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Â鶹´«Ã½

The University of Â鶹´«Ã½

Publications

To purchase print publications, please contact Gallery 1C03's Director/Curator at j.gibson@uwinnipeg.ca

Brings to Light book cover

 

Jaimie Isaac: Brings to Light, 2023, Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. 68 pages, illustrated, soft cover. $15.00 for print book with proceeds donated to the Indian Residential School Survivors Society.

Brings to Light extends the impact of Jaimie Isaac’s exhibition. It includes intergenerational contributions by the artist's grandmother Elder Mary Courchene, mother Elaine Isaac, and son James Isaac-Fehr, beautiful illustrations of the artworks, and a series of compelling texts written by the artist, her sister Dawn Isaac, and scholar Lorena Fontaine. Here, as in the show, Isaac and her kin grapple with intergenerational Indigenous experiences of trauma, memory, resilience, and reclamation to teach us that we must never forget the harms of the past and to honour the survivors and all those who bring awareness to “the beauty of Indigenous knowledge”.


Eruptions Publication Cover

 

Grace Nickel: Eruptions, 2022, Essay by Heidi McKenzie. Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. 28 pages, illustrated, soft cover. $10.00 for print book or downloadable as PDF file below.

Eruptions [PDF 2.5 MB]

Eruptions is an exhibition catalogue of new and recent sculptural installations by Â鶹´«Ã½ artist Grace Nickel in which she collects, studies, transforms and memorializes felled trees and forest fragments in porcelain. Applying an archaeobotanical lens to her research, Nickel references the life cycle of living organisms and varied forms of ceramics production, including experimentation in photogrammetry with her collaborator Michael Zajac. Nickel’s conceptual and technical processes are thoroughly considered in Heidi McKenzie’s clearly written contextual essay, “Regrowth and Reimagining.”


 

Katherine Boyer: Water Meets Body, 2019, Essay by Cathy Mattes. Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. 8 page brochure with sleeve, illustrated. $5.00

This brochure documents Katherine Boyer's solo exhibition Water Meets Body, featuring video, sculptural and textile works rooted in the artist's personal family narratives, and Métis history and material culture more generally. An insightful essay by art historian Cathy Mattes explains that Boyer's work "embodies the ways in which Métis people continue to gather and kindle culture and kinship ties ... [and] is a metaphorical presentation of 'home', and an expression of Métis presence and experience on the land."


locating the little heartbeats Cover

locating the little heartbeats: Julie Nagam, 2019, Essay by Dr. Niigaan Sinclair. Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. 24 pages, illustrated, soft cover. $10.00 for print book or downloadable as PDF file below.

locating the little heartbeats [PDF 2.0 MB]

locating the little heartbeats is an exhibition catalogue of a site-specific multi-media installation by Métis artist Julie Nagam that incorporates drawing, painting, photography, sculpture, video and sounds from nature to create a “living ecosystem” that considers the properties and lifelines that plant life offers the human world. Dr. Niigaan Sinclair’s publication essay, “Seeing our Medicines”, contextualizes the exhibition. He writes: “Nagam calls for us to collect an understanding of the medicines around us; this knowledge, like our relations, is and are still here.”


 Not the Camera, But the Filing Cabinet Publication cover

Not the Camera, But the Filing Cabinet: Performative Body Archives in Contemporary Art, 2018.
Curated by Noor Bhangu. Essays by Noor Bhangu and Dunja Kovačević, poetry by Sharanpal Ruprai. 36 pages, illustrated, NFS. Downloadable as PDF file below.


Not the Camera, But the Filing Cabinet: Performative Body Archives in Contemporary Art documents and interprets an exhibition of the same title presented at Gallery 1C03 in the fall of 2018. Curated by Noor Bhangu, a recent graduate of the University of Â鶹´«Ã½’s Master’s program in Cultural Studies: Curatorial Practices, the exhibition features work by ten local, national, and international artists that explore memory, history and representations of the female and non-binary body through painting, drawing, photography, sculpture, video, audio and performance. Not the Camera, But the Filing Cabinet makes space for and asserts the importance of memories and stories held by marginalized voices: those of women, non-binary, queer, Indigenous and people of colour. The illustrated publication includes a curatorial essay, poetry by Sharanpal Ruprai and a critical response by Dunja Kovačević.


Littoral Landscapes Cover

Littoral Landscape: Tracy Peters, 2018, Essay by Willow Rector. Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. 16 pages, illustrated. NFS. Downloadable as PDF file below.


