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麻豆视频 News Roundup | August 31, 2022

Trash No 2

Jeongmin Ahn, , 2019. Oil on Canvas. (Image courtesy Jeongmin Ahn)

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By Perrin Grauer

Posted on

This week: Jeongmin Ahn | Lucie Chan | Gathie Falk | IM4 | Lindsay McIntyre

Welcome to our new semi-regular feature, the 麻豆视频 News Roundup.

Read on for a snapshot of some of the media coverage our community has recently received.

Jeongmin Ahn鈥檚 Hyperrealistic Paintings at The Gallery at Queen鈥檚 Park

Trash No 5

Jeongmin Ahn, , 2020. Oil on Canvas. (Image courtesy Jeongmin Ahn)

Award-winning painter (BFA 2020) was recently featured in a detailing his process for creating stunning works of hyperrealistic art.

While the paintings created by the Vancouver-based artist are gleaming and pristine, their subject is often trash. Jeongmin鈥檚 interest in taking garbage as a muse began during his time as a student at Emily Carr University, he tells the Record.

鈥淚 used to drink a lot of Red Bull during my university days to stay up all night and paint,鈥 he recalls.

鈥淒uring one such night, he thought to himself, 鈥楾he can of Red Bull is actually beautiful,鈥欌 the article continues. 鈥淪o he crushed a few and painted them. 鈥極f course, because I drank them, they didn鈥檛 hold any value anymore. I could have just easily tossed them in the garbage.鈥

The works were part of , titled Trash, which showed at The Gallery at Queen鈥檚 Park in New Westminster through August. Jeongmin hopes the days, weeks or even months he spends on his extraordinary paintings will spark conversations around conservation and consumerism.

and to learn more about his work.


Oxygen Art Centre Artist-in-Residence Lucie Chan

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Lucie Chan, How to Be 57, 2018. Drawing and watercolour. (Image courtesy Oxygen Art Centre)

announced last month as its artist-in-residence for the month of August. The Guyana-born multi-disciplinary artist and 麻豆视频 faculty member aimed to 鈥渃onduct research towards the creation of future work that explores the experiences of racialized violence,鈥 according to the in Galleries West.

Lucie鈥檚 residency was set to involve open studios for public participation, as well as a series of interviews with volunteers whose stories would be carried into future works created by Lucie.

鈥淎lthough a self-confessed shy person, Chan embraces what has been a 鈥榣ong career of interviewing strangers,鈥欌 the announcement states. 鈥淐han goes on, stating 鈥業 am interested in these interactions when something is revealed that we don鈥檛 necessarily have every day like a sense of connection or intimacy.鈥欌

How to be 57 is situated in the historic and contemporary struggle of the diasporic peoples, of women and of people of colour to find justice in a world ripe with systemic violence and injustices,鈥 a on Lucie's residency in the Nelson Daily states. 鈥淔or Chan this work is a way of honouring the individual who is often forgotten in the collective experience of being human, and of conjoining individuals through sharing stories around culture and identity.鈥

An exhibition of previous works, titled How to Be 57 (2018), which includes drawings, text and sculpture, will show at Oxygen Art Centre in Nelson, BC, through September. Lucie will also give on Sept. 8.


Gathie Falk Career Retrospective Hits the Road

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Gathie Falk, Picnic with Clock and Bird, 1976. Ceramic with glaze, paint and varnish. (Courtesy of the artist and Equinox Gallery)

A career retrospective for renowned artist Gathie Falk is currently on view at the in Kleinburg, Ontario. Titled Gathie Falk: Revelations, the show will travel to several more exhibition spaces across the country over the next two years including Museum London in London, Ontario, the Glenbow Museum in Calgary, Alberta, and, beginning October, 2023, the Audain Art Museum, in Whistler, BC.

鈥淧iles of glossy apples, rows of potted trees festooned with blossoms and ribbons, floating cabbages, gentlemen鈥檚 brogues presented in reliquary style, expanses of water, or burgeoning flower beds exploding with colour 鈥 these have been some of the manifestations of Falk鈥檚 rampant imagination as she has explored the nuances of everyday life for over half a century,鈥 reads .

鈥淪till working at 94, she has been at the forefront of performance and installation art in Canada while her paintings and sculptures have been attuned to the international movements of Surrealism and Pop Art.鈥

Equinox Gallery that for anyone in the Toronto area the show is a 鈥渕ust see.鈥

Among her many, many accomplishments, Gathie was a 1994 recipient of an Honorary Degree from Emily Carr University.

Read more .


IM4 Lab Launches Virtual Production Program

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Loretta Todd. (Image courtesy IM4 Lab)

APTN recently published about the launch of 鈥檚 new program, which aims to train 30 participants in virtual production filmmaking. The no-cost Indigenous-led program will be offered online, with in-person lessons in the virtual production studio at Emily Carr University.

麻豆视频鈥檚 virtual production studio harnesses the same technology used on internationally acclaimed productions including Star Trek: Discovery and Star Wars spin-off The Mandalorian.

鈥淚t鈥檚 great to be able to get there, in the beginning, to be able to get these good-paying jobs in this new digital world and at the same time, it allows us as filmmakers and storytellers to be able to use these technologies to be able to tell these stories in our unique way,鈥 filmmaker and IM4 Lab founder Loretta Todd told APTN in an interview.

Loretta added that IM4 Lab is working on a micro-credential for the program, which was made possible through a collaboration with Digital Supercluster, a non-profit organization that invested more than $500,000.

to learn more about their huge range of programming and resources.

Read our previous story about Loretta鈥檚 innovative approach to keeping the 鈥渃ameras rolling鈥 on APTN children鈥檚 series during the pandemic.


Lindsay McIntyre鈥檚 Suitable Comes to St. Albert

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Lindsay McIntyre, writer-director of Suitable, crouches over cinematographer Wes Miron's shoulder as they decide on a shot while filming. Assistant director Eric Spoeth (standing) waits for their call. (Photo by Katrina Beatty / Courtesy Katrina Beatty + Lindsay McIntyre)

Filmmaker and 麻豆视频 faculty member Lindsay McIntyre was the subject of in the St. Albert Gazette. The artist was in Alberta shooting part of a new short film, titled Suitable, which tells the story of 鈥渙ne Inuit woman鈥檚 life during the 1930s,鈥 according to the Gazette.

鈥淚t鈥檚 the idea that Inuit are not suitable to live here. They don鈥檛 fit,鈥 producer Katrina Beatty said in an interview. 鈥淚 do feel it鈥檚 a personal story. A lot of Lindsay鈥檚 art deals with ancestral trauma and the way we carry it in our DNA. She鈥檚 had to take charge of her own cultural learning.鈥

Lindsay, who is of Inuit and Scottish descent, spoke to the Gazette about her relationship with her great-grandmother Kumaa鈥檔aaq, whose life animates the film鈥檚 story. Lindsay recalls how, as a child, Kumaa鈥檔aaq鈥檚 husband Ray, an RCMP officer, would tell her stories of the north and hint at the discrimination and racism experienced by Inuit people at the hands of white settlers.

鈥淗e said, 鈥榊ou鈥檝e got good Inuit blood running through your veins. Don鈥檛 forget that鈥,鈥 Lindsay told the Gazette. 鈥淚 identified with Kumaa鈥檔aaq鈥檚 story. It鈥檚 my duty to tell this story. If we don鈥檛 tell stories, they die. I can use my skills as a filmmaker to tell this story.鈥

Read our previous stories about Lindsay online now, including her appearances in Border Crossings Magazine and Inuit Art Quarterly, her 2020 solo show at Capture Photography Festival and her 2021 WIDC Feature Film Award.