductions by co-curators Shannon Anderson and Jay Wilson.


The Further Apart Things Seem

Co-curated by Shannon Anderson & Jay Wilson

In a social and political moment where opinions are often divisive, the possibility of finding common ground can seem beyond reach. Debates over human rights, climate change, land claims, and even the politicizing of the pandemic often seem at cross-purposes and irresolvable. How do we respond in times of uncertainty—when do we push forward, when do we give up, and when do we try things differently? In The Further Apart Things Seem, artists follow distinct paths toward subtle forms of resistance, while exploring areas of connection between that which feels disconnected or in opposition. By testing the unexpected, they embrace material experimentation and provisionality as productive spaces for building resilience, resolution, and understanding.


About the Artists

Anna Binta Diallo

Anna Binta Diallo (b. Dakar, Senegal, lives in Winnipeg, MB) is a multidisciplinary visual artist who investigates memory and nostalgia to create unexpected narratives surrounding identity. Her work has been exhibited widely, including at La Maison des Artistes Francophones (Winnipeg), Art Gal­lery of Southwestern Manitoba, Art Gallery of Alberta, Towards (Toronto), Access Gallery (Vancouver), Vancou­ver’s Capture Photography Festival, MAI (Montréal Arts Interculturels), MOCA Tapei, SAVVY Contemporary (Berlin), and BOZAR (Palais des beaux-arts de Bruxelles). In 2021, Diallo was awarded the Barbara Sphor Memorial Prize from the Walter Phillips Gallery at the Banff Centre and received the Black Designers of Canada Award of Excellence. She has an Honours BFA in painting and design from the University of Manitoba’s School of Fine Art and an MFA from the Transart Institute, Berlin, Germany, and currently teaches at the University of Manitoba’s School of Art.

 

Atanas Bozdarov

Atanas Bozdarov (b. Etobicoke, ON, lives in Toronto, ON) is an artist and designer whose recent projects have explored systems of access and accessibility, unnoticed conditions of disability and design, and architectural propositions for public space. He received his HBA from the University of Toronto Mississauga and his MDes from OCAD University. He has exhibited at the Textile Museum of Canada, Toronto; Xpace Cultural Centre, Toronto; the Athens Institute for Contemporary Art, Georgia; Montréal, arts interculturels (MAI), Montreal. His project, Every Step on Queen Street West & Every Ramp on Queen Street West, a collaboration with Craig Rodmore, was selected as a feature exhibition at the 25th edition of CONTACT Photography Festival. Bozdarov teaches design in the University of Toronto Mississauga and Sheridan College’s joint Art and Art History program.

 

Barbara Hobot

Barbara Hobot (b. Toronto, lives in Kitchener, ON) is interested in creative processes and actions that de-centre the human. She has worked with loose trompe l’oeil, alchemy, gravity, and chance, creating a confusion of materials that draws attention to our incomplete grasp on the world that surrounds us. Her recent sound work explores the process of attempting to access unreachable knowledge. Her work has been exhibited at the University of Waterloo Art Gallery, Cambridge Art Galleries, the Kitchener-Waterloo Art Gallery, Harbourfront Centre in Toronto, Forest City Gallery in London (ON), and AKA artist-run in Saskatoon. She has also exhibited her work in Poland, Germany, and the Netherlands. Hobot holds an MFA from the University of Western Ontario and is represented by Olga Korper Gallery, Toronto.

 

Adriana Kuiper & Ryan Suter

Adriana Kuiper (b. Toronto, ON, lives in Sackville, NB) and Ryan Suter (b. Tilbury, ON, lives in Sackville, NB) have collaborated on work since 2010. They have completed a number of public site-specific works in the Magdalen Islands, QC; Halifax, NS: and in Dawson City, YK. They have exhibited together at the Confederation Centre for the Arts in Charlottetown, PEI; the Kenderdine Art Gallery, SK; and the University of Lethbridge Art Gallery, AB. Kuiper completed her BA at the University of Guelph and her MFA at the University of Western Ontario. Her work has been shown across Canada and internationally in Oslo, Norway. She is a professor in sculpture and drawing at Mount Allison University. Suter is a multimedia artist who holds a BFA from the University of Ottawa and an MFA from the University of Guelph. He has worked as an arts administrator in artist-run centres for the past 15 years and has taught a variety of courses at the Nova Scotia of Art and Design and Mount Allison University. His work has been shown at many artist-run centres across Canada.