Littoral Landscape documents a solo exhibition of new multi-media installations by Tracy Peters that investigates the ever-shifting shorelines of Lake Â鶹´«Ã½. Through this body of work Peters considers time-based exchanges between natural and human occurrences along the lakeshore, responding with emotive sculptures and videos that point to the poignancy of this fragile ecosystem. Writer and visual artist Willow Rector contributes a thorough and sensitive interpretation of the works in the exhibition, revealing the many layers of meaning behind Peters’ art.  


What Flies Above cover

What Flies Above: Erika Lincoln and Reva Stone, 2018, Essay by Emily Doucet. Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. 24 pages, illustrated. NFS. Downloadable as PDF file below.


This illustrated online pdf publication is a record of the two-person exhibition What Flies Above which featured digital installations and 3D printed sculptures by Â鶹´«Ã½ artists Erika Lincoln and Reva Stone that consider the socio-political implications of drones.  Scholar Emily Doucet writes a critical contextual essay that questions society’s cultural emphasis on the novelty of drones as a distraction from larger issues of their operation within “ancestral systems of imperial violence.” An introduction is provided by exhibition curator Jennifer Gibson.  


Moving Images Cover

Moving Images, 2017. Curators Jennifer Gibson and Alison Gillmor. Essay by Alison Gillmor. Creative responses by Roewan Crowe and Jonathan Ball. 32 pages, illustrated. NFS. Downloadable as PDF file below.

Moving Images Single Pages [PDF 10 MB] 

Moving Images is an online pdf publication produced in affiliation with a Gallery 1C03 exhibition of 23 short films created by professional artists who have an association with the University of Â鶹´«Ã½ – current and former students and faculty. The exhibition featured five thematic shorts programs that changed on a weekly basis. Moving Images was accompanied by a smaller exhibition in the University Library’s Hamilton Galleria called “The Tender Fragments.” This show presented cinematic collages by Guy Maddin alongside his interactive on-line film project “Seances” which he created with Evan and Galen Johnson. The publication includes an introduction by Gibson, a curatorial essay by Gillmor and creative responses by writers and academics Roewan Crowe and Jonathan Ball. Crowe offers a rejoinder to “Moving Images” while Ball’s text replies to “The Tender Fragments.”


Cafeteria Cover

Cafeteria: Elvira Finnigan and Lisa Wood, 2017, Essay by Natalia Lebedinskaia. Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. 24 pages, illustrated. NFS. Downloadable as PDF file below.


Cafeteria is an online pdf publication that documents a series of two exhibitions in which Manitoba artists Elvira Finnigan and Lisa Wood collaborated to explore the culture of the university dining hall. Wood, a painter, and Finnigan, who uses salt brine as a material and a method, employ various media to consider the act of eating together and to question how sharing a meal might be recorded and remembered. The first exhibition highlighted the artists’ processes while the second show featured finished works. The publication includes an essay by guest writer Natalia Lebedinskaia who considers this project in the context of the relatively recent development of “relational aesthetics” and also places it within a larger art historical framework.


Methods of Preservation cover

Ashley Gillanders: Methods of Preservation, 2016. Essay by Dr. Susan Close. Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. 24 pages, illustrated. NFS. Downloadable as PDF file below.

[PDF 12.7 MB]
 [PDF 10.2 MB]

Gallery 1C03’s second online pdf publication, Methods of Preservation, documents an exhibition by emerging Â鶹´«Ã½ artist Ashley Gillanders. Gillanders created a series of photographic sculptures of tropical house plants enclosed by Plexiglas covers and perched on pedestals. Her goal is to both confront and accept conventional definitions of the medium of photography. On the one hand she seeks to challenge the two-dimensional physicality of the photographic print; however, she also acknowledges that she works within photography’s tradition of capturing a particular moment in time. Methods of Preservation includes a contextual essay by art historian Dr. Susan Close.


Mark Neufeld: Re-enactments, 2015  Essay by Sigrid Dahle. Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. 32 pages, illustrated, soft cover.

Mark Neufeld: Re-enactments, 2015. Essay by Sigrid Dahle. Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. 32 pages, illustrated, soft cover. NFS. Downloadable as PDF file below.

[PDF 96.5 MB]
[PDF 20.8 MB]

This online pdf publication is a record of Mark Neufeld’s Re-enactments exhibition installation at Gallery 1C03 wherein the artist used painting, collage, theatre, repetition, the found object, borrowed aesthetics, and presentation strategies from the curatorial domain to think about history and geographic place – specifically Â鶹´«Ã½, and aspects of colonial-era Western Canada – that live on in the present day. In the Gallery, the assembled pieces functioned as a theatrical mise-en-scène that was ‘activated’ periodically over the course of the exhibition’s run, by the presence of actors Gwen Collins and Andraea Sartison, using a script that takes the historical re-enactment genre as its departure point. Re-enactments features an essay by independent art writer Sigrid Dahle.


