Thursday, October 22, 2009

Native intelligence - Brian Jungen

Washington Post's Art Review on Brian Jungen's exhibit at the National Museum of the American Indian













Brian Jungen, installation view, Catriona Jeffries Gallery, 2007. Photo: Scott Massey

View some of Jungen's work from The Tyee Brian Jungen Gallery:
http://thetyee.ca/gallery/2006/01/25/BrianJungen/index.html

from The Beat Volume III, Issue 10 October, 2009:
Brian Jungen is also participating in the group exhibition, Moby Dick, at the CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts in San Francisco, from 22 September to December 12 2009. Curator Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev will lecture in San Francisco on Thursday October 22 2009, at 7 pm. at the California College of the Arts. For more information, see http://www.wattis.org

The Beat is an independent, not-for-profit project, written and published in Vancouver Canada by Ann Cameron. ©2008, Ann Cameron.
Comments, news and new subscribers to this free newsletter are welcomed. Please write to:
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Wednesday, October 21, 2009

2010 Olympic medal design unveiled















First Nations artist Corrine Hunt responsible for the design used on the newly minted 2010 Olympic Medals. Read the CBC article here:
CBC News - British Columbia - 2010 Olympic medal design unveiled

See how they are made:
Watch the making of the 2010 medals on the official Royal Canadian Mint website

Image copyright (VANOC)

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Native Art for 2010

The Beat Volume III, Issue 10 October, 2009

Two important works of art by Michael Nicolls Yahgulanaas and Thomas Cannell were presented to the public in early September. They are among forty-five pieces commissioned for the Olympic and Paralympic Games in February 2010 for venues in Richmond, Vancouver and Whistler.
The secondary site for hockey events is the University of British Columbia’s Thunderbird Arena. Cannell’s work, Thunder, is a 5-metre cedar panel showing a radiant sun, with two thunderbirds carrying salmon and eggs up to it.
Yahgulanaas has created a Haida Manga-style work called Take Off. A bird-like creature taking flight was created from copper encrusted re-cycled Volvo fenders and door, painted with black formline designs.
These pieces join others already installed at the arena, including Musqueam Joe Becker’s yellow cedar panel of a Thunderbird, a textile piece by Debra Sparrow, a carving by Chrystal Sparrow, and a carving by Irving Sparrow.
Lakota-Sioux artist Dana Warren is one of six curators presenting Code Screen 2010, a series of bi-weekly online exhibitions of contemporary Canadian downloaded to your computer from the web, as a countdown to Vancouver’s Olympic Games in February 2010. Visitors to http://www.vancouver2010.com/code can apply to be alerted when these new exhibitions are posted.