c. 1983 at Presentation House Gallery

12/01/2012

I’ll be showing two analogue slide dissolves from circa 1983 -1987 for this show, part 1 has “she who scanned the flower of the world…”. Thanks to curator Helga Pakasaar for her most excellent research and encouragement of my work for this exhibition, Erik Hood for gentle spirit and attentive technical support, and Presentation House Gallery in North Vancouver for continuing to pursue intriguing, subtle investigations into the phenomena of photography.

Through the Holes, Elizabeth Vander Zaag, 1982, 4 minutes, video still

c. 1983

MARIAN PENNER BANCROFT
KATI CAMPBELL
STAN DOUGLAS
ELLIE EPP
ARNI RUNAR HARALDSSON
LAIWAN
KEN LUM
MICHELLE NORMOYLE
ELIZABETH VANDER ZAAG
IAN WALLACE

Part I: January 28 to March 11, 2012

Please join us for the opening reception on Friday, January 27, at 7 pm. Artists in attendance.

This first of a two-part exhibition looks at how artists in Vancouver worked with camera images during the vital period of the 1980s. The project brings together photographic and media art from two generations, including key innovators of the influential “Vancouver school.” Many of the works will be seen for the first time since they were originally exhibited. “C. 1983” identifies self-reflective and concept driven camera works that points to the significance of photographic images in contemporary art practices at that time.

Part One highlights experimental and conceptualist approaches to image making through collage and appropriation, and sequences of moving and still pictures. The materiality of photographs and the interactions of light and surface are emphasized, drawing attention to modes of perception and visuality itself. The pictorial languages through which we read photographic images are seen as “significant surfaces produced by apparatuses” as Villem Flusser describes. The exhibition considers what is at stake in the realism of photographic depiction. Camera documents are mediated and given new associations that intervene with the legibility of photographic images. It is through the artists’ critiques of representation, rather than direct reportage, that social realities are revealed. Throughout the exhibition are clues to the instabilities arising from economic upheavals in Vancouver during the eighties. The narratives in these works are fragmented and often enigmatic: a slide projection piece will literally disappear over the course of the exhibition; abstract light patterns are recorded on film; and postcard blowups construct a landscape. The artists purloin images from popular culture and make reference to pictorial conventions from the histories of painting, cinema and mass media. They treat photographic images as a language and system of signs with an acute awareness of the social impact of public images in a mediated world. Indicative of that time, the works are informed by critical art theories as well as psychoanalysis, feminism, media politics, semiotics, film and literary theory.

Each part of “C. 1983” stresses different approaches to issues of the photographic that dominated art of the eighties, especially in this context. Many of the artworks in this exhibition were produced for new venues that emerged in the city at that time, including Presentation House Gallery that began to focus on photography in the early eighties. “C. 1983” proposes a framework for considering this zeitgeist from both local and wider perspectives. Public programs and a publication will be produced in conjunction with the project. Save the date of March 23 for the opening of Part Two with a screening of Rodney Graham’s “Two Generators” film.

Presented in honour of Kitty Heller, with generous support from her estate.

Public discussions, film screenings and a publication will be produced in conjunction with this project.

333 Chesterfield Avenue, North Vancouver, BC V7M 3G9

Wed to Sun 12:00 – 5:00 PM   T +1 604 986 1351

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