Saturday, April 20, 2024
ADVT 
Exhibitions

MOA presents Playing with Fire: Ceramics of the Extraordinary

Museum of Anthropology University of British Columbia 6393 NW Marine Drive22 Nov '19 to 29 Mar '20 @ 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM

    The Museum of Anthropology (MOA) at UBC presents the thought-provoking exhibition, Playing with Fire: Ceramics of the Extraordinary, on display from November 22, 2019 to March 29, 2020. Showcasing a group of 11 highly celebrated BC-based artists, this premiere exhibition of ceramic works expresses strong opinions on urgent social issues and offers subtle perspectives on the state of our contemporary world. While at first glance these works may appear very approachable through a lens of nostalgia, beauty, or humour, upon closer inspection they reveal much deeper commentaries on social injustice, racism, identity, and censorship. This powerful exhibition invites visitors to explore the many layers of understanding each of these provocative works embody, boldly demonstrating clay’s myriad discursive possibilities.

    Playing with Fire features the work of 11 internationally recognized BC-based artists — Judy Chartrand, Ying-Yueh Chuang, Gathie Falk, Jeremy Hatch, Ian Johnston, David Lambert, Glenn Lewis, Alywn O’Brien, Bill Rennie, Debra Sloan, and Brendan Tang — who are all acclaimed for their fearless innovation in ceramic work. Working in clay, the most accessible of mediums, and drawing inspiration from pop culture, art history, humour, beauty, hope, and nature, these artists bring fresh, playful, and challenging perspectives of the art form. Visitors will be encouraged to discover new meanings and uncover complexities hidden, often in plain sight, within the works.

    For this exhibition, more than 35 ceramic installations will be on display — some of which are epic in scale, including Johnston’s The Antechamber (2010–2012), in which a 25-foot-long room is covered with a repeating, grid-like motif of ceramic elements, created through a vacuum-forming process. The result of these overlapping elements, hanging like roof tiles, evokes the massive scale of consumption of manufactured goods today.

    The exhibition gallery will be transformed into a container of possibilities in which the sculptures both occupy and comment on the spaces they inhabit. O’Brien’s earthenware and porcelain sculptures push the medium as a vehicle to explore the question, “What is the vessel?” Known for her extensive knowledge of the history of decorative arts and passion for baroque, O’Brien dissects the definition of the vessel through her lacey hand-rolled coils used in a deliberate yet chaotic way to construct volume and shape.

    Rennie’s work also addresses space as he creatively evokes a sense of place as embodied in fabled architecture and specific locales. By working with clay slabs and press moulds, he constructed a large-scale and highly detailed model of his childhood home in Surrey entitled Where I Was Brought Up. Visitors will have the opportunity to view this thoughtful piece mediated by Rennie’s cultural history that is both a represented and presented space.

    Another powerful piece in the exhibition is Chartrand’s 2006 installation entitled Counteract. Upon first glance, Chartrand has recreated a diner’s bar with stools, but closer inspection addresses important Indigenous issues and reveals biting commentary on racism and segregation, particularly in the context of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside.

    In pushing the exploration of space, Playing with Fire extends beyond the confines of the exhibition gallery and into other areas of the museum. Two artists — David Lambert and Debra Sloan — will be presented in MOA’s Multiversity Galleries and Koerner European Ceramics Gallery respectively, where their works will be in dialogue with the objects on permanent display, adding new contextual layers for interpretation.

    Lambert, sometimes referred to as the godfather of BC Ceramics, reached a commercial heyday in the 1950s selling pottery with “Indigenous” designs to offer a more comprehensive representation of Canadian art in the marketplace. Now to be displayed among MOA’s collection of objects from Pacific Northwest Coast First Nations in the Multiversity Galleries, Lambert’s work takes on a renewed relevance in today’s conversations of cultural appropriation.

    As part of her year-long artist residency at MOA, Sloan studied and created works in response to the Koerner European Ceramics, in particular the collection of Haban ware from 17th and 18th centuries, made by the Anabaptists, who fled Florence due to religious persecution. Drawing from this inspiration, her works highlight the ongoing yet ever urgent subject of worldwide migration.

