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UID:20211102T1142Z-1635853329.6349-EO-22780-37@10.19.146.15
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTAMP:20260410T160948Z
CREATED:20170203T214852Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210816T202228Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20130502T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20130502T220000
SUMMARY: As Seen Here: UBC Master of Fine Arts Graduate Exhibition 2013
DESCRIPTION: Opening Reception: Thursday\, May 2\, 8:00 – 10:00pm. Runs May
  3 to June 2\, 2013. The Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery is pleased to 
 present As Seen Here\, an exhibition of work by the 2013 graduates of The U
 niversity of British Columbia’s two-year Master of Fine Arts program: Carlo
 s Colin\, Kate Henderson\, Chris Howison\, […]
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <h4>Opening Reception: Thursday\, May 2\, 8:0
 0 - 10:00pm. Runs May 3 to June 2\, 2013.</h4><p>The Morris and Helen Belki
 n Art Gallery is pleased to present <strong><em>As Seen Here</em></strong>\
 , an exhibition of work by the 2013 graduates of The University of British 
 Columbia’s two-year Master of Fine Arts program: Carlos Colin\, Kate Hender
 son\, Chris Howison\, Erin Siddall\, Tristan Sober-Blodgett\, Stephen Wichu
 k<strong>.</strong></p><p>Public Critique with <strong>Cate Rimmer</strong>
 \, Curator Charles H. Scott Gallery at Emily Carr University of Art + Desig
 n\, <strong>Saturday\, May 11\, 12:30 - 5 pm</strong></p><p><strong>Carlos 
 Colin</strong> is a Mexican-born artist whose research focuses on how “art 
 objects” can create links between Latin American-produced art and Latin Ame
 rican societies\, in particular in relation to Mexico. His work is an inves
 tigation into how artists use local knowledge\, realities and histories in 
 social movements\, struggles and subversions as new expressions of social a
 nd cultural progress using language as knowledge.</p><p><strong>Kate Hender
 son’s </strong>current work Demolition is a series of degraded Internet-sou
 rced digital photographs and videos that depict the destruction of Eastman 
 Kodak factories in the United States and Europe. Henderson’s practice inves
 tigates the transition from analog to digital in lens-based technologies wh
 ile considering the economy and poetics of the circulating\, degraded image
 . Additionally\, she is concerned with the recent phenomenon of the collect
 ively photographed and shared image of spectacle\, and how digitally-mediat
 ed viewing has altered forms of subjectivity\, perception and experience.<b
 r /><strong><br />Christopher Howison</strong> is a Scottish-born artist wh
 ose work concentrates on the relationship of the viewer to the work. Workin
 g primarily in sculpture\, he produces intricate casts from the body and in
 stalls them in a way that forces the viewer to attempt to reorient himself 
 in order to properly inspect the work\, thereby challenging the supposition
  that it is the viewer’s right to unimpeded access to both the physical wor
 k and its intended meaning.</p><p>The work of <strong>Erin Siddall</strong>
  investigates how the artist can find contradictory or complex methods for 
 showing the relationship between the viewer and the viewed\, which can be c
 haracterized as a tension between inside and out\, particularly as it relat
 es to film and other lens-based art practices. Her video works push the vie
 wer to acknowledge the limits of their vision\, through discomfort or inabi
 lity\, and question normative ways of thinking of the eyes or seeing.</p><p
 >A native of Los Angeles\, <strong>Tristan Sober-Blodgett’s</strong> work i
 s text-based though he employs a range of materials and processes including
  ink on paper\, printmaking\, body works and installation. A preoccupation 
 with writing\, grammar and code dominate the work\, stressing the analogous
  relationship between linguistic intelligibility and the way the body is “r
 ead.”</p><p><strong>Stephen Wichuk’s</strong> video installations restage a
  body of sight gags and movement tropes borrowed from the history of cinema
 . These filmic moments are often utopic representations of labour which are
  themselves crafted using the laborious techniques of early animation. As s
 tudies of the cinematic movement\, Wichuk’s work makes us aware of the dura
 tion congealed within the animated form. In watching the work\, the viewer 
 flips between illusion and knowledge of that illusion’s artifice.</p><p><em
 >The exhibition is presented with support from the Department of Art Histor
 y\, Visual Art and Theory at the University of British Columbia.</em></p>
LOCATION:Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery
GEO:49.268088;-123.256007
URL;VALUE=URI:https://ahva.ubc.ca/events/event/as-seen-here-ubc-master-of-f
 ine-arts-graduate-exhibition-2013/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ahva.cms.arts.ubc.ca/wp-content/uploads/sites/37/2021/05/1189.jpg
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TZOFFSETFROM:-0800
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
DTSTART:20130310T100000
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