Lei Cox: Being There

AM-007, Bricklayers, Photograph on Cotton Rag (Framed).jpg

Video Pool Media Arts Centre and Gurevich Fine Art present: Lei Cox - Being There with new work by Andrew Milne and Doug Smith.

Follow Lei Cox on a journey to fiction and back again. Video Pool Media Arts Centre in collaboration with Gurevich Fine Art are please to present a retrospective of Lei Cox`s work from 1986 to 2011.  Current work includes: Being There. Comprised of three video performance works that form a triptych, each video has been inspired by a life long obsession with flight, space travel and human desire to push the envelope. Catching Sight of Sputnik 2009/11, Race 2010/11, and Auto Draw 2010  will be exhibited together displaying a range of work that begins with a 26-year quest to find a surrealistic fiction, or the unusual, in everyday life through the medium of photography and video.

Biography

Lei Cox works with video installation, video art, performance-to-camera and photography and has shown his work worldwide since 1985. His work has often been described a surreal, humorous and science fictional. Cox began working with black and white photography, this was essentially shot straight and with no special effects where finding the unusual in everyday landscapes and portraits was the dominant theme. These early photographs were made with full-frame purity, dramatic light with high contrast and tonal exaggeration. The work changed direction after considering experimentation with sandwich negatives in the enlarger, studio lighting work, filmmaking and video art and the vast possibilities of moving images and early digital video effects. Together with parallel interests in sound and music, video art and video installation became his main form of expression. Later utilizing digital broadcast quality production and post production equipment he began questioning the need for extensive compositing, the reliance of the computer and the over complication of some works which took up to two years to construct. Major solo exhibitions have been shown in the Experimental Art Foundation, Adelaide, Centre for Contemporary Art, Glasgow, Laing Gallery, Newcastle and Gallery Rene Coelho, Amsterdam. Cox has also been exhibited in shows including Tel Aviv Museum of Art, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Skopje, Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, Tate Gallery Liverpool, Osnabruck European Media Art Festival, His Single screen work has been shown in over 70 international festivals and he has recently completed an interactive camera obscura public artwork, The Dark Room:  Mountain to Sea - Beyond Site which is situated on Cairngorm Mountain in Scotland.

Andrew Milne

Mechanical Shadows

A series of mechanical representations inquire about the future and the history of reproduction. Sculpture, photography, drawing, painting all move within the images resisting definition as any one medium. Reconstructions of body and vision are formed by the mechanical hand of a photographic artist; the gaze manifest as the shadow of shadows.

At the age of 31 years old Andrew quit his career as an Engineering Technologist and began an artistic practice in Vancouver involving photography, sculpture and contemporary dance. Working in the exchange he develops image making technologies, devices and machines that act as both product and process of his art practice. Andrew is asking if there is still a way to celebrate the physical and the personal within current and future systems of our technologically organized culture.

Andrew has received funding from the Manitoba Arts Council, the Winnipeg Arts Council, Video Pool Inc and the Winnipeg Film Group.

Doug Smith

Defining identity is dubious, the identity of a period in time even more so. We do however, associate certain colours, fashions and values to specific eras in time; one example being the international exportation and influence of America's particular tastes and values via Hollywood. I revisit the notion of identity of previous decades, essentially Canadian and North American identity, through a series of inventive portraitures, using various painted surface treatments and hand-cut paper elements.

Doug Smith was educated at the University of Manitoba in the Fine Arts Diploma Program. He continued as a sculptor in clay for several years. In 1996 - 2001, Smith moved from Canada to Cleveland and Rotterdam. It was during his time in Rotterdam that he re-aligned his artistic practice towards drawing. The trajectory of his current drawing practice was greatly influenced by The Netherlands; a geologically vulnerable country whose history encompasses centuries of expansive mercantile entrepreneurship and superhuman engineering projects, yet also a historically mono-cultural country wrestling with contemporary immigration challenges. What initiated from this period, for Smith, was an experimental, diagrammatic-based art that probes the concept of human transmigrations. He places the optics not upon one particular country or city, but on the world stage, inferring the realm of a collective psyche. He utilizes a visual set of self-derived codes, symbols and images that are re-contextualized throughout an ongoing suite of narrative- based drawings; a project that would be brought to fruition after his return to Canada.

Video Pool Media Arts Centre is a nonprofit Artist-Run Centre dedicated to independent video, audio and computer integrated multimedia production, located in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.

