Museums: Vancouver Art Gallery
On my way to board a cruise to Alaska, I stopped in at the Vancouver Art Gallery, the 5th largest Art Gallery in Canada and the largest on the west side.
The Vancouver Art Gallery, 41,400 square feet (3,850 m2) of exhibition space and more than 11,000 works in its collection.
This old courthouse neoclassical building was designed by Francis Rattenbury after winning a design competition in 1905.
Displacement, the main exhibition on view is a curated collection of objects from their permanent collection that consists of “art that evokes displacement as a tool to elicit viewer reactions ranging from empathy and understanding, to the unexpected and disruptive”
Joseph Wilton, General Wolfe, c 1759, plaster
Patrick Traer, baby blue balls, 2002, plywood, cotton, cardboard foam batting vinyl, zippers, approximately 2000 covered buttons, stainless steel buckle and chain.
Aganetha Dyck, Eaton Triplets, 1976-81, wool, textile
There was also a solo show of Victoria based artist, Mowry Baden. “Baden is known for producing intricate, sometimes humorous sculptural works and installations that borrow from the fields of perceptual psychology, science and architecture, and often solicit the audience’s participation.”
Mowry Baden, “Cheap Sleeps Columbine,” 1994 mattress, boxspring, pillow, wood, steel, mirror
There was also a large photography exhibition, Moving Still: Performative Photography in India.
The photographer who caught my attention was Gauri Gill and his series, Acts of Appearance (2015- ). He brings attention to an indigenous community living in the Jawhar district in Maharashtra, India known for their papier-mâché of festival deities. Gill commissioned the villagers to make papier-mâché masks of common people and pets who are important to them and have them posing doing normal everyday activities.
Gauri Gill. Untitled, from "Acts of Appearance" (2015-ongoing)
Gauri Gill. Untitled, from "Acts of Appearance" (2015-ongoing)