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Simon Hughes, Exurbia Borealis #1, #2, #3

Out of Nowhere: a group show of Winnipeg artists

(selected by Sarah Anne Johnson and Meeka Walsh)
December 15, 2011-January 28, 2012


For the exhibition, “Out of Nowhere”, gallery artist Sarah Anne Johnson and Border Crossings editor Meeka Walsh have selected a group of ten artists from their native city of Winnipeg. The work of these Winnipeg born artists represents a range of media: painting, drawing, photography, video, and collage. Drawing on Winnipeg native Marshall McLuhan as source, these artists have clearly massaged their mediums. Most are relatively young and several were shown in the acclaimed "My Winnipeg," an extensive exhibition that premiered at La maison rouge in Paris and recently opened at the Musιe International des Arts Modestes in Sete, France. This show, however, marks the first US exhibition for most of them.

Winnipeg enjoys an almost mythical reputation as a creative center. The region has produced the internationally recognized Royal Art Lodge collective - a group of artists that included Marcel Dzama, Neil Farber, Michael Dumontier and Jon Pylypchuk, among others. The noted filmmaker and director of ten feature length and countless short films, Guy Maddin, is a Winnipegger, as are painters Tim Gardner and Karel Funk and photographer Laura Letinsky.

The most senior artist in our show is Neil Farber, one of the founders of the Royal Art Lodge who is well known for his distinctive style of densely populating worlds filled with a curious cast of characters. Some are human and others not, and in his works he combines a fulsome intensity with wry and particular humor. The video team of Lasha Mowchun and Rachel Schappert also produce work which is intense and their video provides a Surrealist's lampoon of the artist's role in society. With Ted Barker, they are the youngest participants in the show but Barker's work, densely drawn and closely rendered in its exactitude shows a careful and precise representation of a history which is at once personal, historic and specific to place. Simon Hughes applies a mid century aesthetic to playful materials such as stickers and building blocks and adds a repertoire of Canadian iconography from ice flows and snow to the dazzling Aurora Borealis.

Erica Eyres is interested in the fragile and resilient, inventive human condition. Her drawings and videos examine, with uncanny psychic accuracy how we perceive others and how we portray ourselves but her scrutiny is off-set with a certain humane generosity. Lisa Wood's painting and graphic works center on the subject of self-portraiture, rendered up-close and personal. Her gaze is unflinching.

There are two photographers in the exhibition, Steve Ackerman and Elaine Stocki. After having lived in New York Ackerman has now returned to Winnipeg, working on occasion with Guy Maddin and also producing his own work which often reflects the rough setting and indigent characters in his community. Elaine Stocki, who, like Sarah Johnson has an MFA from Yale lives in New York but identifies Winnipeg as home. Stocki theatrically challenges the expected limits of documentary photography and will be showing platinum-printed images of gymnasts who appear, like many of Stocki's figures, to inhabit a space of their own time and making. They are unique and other-worldly. Paul Robles, using a sharp blade and a fine hand, renders porn magazine images into lacy fret-work moths and butterflies, mounting their small forms in boxes that would have Vladimir Nabokov applauding.

Located in the geographic center of the country, Winnipeg sits on a vast flood plain that was once prehistoric Lake Agassiz. The wind sweeps across the wide expanse which, in winter, becomes what noted poet Robert Kroetsch called "the white erasure of snow". Artists are impelled each year to re-inscribe this clean sheet. It's this sense of opportunity, necessity and vulnerability that draws Winnipeggers together to work collectively and at the same time to assert an iconoclastic individuality. The city is both isolated and central. Its inhabitants have a strong sense of themselves and this generative quality produces the art which is attracting attention wherever it is seen.

Presented in association with the Consulate General of Canada's Upper North Side Canada in Conversation Series.

OUT OF NOWHERE: A GROUP SHOW OF WINNIPEG ARTISTS
(SELECTED BY SARAH ANNE JOHNSON AND MEEKA WALSH)

DECEMBER 15, 2011-JANUARY 28, 2012

Entrance:
SIMON HUGHES
Exurbia Borealis #1, 2011
watercolor and gouache on paper
51 x 36 3/4”

Exurbia Borealis #2, 2011
watercolor and gouache on paper
51 x 36 3/4”

Exurbia Borealis #3, 2011
watercolor and gouache on paper
51 x 36 3/4”

Main Gallery
East wall:
LISA WOOD
Interior Dialogue #7, 2010
oil on canvas
14 x 18”

Twin Reflections Print Series #1 - #4, 2010
etching on Magnani Pescia 4 sheets, each 14 1/2 x 20”
total size framed 19 x 87"

North wall:
NEIL FARBER
The Republic of Forgiveness, 2010-2011
mixed media on panels
60 x 80”

TED BARKER
Untitled, 2011
watercolor and ink on paper
15 x 11”, 20 x 16” framed

Untitled, 2011
graphite on paper
11 x 9”, 18 7/8 x 15 3/4”

Untitled, 2011
oil on board
16 x 12”

West Wall:
ELAINE STOCKI
Exit 2, 2010
gelatin silver print
17 3/4 x 17 3/4”
edition 1/3

Exit 1, 2010
gelatin silver print
17 3/4 x 17 3/4”
edition 1/3

Exit 3, 2010
gelatin silver print
17 3/4 x 17 3/4”
edition 1/3

South wall:
ERICA EYRES
Destiny Green, 2006
digital video, 7 min
edition 4/5

Imaginary Girlfriend, 2008
digital video, 9 min, 12 secs
edition 2/5

Untitled, 2010
pencil on paper
11 1/4 x 15 1/2”, 16 1/8 x 20 3/4” framed

Little Hands, 2009
pencil on paper
16 1/4 x 11 1/4”, 21 x 16 1/2” framed

Sex-Tape, 2010
pencil on paper
26 1/4 x 24”, 35 1/4 x 31” framed

Project gallery:
STEVE ACKERMAN
The Fire and the Fence, 2011
pigment print
26 x 40”
edition of 6

The City’s Light Grows, 2011
pigment print
26 x 40”
edition of 6

PAUL ROBLES
Antler Moth, 2011
ember burnt cut-paper on Picea
4 1/4 x 6 1/4”

Beautiful Snout Moth (Red Nails), 2011
ember burnt cut-paper on Pecea
4 1/4 x 6 3/4”

Red Necked Footman (The Kiss #1), 2011
ember burnt cut-paper on Picea
3 3/4 x 5 3/4”

Medicine Men (Forked Tongue), 2011
Cut paper/collage on Vellum
7 1/2 x 4 1/4”

LASHA MOWCHUN and RACHEL SCHAPPERT
Cadmium Red Deep Hand, 2011
mixed media

Cadmium Red Deep, 2011
digital video, 5 min, 50 sec
edition of 10

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Lisa Wood, Interior Dialogue #7


Lisa Wood, Twin Reflections Print Series (detail)



Neil Farber, The Republic of Forgiveness



Ted Barker, Untitled




Ted Barker, Untitled (detail))



Ted Barker, Untitled



Elaine Stocki, Exit 2



Elaine Stocki, Exit 1



Erica Eyres, Destiny Green (still)



Erica Eyres, Imaginary Girlfriend (still)



Steve Ackerman, The Fire and the Fence



Steve Ackerman, The City's Light Grows



Paul Robles, Antler Moth



Paul Robles, Medicine Men



Lasha Mowchun and Rachel Schappert, Cadmium Red Deep Hand (still)