 

Brendan Lee Satish Tang

Brendan Lee Satish Tang (b. Dublin, Ireland, lives in Vancouver, BC) explores issues of identity and the hybridization of material and non-material culture in his work, drawing from futuristic technologies, contemporary culture, and ancient traditions. Tang’s work has been exhibited at the Museum of Anthropology, Vancouver; the Gardiner Museum, Toronto; the Musée d’Art Contemporain de Montréal, QC; the Museo Internazionale delle Ceramiche, Faenza, Italy; the Boston Art Museum; the Seattle Art Museum; and the Foundation d’Entreprise Bernardaud, Limoges, France, among others. He was a recipient of the 2016 Biennale Internationale de Vallauris Contemporary Ceramic Award, France; shortlisted for the Sobey Art Prize; and a finalist in the Loewe Foundation’s International Craft Prize, Madrid, Spain. He received a BFA from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, and an MFA from Southern Illinois University Edwardsville.

 

Couzyn van Heuvelen

Couzyn van Heuvelen (b. Iqaluit, NU, lives in Bowmanville, ON) is a Canadian Inuk sculptor. His work explores Inuit culture and identity, new and old technologies, and personal narratives. While rooted in the history and traditions of Inuit art, the work strays from established Inuit art making methods and explores a range of fabrication processes. He has par­ticipated in exhibitions at the Art Gallery of Mississauga, Artspace in Peterborough, Anna Leonowens Gallery in Halifax, Winnipeg Art Gallery, and SBC Gallery of Contemporary Art in Montreal, among others. Van Heuvelen holds a BFA from York University and an MFA from NSCAD University. His work has been longlisted for the Sobey Art Award, and he has received commissions through the Sheridan’s Temporary Contemporary Artists series, in collaboration with the Art Gallery of Mississauga; and the George Reid House Project through OCAD U.

 

About the Moderators

Rhonda Weppler & Trevor Mahovsky

Rhonda Weppler and Trevor Mahovsky, based in New York and Toronto respectively, are artists who have worked collaboratively since 2004. Their work, laborious and handmade, is concerned with material culture and our relationship to the world of things. Their practice has increasingly incorporated aspects of craft that are communal and more broadly collaborative, such as the production of DIY tutorial videos, the distribution of source files for the making of versions of their works, the hosting of virtual crafting bees, and facilitating other collaborative public projects within and without institutional settings. Their current ongoing project, Crafts Abyss, produced in conjunction with and hosted by the Museum of Arts & Design, NYC, was first created during the 2020 edition of Contemporary Calgary’s Collider residency.

Other exhibitions include: National Gallery of Canada (Ottawa), LABoral (Gijon), Dos de Mayo (Madrid), Aurora (Dallas), Vancouver Art Gallery, Flux Night (Atlanta), Art Gallery of Alberta (Edmonton), Contemporary Art Gallery (Vancouver), Power Plant (Toronto), Musee d’art Contemporain de Montreal, Tokyo Wonder Site, loop-raum (Berlin), 516 Arts (Albuquerque), Art Gallery of Nova Scotia (Halifax), Alter Space (San Francisco), Glow (Washington DC). Mahovsky has written for journals such as Artforum and for catalogues such as Liz Magor (MACM: Montreal, Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst: Zurich, and Hamburg Kunstverein). In 2017, Weppler was the inaugural artist in residence with the MFA Art Practice program at the School of Visual Arts, New York, and in 2018 she completed a major project for the Community Arts Initiative, Artists Project program at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA.


