KATHY VENTER DELIVERS “LIFE” AT GARDINER MUSEUM May 30 – September 15, 2013

The Gardiner Museum, Kathy Venter – LIFE opens May 30, running until September 15, 2013.

Featuring
this celebrated ceramic artist, internationally recognized for her
life-size figurative sculptures, the exhibit introduces dialogues with
time, femininity, and community, capturing the continuity of the human
condition.

The exhibition presents a large installation of
Venter’s sculptures which she produced in series, including One,
Revision, Ostraca, Immersion, Coup d’Oeil and the never seen before
Metanarrative. Most of her figures are presented full scale – standing,
sitting, reclining or suspended by cables in space – while others are
limited to heads and torsos. Each work is direct and engaging; life-size
and nude. They are a measure of our humanity. Their strong presence
derives from the artist’s intimate engagement with her models – most of
which are women – who posed over long hours in her studio.

“We
are extremely excited to present Kathy Venter – LIFE at The Gardiner
Museum this summer,” says Rachel Gotlieb, Interim Executive Director
& Chief Curator, Gardiner Museum. “Kathy Venter chooses the
terracotta as a primary medium to explore the history of representation
of the female figure.  This dramatic installation stimulates discussion
about sculptural praxis in contemporary art.”

Venter describes
each work as “a slow construction” by which she “applied the clay, piece
upon piece, within a silent dialogue between the model and myself,
comfortable with my medium and tradition, accepting of their
constraints.” The forms are built from the feet up using the traditional
coiling and pinching techniques, without the use of life cast molds or
internal armatures. The sculptures’ surface treatment is inspired by the
Tanagra figures of the Mycenaean period, encrusted and worn from
centuries of burial.
The exhibition is curated by Montreal author and critic John K. Grande.

What’s On Throughout the Exhibit?

Patron Circle: May 28, 5:30 – 7 p.m.
Exclusively
for Patron Members, artist Kathy Venter and guest curator John K.
Grande will lead a tour of the exhibition followed by a cocktail
reception with hors d’oeuvres by à la Carte Kitchen.

Member’s Preview: May 29, 10 a.m. – 8 p.m.
Members,
bring all of your friends and be among the first to experience Kathy
Venter – Life for this special preview. The gallery is reserved between
12:30 – 1:30 p.m. for members who have purchased tickets to the Members’
Lunch, which includes a private tour. Following the tour, artist Kathy
Venter will be available in the gallery from 1:30 p.m. Cost: Free for members

Members’ Lunch & Tour with Artist & Curator: May 29, 12 – 1:30 p.m.
Enjoy
a delicious lunch prepared by à la Carte Kitchen, followed by a tour of
the exhibition with artist Kathy Venter and guest curator John K.
Grande. Cost: $30 – Members only

Not a member? You can take advantage of the Gardiner Museum’s May Membership Promotion by clicking here.

Lecture: Kathy Venter and the ‘Flesh of the World’: June 6, 6:30 – 8 p.m.
Dr.
Elizabeth Legge, Associate Professor of Art, University of Toronto,
explores how Venter creates figures who seem at once ancient and fully
in the present, both a comfortable presence and an enigmatic
interruption of our experience of the world. Sponsored by Dr. Lorna
Marsden. Cost: $15 general admission, $10 for members

Lecture: Hands On: The Figurative Tradition in Terracotta Sculpture: June 20, 6:30 – 8 p.m.
Dr.
Betsy Bennett Purvis, Lecturer in Renaissance Art History, University
of Toronto, will examine a variety of figurative terracotta sculptures
from the Renaissance to the present, with a special emphasis on
life-likeness and the materiality of terracotta itself. Cost: $15 general admission, $10 for members

www.gardinermuseum.on.ca/exhibition/kathy-venter-life



111 Queen’s Park
Toronto, Ontario
M5S 2C7
Canada

Tel +1 416.586.8080
Fax +1 416.586.8085

Laurent Dufour @ Les Ateliers galerie de L’Ô asbl

Le geste spontané, au graphisme tantôt percutant tantôt innocent du céramiste Laurent Dufour suscite l’émotion, l’interrogation, la remise en question…

Fasciné, on ne peut que se laisser porter par le graphisme narratif de ses cubes ou plonger dans la candeur des regards de ses personnages.
Très vite, trop vite on lâche prise,…la force physique qu’elle dégage et la virtuosité « récit-graphique» ouvrent une faille émotionnelle à laquelle on ne peut résister.