    Playing with Fire will incorporate many layers of technical prowess and symbolic power, superbly demonstrating clay’s infinite artistic possibilities. In Tang’s Magna Ormulu series, he reconfigures historical art traditions through the use of clay and mixed media. Intrigued by cultural appropriation and hybridity, Tang incorporates these predominant themes in his work to reflect his own ambiguous cultural identity. Although he is labeled by others as Asian-Canadian, Tang considers his family disconnected from Asia through several generations of migrational displacement and interracial marriage. Thus, he employs self-portraiture in his work to address issues of race, ethnicity, class, and culture.

    Taiwan-born Chuang also addresses cultural identity and class through her art. Chuang is selective about how she adapts Western philosophies and ways of living in her art and prefers to convey a hybrid existence, adopting elements from both Western and Taiwanese cultures — Chuang’s interest in hybridization has led her to incorporate elements from plants or sea anemones in her stunning clay works, combining and creating forms that are symmetrical and asymmetrical.

    The 11 artists featured in Playing with Fire boldly challenge long-held notions of the functionality of clay — they have released this unassuming yet utterly transformable material from this constraint to create extraordinary works of art. Visitors will be awe-inspired by the power of each work and compelled to reconsider their own perceptions of clay as an art form.

    MOA presents Playing with Fire: Ceramics of the Extraordinary

    Dates: November 22, 2019 to March 29, 2020

    Opening: November 21, 2019 at 7pm

    Address: Museum of Anthropology
    University of British Columbia
    6393 NW Marine Drive, Vancouver, BC

    Website: www.moa.ubc.ca

    Photo: Antechamber, by Ian Johnston (2010-2012). Collection of the artist. Photo courtesy of
    the artist.

     

    Join DARPAN Magazine community on socialmedia!  

     

     FACEBOOK  |  TWITTER   | INSTAGRAM  |  YOUTUBE    |  ISSUU

    Event Location Museum of Anthropology University of British Columbia 6393 NW Marine Drive
    Address:
    Post Code: V6T 1Z2

    MORE Exhibitions ARTICLES

    Surrey Art Gallery’s free guided tour of fall exhibition

    13750 88 Ave | 16/10/2019 - 16/10/2019

    The exhibition looks at the relationship between computational art and the natural environment, the digital and the biological, and nature and culture.

    Surrey Art Gallery’s free guided tour of fall exhibition

    16/10/2019 - 16/10/2019

    Top five must-see attractions at Vancouver Fall Home Show 2019

    1055 Canada Pl | 24/10/2019 - 27/10/2019

    Expert advice and inspiration return to the Vancouver Convention Centre-West October 24 – 27, 2019 

     

    Top five must-see attractions at Vancouver Fall Home Show 2019

    24/10/2019 - 27/10/2019

    David Yarrow Exhibition at Chali-Rosso Art Gallery

    549 Howe St | 17/10/2019 - 10/11/2019

    Over 20 fine-art photographs by Scottish artist David Yarrow to be displayed at Chali-Rosso Art Gallery

     

    David Yarrow Exhibition at Chali-Rosso Art Gallery

    17/10/2019 - 10/11/2019

    Eastside Culture Crawl presents new public forum & multi-venue art exhibition, Displacement Foru

    DUDOC 1489 Frances St | 25/10/2019 - 26/10/2019

    Arts organization to release new findings from survey on artist space at public forum

     

    Eastside Culture Crawl presents new public forum & multi-venue art exhibition, Displacement Foru

    25/10/2019 - 26/10/2019

    Bill Reid Gallery Celebrates Indigenous Feminine Power in Vancouver Premiere of Out of Concealment

    Bill Reid Gallery 639 Hornby St | 23/10/2019 - 05/04/2020

    Terri-Lynn Williams-Davidson sheds light on ancient oral traditions from Haida Gwaii in solo exhibition of photographic collages and mixed media installation 

     

    Bill Reid Gallery Celebrates Indigenous Feminine Power in Vancouver Premiere of Out of Concealment

    23/10/2019 - 05/04/2020

    The Gandhi Photo Exhibition at Teck Gallery

    Teck Gallery, SFU Harbour Centre, 515 W Hastings St | 04/10/2019 - 07/10/2019

    Depicting the life events of the Mahatma.

    The Gandhi Photo Exhibition at Teck Gallery

    04/10/2019 - 07/10/2019
    PrevNext