Julia Feyrer’s (b. 1982, Victoria, BC) work has been the subject of solo exhibitions, including Kitchen at grunt gallery, Vancouver (2014); Escape Scenes at Western Front, Vancouver (2014); Alternatives and Opportunities at Catriona Jeffries Gallery, Vancouver (2012); and Irregular Time Signatures at Johan Berggren Gallery, Malmö, Sweden (2011). She has participated in group exhibitions at museums, including the Belkin Art Gallery, Vancouver; The Rooms, Newfoundland; Jewish Museum, New York; Victoria Art Gallery, Canada; Presentation House Gallery, Vancouver; and Bielefelder Kunstverein, Bielefeld, Germany. She is co-editor of the online Spoox Audiozine and author of a series of artist books from Perro Verlag press.
Tamara Henderson’s (b. 1982, Sackville, NB) recent solo exhibitions include The Blur Inbetween at the Art Gallery of Edmonton (2016); Charmer Scripture at Rodeo, London (2014); Speaking in Scales at Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York (2014); Tapped Out and Spiraling in Stride at Grazer Kunstverein, Graz, Austria (2014); Sans Tête Au Monde with Santiago Mostyn at Kunsthall Stavanger, Norway (2014); and Evergreen Minutes of the Phantom Figure at Kunstverein Nürnberg, Germany (2013). She has participated in group exhibitions at venues such as Insomnia at Bonniers Konsthalle (2017), the Glasgow International (2016); Toronto Kunstverein (2014); Rodeo, Istanbul (2013); Western Front, Vancouver (2013); Magasin III, Stockholm; and Midway Contemporary Art, Minneapolis. Her work was included in dOCUMENTA 13, Kassel, Germany (2012), where she presented Sloshed Ballot & Anonymous Loan. Henderson was shortlisted for the 2013 Sobey Art Award.
Join Julia Feyrer and Tamara Henderson for a tour of Julia Feyrer and Tamara Henderson: The Last Waves. The exhibition is a collaborative installation in which the viewer is immersed in a sequence of hallucinatory sets that loosely evoke the familiar yet strange locations for escapist films: a bar, a lab, a hotel.
At The Night Times Press Bar for Dreamers, visitors might linger over the The Night Times newspaper that records and categorizes the artists’ dreams – or record their own, using an ergonomic keyboard that projects their writing into the Gallery to flicker for a moment, then disappear. The bar is U-shaped, containing glowing vignettes in the form of nighttime windows, in reference to the film Consider the Belvedere (2015), which was shot at the aging Belvedere Court apartment building on Main Street in Vancouver. Research into the collection of the Historical Museum of Wine and Spirits in Stockholm inspired and provoked such elements as a drinking song for women and the film Bottles Under the Influence (2012), in which glass bottles are featured as characters. These “vessels,” with names like The Old Hag, subtly unhinge the pairing of psychosis and female sexuality, instead pulling focus to the potent, transformative states between sleeping and waking explored by Surrealism.
This fluid collaboration alters the space of the Gallery to a site of production as well as presentation, and of the accumulated effects of experimentation across a number of years, as these spaces become a set for a third film to be shot during the exhibition.
Julia Feyrer’s (b. 1982, Victoria, BC) work has been the subject of solo exhibitions, including Kitchen at grunt gallery, Vancouver (2014); Escape Scenes at Western Front, Vancouver (2014); Alternatives and Opportunities at Catriona Jeffries Gallery, Vancouver (2012); and Irregular Time Signatures at Johan Berggren Gallery, Malmö, Sweden (2011). She has participated in group exhibitions at museums, including the Belkin Art Gallery, Vancouver; The Rooms, Newfoundland; Jewish Museum, New York; Victoria Art Gallery, Canada; Presentation House Gallery, Vancouver; and Bielefelder Kunstverein, Bielefeld, Germany. She is co-editor of the online Spoox Audiozine and author of a series of artist books from Perro Verlag press.
Tamara Henderson’s (b. 1982, Sackville, NB) recent solo exhibitions include The Blur Inbetween at the Art Gallery of Edmonton (2016); Charmer Scripture at Rodeo, London (2014); Speaking in Scales at Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York (2014); Tapped Out and Spiraling in Stride at Grazer Kunstverein, Graz, Austria (2014); Sans Tête Au Monde with Santiago Mostyn at Kunsthall Stavanger, Norway (2014); and Evergreen Minutes of the Phantom Figure at Kunstverein Nürnberg, Germany (2013). She has participated in group exhibitions at venues such as Insomnia at Bonniers Konsthalle (2017), the Glasgow International (2016); Toronto Kunstverein (2014); Rodeo, Istanbul (2013); Western Front, Vancouver (2013); Magasin III, Stockholm; and Midway Contemporary Art, Minneapolis. Her work was included in dOCUMENTA 13, Kassel, Germany (2012), where she presented Sloshed Ballot & Anonymous Loan. Henderson was shortlisted for the 2013 Sobey Art Award.
Once again, we are pleased to welcome the UBC Contemporary Players to the Belkin Art Gallery for a concert inspired by the exhibition Julia Feyrer and Tamara Henderson: The Last Waves. Led by Directors Corey Hamm and Paolo Bortolussi, this graduate and undergraduate student ensemble from the UBC School of Music will animate the Gallery for an afternoon program celebrating themes from the exhibition.
[more]Julia Feyrer and Tamara Henderson: The Last Waves is a collaborative installation in which the viewer is immersed in a sequence of hallucinatory sets that loosely evoke the familiar yet strange locations for escapist films: a bar, a lab, a hotel. At The Night Times Press Bar for Dreamers, visitors might linger over the The Night Times newspaper that records and categorizes the artists’ dreams – or record their own, using an ergonomic keyboard that projects their writing into the Gallery to flicker for a moment, then disappear. The bar is U-shaped, containing glowing vignettes in the form of nighttime windows, in reference to the film Consider the Belvedere (2015), which was shot at the aging Belvedere Court apartment building on Main Street in Vancouver. Research into the collection of the Historical Museum of Wine and Spirits in Stockholm inspired and provoked such elements as a drinking song for women and the film Bottles Under the Influence (2012), in which glass bottles are featured as characters. These “vessels,” with names like The Old Hag, subtly unhinge the pairing of psychosis and female sexuality, instead pulling focus to the potent, transformative states between sleeping and waking explored by Surrealism. This fluid collaboration alters the space of the Gallery to a site of production as well as presentation, and of the accumulated effects of experimentation across a number of years, as these spaces become a set for a third film to be shot during the exhibition.
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