About The Further Apart Things Seem

In a social and political moment where opinions are often divisive, the possibility of finding common ground can seem beyond reach. Debates over human rights, climate change, land claims, and even the politicizing of the pandemic often seem at cross-purposes and irresolvable. How do we respond in times of uncertainty—when do we push forward, when do we give up, and when do we try things differently? In The Further Apart Things Seem, artists follow distinct paths toward subtle forms of resistance, while exploring areas of connection between that which feels disconnected or in opposition. By testing the unexpected, they embrace material experimentation and provisionality as productive spaces for building resilience, resolution, and understanding.


Take a guided virtual tour of The Further Apart Things Seem with Co-Curators Shannon Anderson and Jay Wilson


 
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WATCH: The Further Apart Things Seem—Curatorial Talk with Shannon Anderson & Jay Wilson
Apr
13
5:00 PM17:00

WATCH: The Further Apart Things Seem—Curatorial Talk with Shannon Anderson & Jay Wilson

 
 

Online Curatorial Talk with Shannon Anderson & Jay Wilson

Extended as a public program of The Further Apart Things Seem, the curators walk us through the genesis of this curatorial project, and the factors that shaped the choice of work. They’ll also elaborate on the relevance of the show today, especially within our current socio-political context. 


About the Curators
Shannon Anderson & Jay Wilson

Shannon Anderson is an independent curator and writer based in Oakville, Ontario and Jay Wilson is an independent curator, artist (sculptor), designer and educator based in Toronto, Ontario. Their first co-curated project, The Closer Together Things Are, was a group exhibition focused on artworks that examine the space between similarity and difference arising from intense observation and consideration. An exploration of nearness and proximity, the exhibition brought together the work of ten artists from across Canada, including Kathleen Hearn, Ève K. Tremblay, Laura Letinsky, Micah Lexier, Dave Dyment, Roula Partheniou, Rhonda Weppler and Trevor Mahovsky, Luke Painter, and Chris Kline. Independently curated and organized, it travelled to the University of Waterloo Art Gallery (Waterloo, ON), the Owens Art Gallery (Sackville, NB), Saint Mary’s University Art Gallery (Halifax, NS), and the Southern Alberta Art Gallery (Lethbridge, AB) between 2017 and 2018. 

Anderson’s curated exhibitions have been shown at galleries across Canada, and she is currently the Art Curator for the Oakville Trafalgar Memorial Hospital. She has also written essays for publications produced by numerous art galleries, and feature articles for Canadian Art, C Magazine, Carousel and EyeMazing Amsterdam. She holds a Specialist BA in Art and Art History (with distinction) from the University of Toronto and an MA in Art History from Concordia University in Montreal. 

Wilson is a full-time professor of design in the Art and Art History program, a joint program between the University of Toronto Mississauga and Sheridan College. He has an Honours degree in Wildlife Biology and Statistics from the University of Guelph, a diploma from the Ontario College of Art and Design and an MFA from York University. As an artist, Wilson has shown both locally and internationally, and has received numerous creation, research and exhibition assistance grants. His design and art practices are a mix of conceptual considerations and play, often full of segues, spontaneity and contradiction. 


About The Further Apart Things Seem

In a social and political moment where opinions are often divisive, the possibility of finding common ground can seem beyond reach. Debates over human rights, climate change, land claims, and even the politicizing of the pandemic often seem at cross-purposes and irresolvable. How do we respond in times of uncertainty—when do we push forward, when do we give up, and when do we try things differently? In The Further Apart Things Seem, artists follow distinct paths toward subtle forms of resistance, while exploring areas of connection between that which feels disconnected or in opposition. By testing the unexpected, they embrace material experimentation and provisionality as productive spaces for building resilience, resolution, and understanding.


Take a guided virtual tour of The Further Apart Things Seem with Co-Curators Shannon Anderson and Jay Wilson


 
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Omar Ba Same Dream Youth Workshop
Feb
26
5:00 PM17:00

Omar Ba Same Dream Youth Workshop

Omar Ba, Same Dream, 2018.

Omar Ba, Same Dream, 2018.

Youth Workshop
For youth ages 15–25.

Inspiring young people through the exploration of contemporary art, and connecting them to community, global, and social issues that affect all of our lives. 

Join us February 26, 2021
5PM – 7PM!