Willow Rector: Trapped, 2015  Essay by Helen Delacretaz. Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. 44 pages, illustrated, soft cover.

Willow Rector: Trapped, 2015. Essay by Helen Delacretaz. Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. 44 pages, illustrated, soft cover. $10.00

Emerging artist Willow Rector creates textile embroideries and sculptures that explore the complex question of identity as it is rooted in our experiences of sexuality, desire, the topography of home, and the cultural narratives of our national identities. This publication documents work from two series – Trapped and This is a Photograph of Me – that the artist produced for her solo exhibition at Gallery 1C03. The book includes a contextual essay by former Â鶹´«Ã½ Art Gallery Chief Curator Helen Delacretaz that considers Rector’s unexpected interventions into the history of art with pieces that hover between painting, sculpture, and textiles.  Her hand embroidered animal pelt sculptures, in particular, examine the influence of the Group of Seven on our understanding of the Canadian landscape and offer the possibility of new, alternative visual chronicles of place.


Mahon Water Structures Cover

Patrick Mahon – Water Structures: Printed Sculptural Works, 2012-2014, 2014. Texts by Anne Brydon, Ihor Holubizky, Robert Enright, and Patrick Mahon. 60 pages, illustrated, soft cover. $20.00

Patrick Mahon is noted for his print-based projects that, by engaging with historical and contemporary aspects of printmaking, respond to gallery and museum collections. Mahon’s work also establishes community-based art initiatives, including several regarding the environment. This publication features three major exhibitions held at Gallery 1C03 in Â鶹´«Ã½, Robert Langen Gallery in Waterloo, and McMaster Museum of Art in Hamilton. Together they provide an excellent overview of the artist’s practice. With Voyageur, Mahon juxtaposes his graphic/wall sculptures with prints by Dürer, Hogarth, and by contemporary artists, thereby examining the critical role of visual art in moral teaching in the West. In Water Memory Table Mahon’s printed sculptural installations reference shifting environmental conditions through an investigation of built structures. Water and Tower Allegory uses solids and liquids to produce provocative forms of invention and human enterprise. Original essays and an interview with the artist explore the many facets of a singular artistic career. Co-produced with Robert Langen Gallery and McMaster Museum of Art.


White Herstory

Herstory: Art by Women in The University of Â鶹´«Ã½ Collection, 2014. Curator Laura White. Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. 48 pages, illustrated, soft cover. $15.00

Catalogue of a group exhibition of contemporary and historical art from The University of Â鶹´«Ã½’s collection by Manitoba women artists. Featured artists include Eleanor Bond, Sheila Butler, Caroline Dukes, Aganetha Dyck, G. N. Louise Jonasson, Wanda Koop, Rosemary Kowalsky, Alison Newton, Daphne Odjig, Dominique Rey, Sheila Spence, Eva Stubbs, and Diana Thorneycroft, among others. Herstory highlights the themes and subjects these artists have examined in their work, from portraiture and the body to landscapes and narratives. It also considers how “the feminine” and feminist notions (if any) have been approached and interpreted by these artists. White’s essay also provides some context for the Manitoba art scene over the last century and how this history is connected to the work of the artists included.


Frank Shebageget

Frank Shebageget, 2013. Essay by Jenny Western. Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. 44 pages, illustrated, soft cover. $10.00

Respected Anishinabe artist Frank Shebageget uses modernist forms and repetition to critically investigate symbols of Indigenous-settler contact that have personal historical resonance. This publication documents two site-specific sculptural installations that the artist created for his solo exhibition at Gallery 1C03 and The University of Â鶹´«Ã½’s Anthropology Museum. It features a contextual essay by contemporary art writer Jenny Western that considers Shebageget’s use of specific materials and minimalist approach to subvert the homogenizing objectives of colonial history and modernism.


Johnson Supnet Storytime

Storytime: Glen Johnson & Leslie Supnet, 2013. Essay by Tom Kohut. Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. 60 pages, illustrated, soft cover. $15.00

In Storytime, writer/performance artist Glen Johnson and visual artist/animator Leslie Supnet collaboratively create paired stories and drawings that replicate children’s-style books, but with a subtly adult tone. This illustrated publication features a critical essay by Tom Kohut which employs Gertrude Stein’s unit of composition to consider the unexpected trajectories of Johnson and Supnet’s work.


