Sol Hashemi views his artworks as mushrooms popping up occasionally from a vast mycorrhizal web. His practice spans many niches, including foraging, woodworking, experimental product photography, stoneworking, cooking, organizing, conceptual floral design, writing, conversation, curating, brewing and the internet. Much as a network composed of fungi allows apparently isolated trees to communicate and share resources, Hashemi is interested in exploring how this relationship can exist through art. Solo exhibitions include Afterwards, What Comes Before is Different at James Harris Gallery (Seattle), Technical Support at Annarumma Gallery (Naples) and Software Update / System Build at The Henry Art Gallery (Seattle). He has also exhibited his work at Sculpture Center, the Portland Art Museum, Ditch Projects and Kunstverein Munchen. Hashemi was a founder of the art space Veronica and is a recipient of the Kayla Skinner Award from the Seattle Art Museum.
Martin Katzoff is a printmaker and painter from Providence, Rhode Island. Katzoff’s etchings address mythology across ancient and modern cultural and religious contexts. His printmaking practice draws upon materials that shift into large abstract and surrealistic paintings reflecting catastrophic environmental events and human oddities. Katzoff’s lyrical and immersive large-scale murals have been featured at the Freehand Hotel and Broken Shaker (New York, NY) and Stair Galleries (Hudson, NY). He is a graduate of Bard College and is currently an MFA candidate at the University of British Columbia.
Natalie Purschwitz is an artist living and working on the traditional, ancestral and unceded territories of the xʷməθkʷəy̍əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish) and Sel̓íl̓witulh (Tsleil-Waututh) people. Thinking about earth – as a complexity of materials, a location, a temporal range, a perspective, an intelligence, a system within systems, a geometric configuration, an embodiment of motion and a life-supporting loam – has become the primary substance of her research. She draws from personal experience, daily practice/observation and theoretical discourse to coax out relational clusters of meaning, correspondences and visual strands to form a matrix of interconnected nodes. Purschwitz has shown her work nationally and internationally at the Vancouver Art Gallery, Polygon Gallery (North Vancouver), Plug In ICA (Winnipeg), the Japanese Canadian National Museum (Burnaby), the McMichael Canadian Art Collection (Kleingburg, ON), the Prince Takamato Gallery (Tokyo, Japan), Canada House (London, UK) and AGX Galerie (Tehran, Iran).
Xan Shian is an interdisciplinary artist and writer, and MFA candidate in the AHVA Department at UBC, whose practice uses the presence and absence of memory to question the corporeal tensions that manifest within her body. In this work, Xan examines how the Scottish and Gaelic folklores she grew up hearing help navigate the in-between spaces of personal, cultural and material encounter by seeking what is absent or unaccounted for. She has written for and shown works at spaces including the Polygon Gallery (Vancouver), Project Pangée (Montreal), the AHVA Gallery (UBC, Vancouver), and the Ou Gallery (Duncan). Xan makes art and lives as an uninvited guest on the traditional, ancestral and unceded territories of the xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), and Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations.
Dion Smith-Dokkie is a visual artist and painter currently based in Vancouver, BC. Grounded in painting, he thinks about colour and light, interfaces, skins, screens, skies, and so forth. Dion has a BA in Humanities (Women’s Studies) from the University of Victoria and a BFA in Painting and Drawing from Concordia University. He is a member of West Moberly First Nations, a Treaty 8 First Nation located in northeast British Columbia.
As an extension of Fata Morgana: UBC Master of Fine Arts Exhibition 2021, there are a number of projects related to the onsite exhibition that the artists have made available online.
The following are links and projects for Sol Hashemi.
The following are links and projects for Sol Hashemi.
Visit https://blanket.systems/.
The following are links and projects for Martin Katzoff.
The following are links and projects for Martin Katzoff.
Visit Martin Katzoff’s website.
The following are links and projects for Natalie Purschwitz.
The following are links and projects for Natalie Purschwitz.
Visit geomatrix.hotglue.me.
Check back often as geomatrix.hotglue.me is changing and updating daily.
The following are links and projects for Xan Shian.
The following are links and projects for Xan Shian.
Visit Xan Shian’s website.
sian sain sea
There is a space where the water meets the shore that is imperceptible; it bears a subtle spilling, the leaking of matter between worlds. As with memory, this space becomes more and less accessible over time—never here nor there—but in response to changing conditions. I imagine memory as both presence and absence. An absence indicated by the bodies of presence that surround it, like hands cupped around a frog that jumps away.
The following are projects and links for Dion Smith-Dokkie.
