Born in Abbotsford, just outside of Vancouver where he lived and worked, Rodney Graham (1949-2022) is one of the most celebrated artists in the history of Canadian art. His work traverses a wide and diverse area of knowledge from psychoanalysis to music, from the poetics of Mallarme to contemporary cinema. His art is known for its rigorous conceptual architecture and dazzling interior logic. Among his recurring concerns are the camera and modern technologies of picture-making and notions of historical modes of self-representation. Graham is part of a generation of Vancouver artists—including Ken Lum, Stan Douglas, Ian Wallace and Jeff Wall, some of whom he played with in the punk band U-J3RK5—who established the city’s reputation for photo-conceptualism. Graham studied art history at the University of British Columbia from 1968 to 1971 and at Simon Fraser University from 1978 to 1979. He represented Canada at the 47th Venice Biennale, Italy (1997) and among awards he has received the Gershon Iskowitz Prize (2004), the Kurt Schwitters-Preis (2006) and the Audain Prize for Lifetime Achievement in Visual Arts (2011). Graham’s work is held internationally, including in the collections of the Centre Georges Pompidou, the Tate London, the National Gallery of Canada and the Museum of Modern Art. Rodney Graham was appointed as an Officer of the Order of Canada in 2016 for his contributions to Canadian contemporary art.
This spring and summer, three Vancouver galleries join forces with exhibitions that celebrate renowned Vancouver artist Rodney Graham. Internationally known for his humour and deep engagement with exploring ideas about art in our era of mass communication, Graham works in several media—film, video, photography, sound, text, sculpture, installation and painting—to reflect his ongoing concerns that are part autobiography, part detective novel, part psychoanalysis and part philosophy of consciousness.
The idea of a series of exhibitions was initiated by Rennie Collection, which holds a substantial body of Graham’s work. The exhibition at Rennie Collection at Wing Sang, Rodney Graham: Collected Works (May 31-October 4), will feature works by Graham that question the role of the artist by inverting the status of amateur and professional. The result is a powerful readjustment of how we receive modern art history as Graham provides the tools to liberate forms ossified by authoritarianism so they can be energized anew. Dating from the late 1980s onward, many of the pieces presented are making Canadian debuts. From light boxes to video, paintings to installations, the spectrum of work exhibited highlights Graham’s considerable and varied inspirations.
The Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery at the University of British Columbia and Charles H. Scott Gallery at the Emily Carr University of Art + Design are mounting Graham shows relying on key loans from the Rennie Collection. The Belkin exhibition (June 20-August 17) is built around Torqued Chandelier Release (2005), a film loop of a spinning chandelier borrowed from Rennie Collection. Works from the Belkin’s own collection include Vexation Island (1997), made for the 1997 Venice Biennale where Graham represented Canada, and Millennial Time Machine (2003), a camera obscura fitted on a nineteenth-century landau carriage that is part of the University’s Outdoor Art Collection and normally housed in a glass pavilion on campus. The exhibition also includes two monumental lightbox works shown for the first time in Canada, Leaping Hermit (2011) and Cactus Fan (2013), which was shot in a UBC Chemistry Department lab.
Rodney Graham: Torqued Chandelier Release and Other Works is part of a trio of exhibitions to be held from May to November in Vancouver, including Rodney Graham: Collected Works (May 31-October 4, 2014) at Rennie Collection and Rodney Graham: Artist in Artist’s Bar (Prop Paintings and Other Paintings) (September 17-November 16, 2014) at the Charles H. Scott Gallery, Emily Carr University of Art + Design. The exhibition is a collaboration with Rennie Collection, Vancouver, with the generous support of the Canada Council for the Arts. We are grateful for the support of our Belkin Curator’s Forum members.
Rodney Graham
Torqued Chandelier Release (production still), 2005
Courtesy of Rennie Collection
Born in Abbotsford, just outside of Vancouver where he lived and worked, Rodney Graham (1949-2022) is one of the most celebrated artists in the history of Canadian art. His work traverses a wide and diverse area of knowledge from psychoanalysis to music, from the poetics of Mallarme to contemporary cinema. His art is known for its rigorous conceptual architecture and dazzling interior logic. Among his recurring concerns are the camera and modern technologies of picture-making and notions of historical modes of self-representation. Graham is part of a generation of Vancouver artists—including Ken Lum, Stan Douglas, Ian Wallace and Jeff Wall, some of whom he played with in the punk band U-J3RK5—who established the city’s reputation for photo-conceptualism. Graham studied art history at the University of British Columbia from 1968 to 1971 and at Simon Fraser University from 1978 to 1979. He represented Canada at the 47th Venice Biennale, Italy (1997) and among awards he has received the Gershon Iskowitz Prize (2004), the Kurt Schwitters-Preis (2006) and the Audain Prize for Lifetime Achievement in Visual Arts (2011). Graham’s work is held internationally, including in the collections of the Centre Georges Pompidou, the Tate London, the National Gallery of Canada and the Museum of Modern Art. Rodney Graham was appointed as an Officer of the Order of Canada in 2016 for his contributions to Canadian contemporary art.
Canada Council for the Arts
Belkin Curator’s Forum members
A recent acquisition to the Belkin Gallery, Vexation Island is a 10-minute loop, shot on 35mm, edited on video and presented on laser disc. The “Robinson Crusoe” scenario invokes multi-layered readings from issues of colonialism to the impasse of modernist skepticism. In addition to a continuous screening, presented is a small selection of archival material from the production of Vexation Island.
[more]Rodney Graham is one of Canada’s most inventive and innovative artists. His exhibition, organized by York University, Toronto and the Renaissance Society, Chicago, will be the largest exhibition of his work shown in Canada to date. The exhibition, augmented for Vancouver, will be the first showing of Graham’s in Vancouver, the city where he was born and lives, since 1988.
[more]We join the art community in mourning the passing of artist Rodney Graham, who died on October 22, 2022.
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