Chris Reid
Chris Reid: I like to believe I am telling the truth, 2013. Essay by Mary Reid. 48 pages, illustrated, soft cover. $15.00

This publication marks a traveling solo exhibition by Manitoba artist Chris Reid that includes large-scale chalk pastel drawings, decorated eggs and sculptural installations. Reid examines the culturally diverse sources that the artist draws upon to create her rich, multi-layered visual narratives and considers the tension between the seeming playfulness of her art and the societal anxieties to which it points. Co-produced with Oseredok Ukrainian Cultural & Educational Centre and Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba. In English and Ukrainian.


Rey Erlking/Pilgrim

Dominique Rey: Erlking / Pilgrims, 2012. Essays by Josée Drouin-Brisebois and Leon Bernard Johnson. 80 pages, illustrated, hard cover. $40.00

Dominique Rey is a photographer, painter, and performance artist whose work is marked by a fascination with the marginal figure. This publication documents two new series, one photographic and the other pictoral. In Erlking, Rey takes on a host of personas linked to the German and Scandinavian mythical creature that lures foolish travelers to their death. Drawing from psychoanalysis and the literay works of Angela Carter, Rey invokes personas in flux. Her painting series Pilgrims shows the influence of her involvement as a performer and attests to the intimate knowledge and experience she invests in her work. Recalling sideshow circus ‘freaks’ and 1950s burlesque, Pilgrims, explores notions of the ‘unbeautiful’ and how the unbeautiful becomes permissible, and even desirable, under the guise of performance and public display. Coproduced with Southern Alberta Art Gallery.


Benesiinaabandan unSacred

unSacred: Scott Benesiinaabandan, 2011. Essays by Jaimie Isaac & Mark Ruml. Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. 48 pages, illustrated, soft cover. $10.00

This publication marks Benesiinaabandan's first solo exhibition and features new photographic and video works that deal with the Windigokaan, a Sacred contrary figure in traditional Anishinabe culture. Includes a contextual response by Jaimie Isaac, an interview with the artist, and an experiential essay on the Windigokaan by Dr. Mark Ruml, a faculty member of the University's Religion and Culture Department.

 


Tapper Swoon

Swoon: Evan Tapper, 2010. Essay by Jane Cahill. 6 pages, illustrated brochure. $3.00

Chair of the University of Â鶹´«Ã½ Classics department Dr. Jane Cahill elucidates Tapper's Swoon, a site-specific multimedia installation which considers art historical images, literary references, and contemporary discourse in its exploration of gender-based power dynamics behind the classical myth of Leda and the swan.


Wind Coil Sound Flow

wind coil sound flow: Ken Gregory, 2009. Essay by crys cole. 6 pages, illustrated brochure. $3.00

Respected contemporary Canadian artist Ken Gregory seeks to render nature's orchestra of sounds more obvious and powerful through the presentation of a large-scale instrument-kite hybrid sculpture, revealing the very cause of sound we seem to overlook: movement.


LaTourelle Interval

INTERVAL: Rodney LaTourelle, 2009. Essay by Neil Minuk. 6 pages, illustrated brochure. NFS

Architect Neil Minuk contextualizes Rodney LaTourelle's site-specific, interactive installation of twin chevron-shaped corridors in Gallery 1C03 and the University's Hamilton Galleria as a homage to the soul of Centennial Hall, the modernist building in which INTERVAL was placed.


Bovey McKinnon (Re)Visiting

(Re)Visiting the Collection: Selections of Manitoba Art from the University of Â鶹´«Ã½, 2008. Curator Jennifer Gibson. Essays by Patricia E. Bovey and Sarah McKinnon. 56 pages, illustrated, soft cover. $20.00

Catalogue of a group exhibition featuring 40 works by 25 Manitoba artists from the University's art collection, including Caroline Dukes, Aganetha Dyck, Bruce Head, Wanda Koop, Winston Leathers, Bill Lobchuk, Daphne Odjig, Walter J. Phillips, Tony Tascona, Diana Thorneycroft, and others. Includes essays on the development of the collection and the establishment of the campus art gallery, Gallery 1C03.


