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Features

Student Print Show and Sale

 

Students from the School of Fine Art and Music Department will be showing and selling their original Lithographs, Etchings, Relief and Screen Prints.

 March 15th and 16th  10:00 am - 5:00 pm

March 17th                   12:00 pm - 5:00 pm

Zavitz Hall, Room 207

For further information contact Allen Ash

 

Boarding House Gallery

Opening Reception
7:00 p.m. Thursday February 28

6 Dublin Street South, Boarding House for the Arts

The inaugural Boarding House Gallery exhibition "1" marks the opening of a new public art gallery and is an artistic partnership between the University of Guelph's School of Fine Art and Music (SOFAM) and the Macdonald Stewart Art Centre (MSAC), whose shared mandate is to present contemporary art exhibitions in a space which is open to the public free of cost.

The premiere exhibition "1" features thirteen contemporary Canadian art works by SOFAM faculty artists: Diane Borsato, James Carl, Susan Dobson,FASTWÜRMS, Christian Giroux, Will Gorlitz, John Kissick, Nestor Kruger, Jean Maddison, Martin Pearce, Sandra Rechico, Monica Tap, and Laurel Woodcock.  The show features a number of works selected from MSAC's permanent collection, as well as works that are on special loan for the Boarding House Gallery premiere exhibition.

As the first of many forthcoming exhibitions at the Boarding House Gallery, "1" sets the tone for the public programming planned for the space by featuring an exhibition of works by nationally and internationally recognized artists who, through SOFAM, embody and engender contemporary art practice both in Guelph and beyond our borders.

"1" is on view at the Boarding House Gallery from February 28 to March 24.

Boarding House Gallery is generously supported by the School of Fine Art and Music through the University of Guelph's College of Arts and by the Macdonald Stewart Art Centre through the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council.

Music for the opening reception provided by Threefold Standard.

Charles Stankievech

Musagetes and University of Guelph, School of Fine Art and Music, co-present a lecture by Berlin-based artist Charles Stankievech on Tuesday, March 5, at 6pm at the MacDonald Stewart Art Centre. The lecture is free and open to the public.

Musagetes and the School of Fine Art and Music at the University of Guelph have partnered to create a Visiting Artist Program. This collaboration will bring internationally exhibiting artists, whose artwork focuses on social engagement or participatory practices, to Guelph.

 


 

 Charles Stankievech the program’s inaugural artist. Stankievech will lecture about his current and upcoming projects, and conduct studio visits with School of Fine Art MFA candidates and selected fourth-year undergraduates.

Charles Stankievech creates fieldworks, books, films, soundworks, and sculptures. He blends science with science fiction, extensive research with performative spectacle, and architecture with armament. His work shifts perceptual boundaries while critically examining the history, specificity, and geopolitics of location. 

He has submerged microphones at the confluence of the Yukon and Klondike rivers to broadcast sounds of river flow and shifting ice. He mimicked a rock band world tour by traveling around the globe, firing off model rockets at locations associated with ballistic missile development. His recent work, The Soniferous Æther of The Land Beyond The Land Beyond, is a film installation produced while he was artist-in-residence with the Canadian Armed Forces. Shot at the CFS ALERT Signals Intelligence Station—the northern most settlement on earth—during the continuous darkness of winter, the film showcases a star-filled sky and references the confounding scale of an abandoned space station.

 

STANKIEVECH BIO
Charles Stankievech (born 1978, in Okotoks, Canada) has exhibited in venues such as Palais de Tokyo (Paris), International Symposium on Electronic Arts (ISEA2010, Germany), dOCUMENTA 13 (Kassel), Xth Biennale of Architecture (Venice), NGBK + HKW (Berlin), ISSUE Project Room (New York), Musee d’art Contemporain Montreal, Canadian Centre for Architecture and MASSMoCA. In 2011 he was the West Coast/Yukon finalist for the Sobey Art Award.

