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Exhibition Information

Exhibition Press Release

 Exhibition Information

Glendon Art Classes - Annual Student Show 2009

Open doors Monday May 11
May 14 to 22, 2009

Everyone is invited to visit the Studio, located in Wood Residence, E 010, with students and professor in attendance, Monday May 11 between noon and 3:00 p.m. Light refreshments will be served.  The students’ work will then be on display at the Glendon Gallery itself - May 14th, 15th, 19th, 20th, 21st, 22nd, during the Gallery’s regularly scheduled hours of noon to 3 p.m.

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 Press Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Glendon Art Classes - Annual Student Show 2009

OPEN STUDIO – Monday, May 11, from noon to 3 PM

        Wood Residence, Room 010, door E

Toronto, April 30, 2009 – Continuing its tradition, Glendon Gallery is pleased to announce its ANNUAL GLENDON STUDENT EXHIBITION SHOW 2009.  Glendon Gallery proudly presents the students’ annual exposition from Glendon Gallery curator and professor Marc Audette’s digital photography and painting class at Glendon

Everyone is invited to visit the Studio, located in Wood Residence, E 010, with students and professor in attendance, Monday May 11 between noon and 3:00 p.m. Light refreshments will be served.  The students’ work will then be on display at the Glendon Gallery itself - May 14th, 15th, 19th, 20th, 21st, 22nd, during the Gallery’s regularly scheduled hours of noon to 3 p.m.

Visual artist Marc Audette, professor of the class comments:

 “Each year we encounter the same challenge of finding a meaningful connection between the themes evoked through the students’ works and the important concerns of the day. Obviously, Glendon students do not function in a vacuum; they get involved, speak out and take a stance on the issues that concern them. The resulting works, which the Glendon Gallery presents every spring, form an overview of the reflections of these students and the topics that inspire them.”

Come and discover the products of the students’ artistic expressions, in the studio, through different media and materials, such as photography, painting, drawing, etc. We also invite you to take a walk over to the Glendon Gallery to see what inspires our students.  We hope to see you there!

Gallery Hours: Tuesday to Friday: noon – 3:00 pm
Web : www.glendon.yorku.ca/gallery - 416-487-6721 / artgallery@glendon.yorku.ca

 

 

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Our sincere thanks go out to all those who have contributed to making this exhibition a success: first and foremost our incredible Gallery team. Glendon Gallery would also like to express its special thanks to: Associate Principal Louise Lewin; Aaron Doupe, Manager of Student Affairs; as well as the Student Services team.

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Contact: Martine Rheault, Coordinator of Artistic & Cultural Affairs, 416-487-6859,artculture@glendon.yorku.ca

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 Articles
A World Stitched Together
 

 A fascination for textiles, textures, and where they were made – these were the initial motivations of Quebec artist Josette Villeneuve for collecting labels of used clothing. But the works she created from these mundane sources, currently on view at the Glendon Gallery with the title Un monde à raccommoder / A World in Need of Mending, are anything but commonplace, as they are full of colour, symbolism and imagination.

Josette Villeneuve in front of the Map of the World
“I discovered an interest in clothing labels in 2003”, says Villeneuve. “Their textures and exotic origins seduced me and filled me with questions about their geographic and social context. Where were they made, by whom, under what conditions?” Since each label features the location of its production, the ‘made in…’, collecting them was also a means of virtual travelling and understanding the impact of globalization.

Villeneuve initially collected by sorting through unwanted, unsalable items at used-clothing depots, and personally removed each label. Eventually, places like the Salvation Army Store and other collection sites started setting bags of clothing aside for her and occasionally even removed labels they thought would interest her. “The more I collected, the more I wanted”, she confesses.

The flags of Canada and Vietnam
Her first wish was to produce a really large work – a map of the world, stitched together from tiny pieces that came from every corner of the globe. Putting fifteen of her creations on view, the current exhibition includes this seminal piece, an enormous 9-foot by 17-foot testimonial to Villeneuve’s patience and attention to detail, as each tiny piece has been pinned individually to the backdrop.

Villeneuve started with representative items: maps, flags of different countries. But her impish sense of fun took over as she created an American flag which contained Cuban and Thai labels – from products which would never have found their way to American stores.

Her map of the world dominates the current exhibition, directly opposite the entrance to the Gallery. There are also a number of recognizable flags on display including India’s, Vietnam’s and Canada’s. But soon Villeneuve’s imagination took over. With a wink to Neo-Dadaist American artist Jasper Johns, whose best-known works include flags and maps playfully reconstructed with unorthodox colours and characteristics, Villeneuve’s flags gradually took on new features as well.

Left: Visitors showed a great deal of interest in the artworks

“I realized that when you look at real flags on display, what you also see is the sky and the clouds above. So, I decided to incorporate these into my works – after all, a creative artist can do anything”, she twinkles. In fact, she considers clouds as a metaphor for continued transformation, a cyclical change much like what happens within the world’s population.

What resulted from her fascination with clouds is a series of cloud-flags – flags that started out as accurate representations of the official ones, but which were transformed into cloud shapes with details such as stars or stripes in other colours than the official ones. The most impressive cloud-flag on display at Glendon is the large blue one which is the first work greeting visitors as they enter. With its sapphire blue background and dreamy white cloud centre, it transports the onlooker up, up into the sky.

The combination of maps, flags and cloud-flags is shown together for the first time at the current Glendon exhibition, inciting a great deal of interest and admiration from the public for the painstaking work and imagination that went into each piece. Villeneuve praises the Glendon Gallery’s curator, Marc Audette and his team. “They had many insights and innovative ideas for mounting these unusual pieces”, she observes. “It was a pleasure to work with them and the setup is dynamic and harmonious.”

Right: A closeup of the labels

“We are confronted with a veritable melting pot of origins, where ‘Made in Bangladesh’ rubs elbows with a large array of other provenances”, says curator Marc Audette. “Josette Villeneuve's flags open the discussion on questions of identity within our societies, which are undergoing constant change as a result of globalization. These flags also resonate in worrisome ways with the current geopolitical reality of continuous periods of conflict in the world.”

Un monde à raccommoder - A World in Need of Mending is shown at the Glendon Gallery until March 21st. The next exhibition at the Gallery will display the work of York University Masters of Fine Arts student Stephanie Reynolds, from April 18th to April 30th. For details and gallery hours, please visit the Gallery’s website.


The blue cloud-flag with the artist and Glendon Coordinator of Artistic and Cultural Affairs Martine Rheault

 

Submitted to YFile by Glendon communications officer Marika Kemeny

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