Gillmore Show Tell

Show + Tell: Notions of Home and Place by Alumni, 2007. Curator Jennifer Gibson. Essay by Alison Gillmor. 32 pages, illustrated, soft cover. $15.00

Catalogue of a group exhibition featuring works by 13 artists who are graduates of The University of Â鶹´«Ã½ including Steve Bates, Richard Dyck, Leah Fontaine, Allan Geske, Richard Hines, Glen Johnson, Blair Marten, Kegan McFadden, Solomon Nagler, Freya Bjorg Olafson, Paul Robles, Donna Szoke, and Racheal Tycoles. In her essay, alumna Alison Gillmor points out how Show + Tell artists have interpreted the theme of home in diverse ways: some pieces are highly personal and place viewers in the role of voyeur; others emphasize different cultural perspectives; and still others are especially conceptual in nature.


Brown Miller Casualty

casualty, 2007. Curator Sigrid Dahle. Essays by Lorna Brown, Bernie Miller and Sigrid Dahle. 48 pages, illustrated, soft cover. $10.00

Independent curator Sigrid Dahle employs text-based work by Lorna Brown and a sculpture by Bernie Miller to create a slick, minimalist installation that points to the seductive violence of a market-driven society, one that consumes us and leaves no space for thoughtful contemplation.


Hill Kanata

Greg A. Hill: Tekwanonhweraton tsi ken'en Kanata nitisewenonh / Welcome to Kanata / Bienvenue a Kanata, 2005. Essays by Greg A. Hill, Elizabeth McLuhan and Catherine Mattes. 36 pages, illustrated, soft cover. $8.00

With his installation Welcome to Kanata, multidisciplinary Mohawk/French-Canadian artist Greg A. Hill explores Aboriginal sovereignty through a reinvention of Canadian identity. The passport-style publication documents Hill's performance as a customs officer, his border crossing video, nationalistic paraphernalia, and large-scale digital prints. In their texts, Hill, McLuhan, and Mattes prompt readers to question signifiers of national and individual identity.


Eakin Reunion

William Eakin: Reunion, 2003. Essays by Cliff Eyland and Jennifer Gibson. 40 pages, illustrated, soft cover. $10.00

A meditation on mortality, Eakin's hauntingly beautiful images of deteriorating headstone portraits from a Venice cemetery revisit those who have passed and introduce them to the living long after their loved ones have said good-bye.


Valko Night Paintings

Andrew Valko: Night Paintings, 2001. Essay by Jennifer Gibson. 4 pages, illustrated, brochure. $3.00

Gibson's essay considers the hyper-realist works of Â鶹´«Ã½ artist Andrew Valko which capture fleeting moments in time at cheap motels and drive-in movie theatres. Drawing upon the age-old tradition of viewer as voyeur, Valko's figurative narratives display a sense of ambiguity, evoking more questions than answers.


Butler Nursery Rhymes

Nursery Rhymes By Sheila Butler, 2000. Curator Sarah M. McKinnon. Introduction by Jennifer Gibson. Essays by Sheila Butler and Gary Michael Dault. 36 pages, illustrated, soft cover. $8.00

Catalogue of a solo exhibition at Gallery 1C03. This series of drawings by Sheila Butler explores contemporary modes of parenting, deconstructing traditional imagery associated with portraits of mothers and children, and pointing to the cross-gendered nature of child-rearing today. Dault's essay examines how Butler's images ask us to reconsider concepts of time and space in the domestic realm.


Dukes Cities

Cities: Caroline Dukes, 1998. Curator Sarah M. McKinnon. Essay by Claudine Majzels. 20 pages, illustrated, soft cover. NFS

This series of eight large-scale drawings and paintings by Â鶹´«Ã½ artist Caroline Dukes examines the identity of a city that develops over time as a result of political and cultural movements, and environmental effects. Architectural structures from Budapest, Munich, and Jerusalem are depicted in this exhibition. Dr. Claudine Majzels, professor of art history at the University of Â鶹´«Ã½, provides a contextual reading of the works in her essay.


Gramatte 27 Sonia

27 x Sonia: Portraits by Walter Gramatté(1897-1929), 1992. Curator Sarah M. McKinnon. 36 pages, illustrated, soft cover. NFS

Watercolour and woodcut portraits of gifted composer Sonia Eckhardt-Gramatté - created by her first husband, German Expressionist artist Walter Gramatté - are the focus of this exhibition publication and accompanying essay by curator Dr. Sarah M. McKinnon.


Hamilton No Mans Land

No Man's Land: The Battlefield Paintings of Mary Riter Hamilton (1919-1922), 1989 & 1992. Organized by Angela E. Davis and Sarah M. McKinnon. 40 pages, illustrated, soft cover. NFS

Catalogue of an exhibition held at Gallery 1C03. Features full-colour illustrations of First World War subject paintings by acclaimed artist Mary Riter Hamilton, with special forewords by John C. Law and Jean-Pierre Wallot.

 

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