Here today, gone today

Here today, gone today

Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery at University of British Columbia

September 3, 2010
Here today, gone today

UBC Master of Fine Arts
Graduate Exhibition

September 3 – 19, 2010

Keesic Douglas, Sydney Hermant, Fan-Ling Suen, Zoe Tissandier, and Clare Yow

Opening Reception: September 9,
7 – 10 pm

Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery
University of British Columbia
1825 Main Mall
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2

http://www.belkin.ubc.ca


Keesic Douglas’ photography and installation work adopts the forms of fashion and pop culture imagery. He uses deadpan humour to question the objectification and commodification of First Nations’ culture and history by embracing and portraying stereotypes and artifacts.

Sydney Hermant’s aggregates of disposable materials and automatic processes result in sculptural installations of petrified paint. She uses ubiquitous materials such as coffee cups and plastic bottles to enact precariously balanced systems of materials that drip paint to make artwork over time. Her practice embraces a variety of forms that reflect on the notions of productive and unproductive uses of free time through rigorous hobbyism.

Fan-Ling Suen uses morbid humour to explore the forging and severing of human relations and family ties. Her sculpture works call for interaction and play to entice the viewer into a possibly dangerous situation. Influenced by games and stories, she makes set-like sculptures that rely on role-playing and invoke imagined scenarios.

Zoe Tissandier’s practice is research-oriented, and touches on aspects of archives, collections and storage systems to form propositions related to the classification and display of material and knowledge in her work. She uses video, personal collections, found text, sound and installation. Her practice has been influenced by her transition from the UK to Canada to investigate the position of the long-term tourist. Her recent work addresses the souvenir, in particular the snow-globe —a miniature landscape that can contain and immortalize memory.

Clare Yow’s installation and sculpture work shows a concern for seemingly banal systems of indexing everyday activity. She performs and creates installations about collective and individual memory and references the physical marking of duration through labour. She is interested in the commonplace, mimicry and repetitive actions, the gender associations of formal artistic strategies, and has recently employed the use of the grid in order to investigate its rigid and chaotic qualities.

For information: Naomi Sawada, [email protected] , tel: (604) 822-3640
Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery
University of British Columbia
1825 Main Mall
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2

http://www.belkin.ubc.ca

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Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery at University of British Columbia
September 3, 2010

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