 

Los Cubanos

FN-006,  Francisco Nunez The Wall, Mixed media on paper, 52cmx 75cm.jpg

“With art from Asia and Russia in demand, some in the art world are betting on Cuba to be the next hot corner of the market. Prices for Cuban art are climbing at galleries and auction houses, and major museums are adding to their Cuban collections.” Kelly Crow – The Wall Street Journal

Gurevich Fine Art warms up the gallery with Los Cubanos!, an exhibition of work by Jairo Alfonso, Francisco Núñez, and Dalvis Tulya, three cutting-edge artists from the extraordinary nation of Cuba. It is a rare opportunity to view and own works by three renowned Cuban artists.

Los Cubanos! opens at Gurevich Fine Art, 200-62 Albert Street, on Friday, March 2nd, with an opening reception at 7pm-10pm. The exhibition closes March 24, 2012.

Francisco Núñez paints abstract portraits. Powerful faces furtively emerge beneath strong slashes of vibrant paint against starkly composed canvases. The abstract and the figurative are blended with a sort of minimalism where the drawing plays a more leading role while there is less importance for the identity of the portrayed. Yet the faces are still powerful, full of energy and depth.

“My work has been a sort of reductionism on portraying. Perhaps they are showing my influence from music, which assumes reiteration without prejudice. For example, a solo instrument or voice, with only minimal background for support as reproduced in a portrait.”

Jairo Alfonso balances objects and curios in tippy stacks in his coffee and ink drawings. They animated into his video installation, a collective montage of small monuments dedicated to his Cuban experience.

Recently he has been exploring the symbolism inherent in objects found in daily life, and the manner in which they characterized generations, a civilization, a human group. These drawings are inspired by the Diogenes syndrome, that is, the behavior of hoarding and collecting. Objects in daily life are consumed through their use in daily life and then are not discarded. The results are “boxes” full of various clutter. This idea translates into an obsession to draw, in Jairo's object filled pieces.

Dalvis Tuya’s works involve taking a step back to see the full picture emerge, and a step forward to see the tiny, repeated patterns of smaller images that form the whole. The full effect of their works together comprises small peeks into the larger experience and challenges of being nurtured in this legendarily esoteric nation. 

Gurevich Fine Art is a contemporary art gallery that primarily focuses on Canadian art, but has expanded its mandate to include bright, international talent. The gallery represents such artists as Cliff Eyland, Cyrus Smith, Christian Worthington, Andre Milne, Tom Lovatt, Nereo II, Doug Smith, Miriam Rudolph, Katherine Bruce, Robert Bruce, Derek Brueckner, Robert Sim, Sue Gordon, Louis Bako, Elaine Banerjee, Aliana Au, Marie-Doris Valois, and more.

Los Cubanos!

Friday, March 2nd

Gurevich Fine Art, 200-62 Albert Street,

Opening reception : 7pm-10pm.

The exhibition closes March 24, 2012.

Lost in a World (I was Here)

054a.jpg

Gurevich Fine Art is honoured to present Milos Milidrag’s latest body of work in the exhibition Lost in a Lost World (I Was Here).

The show opens at Gurevich Fine Art with a reception on Thursday, December 8th, beginning at 7pm. The exhibition continues to December 31, 2011.

Born in the former Yugoslavia, Milos Milidrag graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Bosnia and obtained a Master of Fine Arts from University Of Belgrade. He taught at the Faculty of Fine Arts at the University of Pristine in Kosovo. He has exhibited locally in over 100 group and 12 major individual shows as well as internationally. Over the years he has worked from a minimalist style to one more expressive and surreal.

In his latest series of drawings and paintings, Milos uses tropes and mythology to express the emotions of being displaced. The artist fled his war-ravaged country in 1997 to live in Winnipeg, where the shock of adjustment charged his artistic practice significantly.

He took periodic refuge in the somber walls of the Winnipeg Art Gallery, endeared to the gallery’s vast array of Inuit artifacts. Drawing metaphor and comfort from the stark presentation of these strange, isolated figures, his latest works abide in the familiarity of estrangement he experiences when encountering Inuit art.

He continues to push his hyper-narratives in surrealist style, filling stark tableaus with mystical creatures, which are all at once playful and nightmarish. He uses a serene colour palette against sparse landscapes to achieve an otherworldly effect. The pervading sense is that Milos’ works are born of truth. Lost in a Lost World is a heart-rending expression of, loss, wonder, inexplicable anguish and beauty.

Lost in a Lost World (I Was Here) opens Thursday, December 8th, with a reception at 7pm. The exhibition will be on display at Gurevich Fine Art, #200-62 Albert Street, from December 9th until December 31, 2011.