Laurent Dufour

Du 25/04 au 18/05 aux Ateliers galerie de L’Ô

ouvert le jeudi de 17H00 à 20H00
vendredi et samedi de 14H00 à 18H00 et sur rdv
www.galeriedelo.be

 
 
 

Les Ateliers galerie de L’Ô  asbl

Rue de L’Eau, 56a _1190 Forest  Belgique  
Tel: +32.495.28.71.74 
Mail: [email protected]

Site: http://www.galeriedelo.be

Gerit Grimm – Wheel Thrown Figurative Sculpture – Demonstration Workshop & Lecture


Saturday, May 25th, 2013 10am – 4pm $85 ($65 for AMOCA members)

Gerit Grimm Bio

Gerit Grimm was born, and grew up in Halle, German Democratic
Republic. In 1995, she finished her apprenticeship, learning the
traditional German trade as a potter at the “Altbürgeler blau-weiss
GmbH” in Bürgel, Germany and worked as a Journeyman for Joachim Jung in
Glashagen, Germany. She earned an Art and Design Diploma in 2001
studying ceramics at Burg Giebichenstein, Halle, Germany. In 2002, she
was awarded with the German DAAD Government Grant for the University of
Michigan School of Art and Design, where she graduated with an MA in
2002. She received her MFA from the New York State College of Ceramics
at Alfred University in 2004. She has taught at CSULB, Pitzer College,
Doane College and MSU Bozeman and has worked at major residencies like
Mc Coll Center, Bemis Center, Kohler Arts & Industry Program and
Archie Bray Foundation. In 2009 NET Television created “Fantasia in
Clay” a Nebraska Story about artist Gerit Grimm. Grimm now lives and
works in Los Angeles, California. www.geritgrimm.com

 

More Info

The central idea for my newest artwork is to transgress the
boundaries of folk art and fine art by means of the following method:
appropriate historically significant folk art and theatrical
genres—such as the characters from the commedia dell’arte; and
interpret them through visual idioms of contemporary sculpture. My work
appropriates historical narrative subjects deriving from fables, myths
and interprets them in forms that have visual and conceptual affinities
with contemporary fine art—affinities that allow me to further explore
and question the boundaries between pop art, kitsch and high art. This
new direction of my work would be a hybrid between ceramics and these
traditions within contemporary sculpture. By risking technical failure
in the process of creating the forms, I am able to attain a complexity,
dynamism, and litheness of form. The technical risks are a corollary
to another type of risk—one that reinterprets a folk figurine tradition
and pushes it to its limits. My reinterpretation of this tradition
combines both narrative and form—synthesizing pots with fairytales in a
way that tests the boundaries of each. The result is often an uncanny
union—one that evokes all manner of stories about dolls, puppets and
statues coming to life. It is a union at once wonderful, elegant and
fanciful but also at times uncomfortable and awkward.

To illustrate the manner in which I work, I will describe my recent
exhibitions in New York City and Los Angeles, in which I reinterpreted
folk traditions as well as a series of autobiographical recollections
of my childhood in the German Democratic Republic. In Gerit Grimm:
Beyond the Figurine, Contemporary Inspirations from the Museum’s
Collection at the Long Beach Museum of Art, each piece formed one part
in a whole scene—an imaginary European market square, set in the
Baroque era, as if the sculptures were magically conveyed from the Old
World into the New. This series of artworks was inspired by the history
of Baroque art and ceramics, especially Staffordshire figurines and
French ceramics from the 17th and 18th centuries. The increase in scale
highlight the sculptural forms of my ceramic figures. To date, I have
been quite successful in building life-size and larger-than-life
ceramic with some exceptions. I use reduction kiln-firing techniques to
produce a highly austere (a subtle metallic sheen or bronze- looking)
surface, which leads to the stone-like appearance of my work. This
surface reinforces its sculptural qualities and conveys an appearance of
moments frozen in stone and in time.

Schedule:

10am – Introduction, Lecture & Discussion

11am – Demonstration

12pm – Lunch Break

1pm – Demonstration

4pm – Wrap up & closing remarks

List of materials and tools to bring:

  1. Since this is a demonstration workshop, you’ll not really need
    anything. If you want to take notes, bring supplies for that. If you
    want to take photos, bring supplies for that. We will have
    chairs/benches and standing room, however because of the popularity of
    these workshops, you might be more comfortable if you bring your own
    ‘camp chair’ to sit in.