This program is hosted on Zoom by invitation through Action Dignity.

For questions or more information please email Krizia Carlos:
krizia.carlos@actiondignity.org


Omar Ba’s work engages with some of the most urgent issues of our time: the growing inequality of wealth and power globally, forced migration and our changing relationship with the natural world. His penchant for depicting personal narratives alongside collective ones speaks to the in-between condition of his work, as he splits his time between Dakar, Senegal and Geneva, Switzerland, and blends the visual texture of both places through his practice. Ba draws from and intertwines a range of elements— the historical and contemporary, figurative and abstract imagery—from African and European cultures.

Same Dream brings together several of Ba’s paintings depicting dictators and authority figures, who lead corrupt and violent regimes across the African continent and in other parts of the world, particularly where the legacies of colonialism persist.


Additional Resources

Watch Omar Ba Studio Tour and Artist Talk, in conversation with Justine Kohleal


This creative leadership workshop is a collaboration between: 

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Special thanks to our youth leaders from:

Youth PLACE, The Written Revolutions, and Antyx Community Arts.

The youth of today are the leaders of tomorrow.
— Madiba

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WATCH: Artist Talk | seth cardinal dodginghorse on Yoko Ono's WATER EVENT
Feb
25
5:00 PM17:00

WATCH: Artist Talk | seth cardinal dodginghorse on Yoko Ono's WATER EVENT


Join Contemporary Calgary for an online Artist Talk with WATER EVENT artist, seth cardinal dodginghorse as he discusses his work The Glenmore Rezerveoir, a water sculpture made in response to Yoko Ono’s invitation to produce a container that held water. The work is one of six water sculptures produced for Ono’s ongoing collaborative work, WATER EVENT (1971/ 2020), part of Ono’s exhibition GROWING FREEDOM at Contemporary Calgary.

This Artist Talk it is hosted as a Public Program of the ongoing exhibition, Yoko Ono: GROWING FREEDOM and will be held online on Zoom and broadcast through Contemporary Calgary’s Facebook Live. A recording of this discussion will be posted on Contemporary Calgary’s website at a late date.


About The Glenmore Rezerveoir

Made of the dirt from Tsuut’ina/The SW Calgary Ring Road, parfleche, earth pigments, sinew, 15L grocery store water jug meant to hold and sell Calgary municipal water, the sculpture is in direct response to the necessitated purchase of bottled water on the Tsuut’ina Nation and is concerned with the larger issue of displacement for alleged progress. 

Describing the work, seth writes, “The Glenmore Reservoir is built on Tsuut’ina Nation land that they were forced to sell in the 1920’s to the city of Calgary. The SW Calgary Ring Road is currently being built on my family’s Tsuut’ina land that was stolen and sold in 2013 to the city of Calgary. Since 2013, I haven’t been able to drink clean water from my tap on Tsuut’ina because of the SW Calgary Ring Road. I now have to buy bottled water that comes from stolen Tsuut’ina land. 

“Dear Calgary and Calgarians, stop forcing Tsuut’ina Chief and Councils to sell land, they can’t say no. Think about what you drink and where you drive.”


seth cardinal dodginhorse

seth cardinal dodginhorse

About the Artist

seth cardinal dodginghorse is an experimental musician, cultural researcher, and multidisciplinary artist working within performance, printmaking, installation, sound and video. He grew up eating dirt and exploring the forest on his family’s ancestral land on the Tsuu’tina nation. In 2013 he and his family were forcibly removed from their homes and land for the construction of the South West Calgary Ring Road. His work explores his family’s history and experiences of displacement.


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Omar Ba: The Art of Human Justice, Education Series in Partnership with Mount Royal University
Feb
17
to Mar 10

Omar Ba: The Art of Human Justice, Education Series in Partnership with Mount Royal University

In partnership with Mount Royal University, Faculty of Arts, Contemporary Calgary introduces a digital education series on Art and Human Justice, with a specific focus on the work of Senegalese artist Omar Ba. The series is extended as a public program around the ongoing exhibition Same Dream by Omar Ba.

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