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At the Gallery Save the Date Chris Millar, Gutterballs - Back Cover, 2011, Acrylic on wood panel, 8.5” x 8.5” at the gallery save the date Chris Millar – september 8th through to October 8th, 2011 TrépanierBaer is pleased to present an exhibition of new works by Chris Millar, opening on Thursday, September 8th. Millar has been labouring fastidiously in his studio while attending various musical venues throughout the city of Calgary (he was seen at many Sled Island events). This exhibition will comprise of a major new sculpture, several new paintings and a new audio piece multiple titled Gutterballs with music by Millar and vocals by the amazing Samantha Savage Smith. You won’t want to miss this exhibition. Mark your calendars! Oh Canada - Mass MoCA (Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art) May 27th, 2012 through to april 1st, 2013 Congratulations are in order to Eric Cameron, David Hoffos, Micah Lexier, Luanne Martineau, Chris Millar, Kent Monkman and Graeme Patterson on their inclusion in an upcoming exhibition at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art. Curated by Denise Markonish, Oh, Canada presents work by over 60 Canadian contemporary artists. The scope of the exhibition exceeds a nationalistic tone by “… encouraging a dialogue about contemporary art made in Canada, touching on issues of craft/making, conceptualism, humour and identity…” The show will be complimented by a detailed catalogue with contributions by Douglas Coupland, Candice Hopkins, Lesley Johnstone, Wayne Baerwarldt and Louise Déry to name a few. This exhibition is definitely worth a visit should you happen to be in the area. Currently on View travel advisOry Harold Klunder – Graphic Works: The Montréal Years Eric Cameron: Exhibition extended Traffic: Conceptual Art in Canada 1965-1980, group exhibition at the Art Gallery of Alberta, to August 13th, 2011 Edmonton, Alberta; on view from June 25th through to September 25th. Danny Singer – New Works Fred Herzog: Street Photography, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario; on view from June 13th through to September 5th. This exhibition presents close to 30 photographs by Vancouver In the Viewing Room until August 13th, 2011 photographer Fred Herzog. These images, captured during the late 1950s and throughout the 1960s, depict Vancouver as well as Victoria, San Francisco and Banff. Organized by the Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography. Luanne Martineau: Rodman Hall Art Centre, St. Catherines Ontario; on view May 7th through to Fall Schedule at August 14th. This exhibition presents recent works, including felt sculptures, drawings and what TrépanierBaer Martineau calls “drulptures” – a unique combination of the two latter disciplines. Organized by the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal in partnership with Rodman Hall Art Centre. Chris Millar September 8th to Evan Penny: Re-Figuring Figuration, on view from June 2nd through to September 4th at October 8th, 2011 Kunsthalle Tübingen, Germany. This exhibition is a concentrated survey of approximately forty works by Penny from the past decade. Accompanied by a multilingual catalogue available at Vikky Alexander TrépanierBaer, this exhibition will continue to the Museum der Moderne Rupertinum in Salzburg, October 15th to Austria; MARCA (Museo delle Arti di Catanzaro) Italy, and conclude in 2012 at the Art Gallery of November 5th, 2011 Ontario in Toronto. Toronto International Vancouver Art Gallery – The Colour of My Dreams: The Surrealist Revolution in Art, on view art Fair, Booth 800 from May 28th through to September 25th, 2011. This exhibition will be shown exclusively at the October 28th to Vancouver Art Gallery and features 350 works by leading Surrealist artists, including André Breton, October 31st, 2011 Salvador Dalí, Max Ernst, René Magritte, Joan Miró, Alberto Giacometti, Leonora Carrington, Brassaï, André Masson, Man Ray, Edith Rimmington, Wifredo Lam and many others. Guest curated by Chris Cran Dawn Ades, internationally renowned expert on Surrealist art, Ades has selected works of art that November 12th to underscore the Surrealists’ radical sense of experimentation and the expansive range of mediums December 3rd, 2011 in which they worked, including painting, sculpture, collage, photography and film. A must if you’re in Vancouver. Suite 105, 999 - 8th Street S.W., Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2R 1J5 T 403.244.2066 F 403.244.2094 [email protected] Gallery Hours: Tuesday through Saturday 10:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. www.trepanierbaer.com.
Recommended publications
  • A Review of Fred Herzog: Modern Color | National Gallery of Canada 2017-10-18, 742 AM
    Donʼt Take My Kodachrome Away — A Review of Fred Herzog: Modern Color | National Gallery of Canada 2017-10-18, 742 AM Don’t Take My Kodachrome Away — A Review of Fred Herzog: Modern Color Sheila Singhal October 17, 2017 One of the things that strikes a viewer almost immediately when presented with an array of Fred Herzog’s photographs is the pop of “Kodachrome red” that appears in almost every image. Whether in the tights of a young girl and the nearby skirt of an older woman in Red Stockings (1961), or in the signage of Empty Barber Shop (1966), or in a painted billboard for Buckingham cigarettes in Elysium Cleaners (1958), Herzog includes the hue in the large majority of his photographs. “Kodachrome red, available only in slides, was his muse,” writer and critic Sarah Milroy has said, “and many of his best works are anchored in this primary hue.” Fred Herzog, Red Stockings, 1961. © Fred Herzog, Courtesy Equinox Gallery https://www.gallery.ca/magazine/books/dont-take-my-kodachrome-away-a-review-of-fred-herzog-modern-color Page 1 of 9 Donʼt Take My Kodachrome Away — A Review of Fred Herzog: Modern Color | National Gallery of Canada 2017-10-18, 742 AM In the new book, Fred Herzog: Modern Color, the photographer’s masterful use of colour is on full display. A quintessential mid-20th-century street photographer, Herzog captures daylit streets crammed with shop signs and people. At night, the neon lights of a gloriously gaudy Vancouver float in the darkness like fireflies in pitch. Open lots with wrecked and decaying automobiles sit cheek by jowl with down-at-heel businesses on forgotten street corners.
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  • Reimagining Vancouver's Skid Road Through the Photography Of
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  • Fred Herzog: Vancouver
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  • Press Release
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