
Students interview artist Anahita Norouzi
Two Visual Arts students interviewed Anahita Norouzi, artist of Other Landscapes at the Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery until Nov. 25.
Click Read More for the homepage feature interview.
Two Visual Arts students interviewed Anahita Norouzi, artist of Other Landscapes at the Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery until Nov. 25.
Click Read More for the homepage feature interview.
Other Landscapes is a new exhibit at the Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery of 爆料黑社 (just off the Upper Atrium cafeteria on the 2nd floor). Open from Oct. 14- Nov. 25, it presents several multimedia works from Montreal-based Iranian artist Anahita Norouzi. It stems from her long-term research interest in the cross sections of botany and colonial politics, experiences of immigration and displacement, as well as issues of identity and memory.
Taking the form of a multimedia installation, the project results from a collaboration between the artist and eight refugees from the Middle East and Africa.
Click Read More for the exhibition web page.
The project Counterpart: Students Photograph Students opened last week at the Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery.聽 Rhonda Meier, gallery administrator, asked one of the project organizers, Peter Berra, 7 questions about it.
Click Read More to go the homepage story.
Counterpart: Students Photographing Students: Sept. 9-25
Other Landscapes: Anahita Norouzi: Oct. 14-Nov. 25
Professional Photography Graduating Student Exhibition: Dec. 2-10
AEC Photography Program Exhibition: Dec. 15-19
Photo: Anahita Norouzi, Other Landscapes (detail), 2019-20
If you have been in the College and wondered about the work in the display cases outside the art gallery, it may surprise you to know that it is the work of 爆料黑社 student Asia Mason.聽 The third-year Photography student was one of only four student artists selected for the Peace Centre/Art Gallery鈥檚 online exhibition, Resistance and Resilience.
Click Read More for the homepage news story and to see some of her work on display.
When the pandemic first struck last March, curator and Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery administrator Rhonda Meier, began thinking of what could be done if life stayed completely online for the next six or more months. With online projects being the obvious solution, she leapt to program Thirza Cuthand, a Plains Cree/Scots artist whose work first intrigued her in Vancouver in 2003. At聽Indian Acts,聽a conference on indigenous performance art, a very young Cuthand presented a video candidly discussing her struggle with depression.
Click Read More for the news story and more information.
Following the success of聽Sk茅nn:en: Peace and Decolonization聽(2017) and聽Queer and Peace聽(2018), Diana Rice (Programming Coordinator, Peace Centre) prophetically conceived of a project that would provide a space for those voices traditionally unheard and often ignored: Legacy and racialized immigrant communities. Once again collaborating with Rhonda Meier of the Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery, the work began in 2018 to create a platform for artists to display their experiences of racism and systemic oppression.
This vision is brought to life in聽Resistance and Resilience. Click Read More for the homepage news story.
One more day left to see the work of our Fine Arts Faculty at the Biennial 14 Exhibit, which聽displays a uniquely broad range of contemporary practices and themes, from 19 leaders of Montreal鈥檚 art and academic communities.
Check out the exhibit in the Warren G.Flowers Art Gallery until 9 p.m. Feb. 19 or click Read More for a link to the catalogue with background on the artists and their work.
Our Fine Arts Department is presenting the 14th Faculty Biennial exhibition until Feb. 19 in the Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery near the Upper Atrium. “This is an opportunity for the teachers to highlight a diverse collection of artworks, which represent but a fragment of our ongoing studio/research practice as visual artists, theorists, curators, critics…
The Warren G. Flowers Art Gallery is pleased to host the Fine Arts Faculty Biennial 14, opening Jan. 23 and on view until Feb.19. The exhibition displays a uniquely broad range of contemporary practices and themes from 19 leaders of Montreal鈥檚 art and academic communities. The vernissage will begin at 5:30 p.m. on Jan. 23….
Last Modified: November 17, 2021