The following are projects and links for Dion Smith-Dokkie.
oculi eis caeruleis
rainbow
Video has come to play a central role in my painting practice, to the degree that much of my sketching takes place on the computer and video camera. Luscious arc, the series of paintings I’ve included in the physical Fata Morgana exhibition, began as a series of video experiments conducted over the course of 2020. Using Zoom, Twitch, post-production software, and hardware like the computer screen, a boroscopic camera, projectors, and glass prisms, I route videos through and amongst themselves, superimpose them, make them water-transparent, web fragments of my body into the image. I think about the images like a drop of dew on a telescope’s lens.
The videos help me to create images that possess their own motor; where the energy for many Impressionist works came from tubed paints, light and atmospheric conditions, I liken these works to echoes in light. Specific inputs and locations are less important than the resonance the works operate through, whose effect is a space nonetheless.
Sol Hashemi views his artworks as mushrooms popping up occasionally from a vast mycorrhizal web. His practice spans many niches, including foraging, woodworking, experimental product photography, stoneworking, cooking, organizing, conceptual floral design, writing, conversation, curating, brewing and the internet. Much as a network composed of fungi allows apparently isolated trees to communicate and share resources, Hashemi is interested in exploring how this relationship can exist through art. Solo exhibitions include Afterwards, What Comes Before is Different at James Harris Gallery (Seattle), Technical Support at Annarumma Gallery (Naples) and Software Update / System Build at The Henry Art Gallery (Seattle). He has also exhibited his work at Sculpture Center, the Portland Art Museum, Ditch Projects and Kunstverein Munchen. Hashemi was a founder of the art space Veronica and is a recipient of the Kayla Skinner Award from the Seattle Art Museum.
Martin Katzoff is a printmaker and painter from Providence, Rhode Island. Katzoff’s etchings address mythology across ancient and modern cultural and religious contexts. His printmaking practice draws upon materials that shift into large abstract and surrealistic paintings reflecting catastrophic environmental events and human oddities. Katzoff’s lyrical and immersive large-scale murals have been featured at the Freehand Hotel and Broken Shaker (New York, NY) and Stair Galleries (Hudson, NY). He is a graduate of Bard College and is currently an MFA candidate at the University of British Columbia.
Natalie Purschwitz is an artist living and working on the traditional, ancestral and unceded territories of the xʷməθkʷəy̍əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish) and Sel̓íl̓witulh (Tsleil-Waututh) people. Thinking about earth – as a complexity of materials, a location, a temporal range, a perspective, an intelligence, a system within systems, a geometric configuration, an embodiment of motion and a life-supporting loam – has become the primary substance of her research. She draws from personal experience, daily practice/observation and theoretical discourse to coax out relational clusters of meaning, correspondences and visual strands to form a matrix of interconnected nodes. Purschwitz has shown her work nationally and internationally at the Vancouver Art Gallery, Polygon Gallery (North Vancouver), Plug In ICA (Winnipeg), the Japanese Canadian National Museum (Burnaby), the McMichael Canadian Art Collection (Kleingburg, ON), the Prince Takamato Gallery (Tokyo, Japan), Canada House (London, UK) and AGX Galerie (Tehran, Iran).
Xan Shian is an interdisciplinary artist and writer, and MFA candidate in the AHVA Department at UBC, whose practice uses the presence and absence of memory to question the corporeal tensions that manifest within her body. In this work, Xan examines how the Scottish and Gaelic folklores she grew up hearing help navigate the in-between spaces of personal, cultural and material encounter by seeking what is absent or unaccounted for. She has written for and shown works at spaces including the Polygon Gallery (Vancouver), Project Pangée (Montreal), the AHVA Gallery (UBC, Vancouver), and the Ou Gallery (Duncan). Xan makes art and lives as an uninvited guest on the traditional, ancestral and unceded territories of the xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), and Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations.
Dion Smith-Dokkie is a visual artist and painter currently based in Vancouver, BC. Grounded in painting, he thinks about colour and light, interfaces, skins, screens, skies, and so forth. Dion has a BA in Humanities (Women’s Studies) from the University of Victoria and a BFA in Painting and Drawing from Concordia University. He is a member of West Moberly First Nations, a Treaty 8 First Nation located in northeast British Columbia.
The Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of work by the 2021 graduates of the University of British Columbia’s two-year Master of Fine Arts program: Sol Hashemi, Martin Katzoff, Natalie Purschwitz, Xan Shian and Dion Smith-Dokkie. This program in the Department of Art History, Visual Art and Theory is limited each year to a small group of four to six artists, who over the two years foster different sensibilities developed within an intimate and discursive working environment.
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