Close X
Friday, December 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Art Gallery Hosts Major Exhibit Of Walker Evans Photographs

The Canadian Press, 22 Oct, 2016 02:12 PM
    VANCOUVER — The Vancouver Art Gallery is set to open what it says is the most comprehensive exhibition of work by the influential American photographer Walker Evans ever shown in Canada.
     
    "Walker Evans: Depth of Field" features more than 200 photos from the 1920s to the '70s. Many of them have become iconic, made in the U.S. South during the Great Depression.
     
    The show runs from Oct. 29 to Jan. 22.
     
    It originated last year at the Josef Albers Museum Quaddrat in Bottrop, Germany, before moving to the High Museum of Art in Atlanta this past summer. The two institutions organized the exhibition in collaboration with the Vancouver gallery.
     
    Gallery director Kathleen Bartels said Evans's work holds "a special significance" in Vancouver.
     
    "Evans's emphasis on the everyday and his historically inflected vision have been a model for generations of photographers and an important point of reference for Vancouver-based artists to this day," she said in a release.
     
    Exhibition curator John Hill and Josef Albers Museum director Heinz Liesbrock will discuss Evans's work during public tours on Oct. 29.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Justin Trudeau, Sophie And The Kids: Canada's Political Family

    Justin Trudeau, Sophie And The Kids: Canada's Political Family
    Upon taking office one year ago, the prime minister set the tone: Although he's Canada's leader, he's also a father with a young family.

    Justin Trudeau, Sophie And The Kids: Canada's Political Family

    Mystery Behind Fatal Plane Crash Poses Particular Challenge For Investigators

    Mystery Behind Fatal Plane Crash Poses Particular Challenge For Investigators
    VANCOUVER — Federal investigators have an especially challenging mystery on their hands piecing together what caused a small jet to crash last Thursday shortly after taking off from a British Columbia airport, sending out no distress call.

    Mystery Behind Fatal Plane Crash Poses Particular Challenge For Investigators

    Court Orders New Trial For Former B.C. Fire Chief Accused Of Sexual Assault

    VANCOUVER — The British Columbia Court of Appeal has ordered a new trial on sexual assault charges for a former fire chief of a small town in central B.C., ruling that the actions of the trial judge could be perceived as being unfair.

    Court Orders New Trial For Former B.C. Fire Chief Accused Of Sexual Assault

    Fourth Suicide Involving Young Girl Rocks Northern Saskatchewan Communities

    Grand Chief Ron Michel of the Prince Albert Grand Council says the latest suicide involves a 10-year-old child from Deschambault Lake, about 500 kilometres northeast of Saskatoon.

    Fourth Suicide Involving Young Girl Rocks Northern Saskatchewan Communities

    B.C.'s Auditor General Says Government Info At Risk Due To Lack Of Security

    B.C.'s Auditor General Says Government Info At Risk Due To Lack Of Security
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's auditor general says appropriate security controls are not always in place for thousands of mobile devices used by government employees, putting sensitive information at risk.

    B.C.'s Auditor General Says Government Info At Risk Due To Lack Of Security

    Minister Bernier Says New Vancouver School Board Trustee Not Considering Closures

    Minister Bernier Says New Vancouver School Board Trustee Not Considering Closures
    Mike Bernier says the former superintendent tasked with being the board's new official trustee has told him school closures are not being considered for the foreseeable future.

    Minister Bernier Says New Vancouver School Board Trustee Not Considering Closures