In 2012 he was artist-in-residence at Flaggfabrikken (Norway), MARFA Fieldwork International Research Program (Marfa, Texas). He has also held residencies with the Canadian Forces Artist Program, MuseumsQuartier (Vienna, Austria), Nodar Artist Residency Center (Portugal), Waterpod (NYC), Atlantic Center for the Arts (Florida), Banff Centre for the Arts, and artLAB San Servolo Artist Residency (Venice).

His writings appear in academic journals such as Leonardo Music Journal (MIT Press) and 306090 (Princeton Architectural Press), as well as experimental texts in art publications. Since 2011, he has served as co-director of the art and theory press K.

CONTACT INFORMATION For more information, please contact the project coordinator, Anna Cox .

Musagetes is an international organization that strives to make the arts more central and meaningful in peoples’ lives, in our communities, and in our societies. Musagetes works in Guelph, Sudbury, Lecce (IT), and Rijeka (HR) to demonstrate how art can be participatory and socially engaged, and to establish a greater sense of belonging in communities.  For more about Musagetes, click here.
 

VISITING ARTISTS & SPEAKERS presents: Weppler Mahovsky

Rhonda Weppler and Trevor Mahovsky   

Alexander Hall, Room 100 Monday, February 25, 6:00pm 
Free admission - all are welcome

Rhonda Weppler (based in San Francisco) and Trevor Mahovsky (based in Toronto) have worked collaboratively since 2004. Their sculptures, essentially still life at life scale, are presented as models that are ambiguously bracketed off from the world they depict. Generated by laborious, drawn-out working processes, and often precariously balanced or otherwise ephemeral, their work focuses attention upon its coming into and out of existence.  Their most recent work, All Night Convenience, was a 300 square-foot lantern mimicking a fully stocked corner store, created for the 2012 edition of Toronto’s Nuit Blanche.   Exhibitions include: National Gallery of Canada, Vancouver Art Gallery, Art Gallery of Alberta, Contemporary Art Gallery (Vancouver), LABoral (Gijon), Dos de Mayo (Madrid), Power Plant, Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal, Tokyo Wonder Site, loop-raum (Berlin), Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, 516Arts (Albuquerque).

For further information, please contact ahoekstr@uoguelph.ca

JOHN ONIANS Art and the Brain: How the Neuroscientist Can Help the Art Historian

7 P.M. Tuesday February 26, 2013

Rozanski Hall, room 105, University of Guelph

Free Admission - All Welcome - Free parking in P31 after 5pm

Art historians have been trying for centuries to understand what goes on in the artists' mind.  They have also been trying to answer big questions, such as 'why is art a universal activity, but why it is so different at different times and in different places?'  Now, thanks to the discoveries of neuroscientists in the last thirty years art historians have a new way to engage with these problems.  The conclusions of the new 'neuroarthistorians' are always revealing and sometimes astonishing.

VISITING ARTISTS & SPEAKERS presents: John Zeppetelli

Monday, February 4, 6:00pm

Free admission - all are welcome

 

John Zeppetelli is the curator for DHC/ART Foundation in Montreal.  The inaugural exhibition in 2007 was a survey of British sculptor Marc Quinn. It was followed by the group show "Re-enactments", which presented installations by Haroun Farocki, Stan Douglas, Nancy Davenport, Kerry Tribe, Paul Pfeiffer and Ann Lislegaard. Subsequent exhibition programming has included solo exhibitions by Sophie Calle, Eija-Liisa Ahtila, Jenny Holzer, Berlinde DeBruyckere, Ceal Floyer, John Currin, Christian Marclay, and Ryoji Ikeda. A recent thematic exhibition "Chronicles of a Disappearance" included Philippe Parreno, Taryn Simon, Teresa Margolles, José Toirac and Omer Fast. DHC/ART’s current exhibition is "Thomas Demand: Animations".  Before joining DHC/ART, John Zeppetelli devised public programs and organized exhibitions at the Saidye Bronfman Centre, the Musée d’art contemporain de Montreal and at the ICA, London.

For further information, please contact ahoekstr@uoguelph.ca