BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//Department of Art History, Visual Art &amp; Theory//NONSGML Events//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://ahva.ubc.ca/events/event/
X-WR-CALDESC:Department of Art History, Visual Art &amp; Theory - Events
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20211013T0817Z-1634113063.5694-EO-22489-37@10.19.146.14
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTAMP:20260412T154916Z
CREATED:20170127T205348Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210816T192250Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20110909
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20111001
SUMMARY: Waterscapes: Migration along the Vancouver Island\, Fraser and Yan
 gzi Rivers
DESCRIPTION: Opening Friday\, September 9th from 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm. Exhibi
 tion runs from September 9\, 2011 to January 7\, 2012 Artist’s Talk: Friday
 \, September 30 at noon Free Docent Led Exhibition Tours: Saturday\, Octobe
 r 22nd at 1:00pm & Saturday\, November 19th at 1:00pm with Marie Egan Campu
 s Gallery – 900 Fifth Street\, Entrance 5D Curator: […]
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <h4>Opening Friday\, September 9th from 5:00 
 pm to 7:00 pm. Exhibition runs from September 9\, 2011 to January 7\, 2012<
 /h4><p><strong>Artist's Talk: Friday\, September 30 at noon</strong></p><p>
 Free Docent Led Exhibition Tours: Saturday\, October 22nd at 1:00pm & Satur
 day\, November 19th at 1:00pm with Marie Egan</p><p>Campus Gallery - 900 Fi
 fth Street\, Entrance 5D</p><p>Curator: Gregory Ball</p><p>The Nanaimo Art 
 Gallery\, is honoured to present internationally acclaimed artist\, Gu Xion
 g's mixed-media installation entitled\, Waterscapes: Migration along the Va
 ncouver Island\, Fraser and Yangzi Rivers from September 9\, 2011 - January
  7\, 2012</p><p>This installation will reference the Fraser and Yangtze Riv
 ers as a personal metaphor for migration and the formation of self-identity
 . Drawn out of his own experience as a migrant to Canada from China\, the w
 ork also builds on his current research with individuals living and working
  on the rivers' banks. Gu Xiong considers the history of each river as a ro
 ute for colonization\, migration\, and movements toward global uncertainty.
  The installation is comprised of photographs\, an imaginary map\, and a me
 taphorical river of over 1500 small white boats that flows from outside to 
 inside the museum space.</p><p>Xiong poses the question\, "How can differen
 t cultures intertwine through personal journeys\, and move together into a 
 new space?"</p><p><strong>Gu Xiong</strong>\, a multi-media artist from Chi
 na now lives in Canada\, works with painting\, drawing\, printmaking\, scul
 pture\, photography\, video\, digital imagery\, text\, performance art and 
 installation.</p><p>Xiong received his BFA and MFA degrees from the Sichuan
  Fine Arts Institute in Chongqing\, China. In Canada\, he twice attended th
 e Banff Centre for the Arts as artist-in-residence\, and in addition to man
 y other colleges and universities in Canada\, the United States and China. 
 He has served on Canada Council\, the Governor General Awards Jury for Visu
 al Arts\, Media Art and Architecture\, Canada Council Visual Art Grant Jury
 \, Seattle Arts Commission Jury\, BC Arts Council Jury\, and Vancouver Foun
 dation Jury. As Associate Professor in the Department of Art History\, Visu
 al Art\, and Theory at the University of British Columbia\, Gu Xiong is eng
 aged in the disciplines of installation\, painting\, drawing\, photography 
 and contemporary art theory.</p><p>He has exhibited nationally and internat
 ionally including more than 40 solo exhibitions and three public art commis
 sions. He has participated in over 80 prominent national and international 
 group exhibitions including Border Zones: New Art Across Cultures\, (Museum
  of Anthropology\, Vancouver\, 2010)\; Art Is Nothing - 798 Art Festival (B
 eijing\, China)\; Post Avant-grade Chinese Contemporary Art - Four Directio
 ns of the New Era (Hong Kong\, 2007. His work is represented in the collect
 ions of the National Gallery of Canada\, the China National Museum of Fine 
 Arts\, and the Vancouver Art Gallery\, among many other museums and private
  collections.</p><p>Xiong has done three large public art projects in Canad
 a and United States\, such as the Safeco Field\, Washington State Major Lea
 gue Baseball Stadium\, Seattle and the Seattle Public Library Columbia City
  Branch\, Seattle\, WA\, USA\; the MacDonald Stewart Art Centre Donald Fors
 ter Sculpture Park\, University of Guelph\, ON\, Canada.</p><p>Xiong has pu
 blished two books and ten solo exhibition catalogues. His writing and art w
 orks are published in art catalogues\, magazines and newspapers. His art wo
 rk has received significant critical recognition including reviews in the i
 nternational art magazines\, Flash Art and Art in America\, and The New Yor
 k Times. The documentary "The Yellow Pear: The Story of Gu Xiong" from the 
 series A Scattering of Seeds: The Creation of Canada was broadcast on The H
 istory Channel in March\, 2001. In the capacity of curator\, Xiong has orga
 nized critically-acclaimed exhibitions of work by emerging artists in Canad
 a and China.</p><p>Xiong's practice centers on the creation of a hybrid ide
 ntity arising from the integration of different cultural origins. Through t
 he critical angle of visual art\, his work encompasses sociology\, geograph
 y\, economics\, politics\, and literature\, as well as the dynamics of glob
 alization\, local culture and identity politics\, through which he constitu
 tes an amalgamation of multiple cultural histories and seeks to create an e
 ntirely new identity. The construction of a new level of being is Gu Xiong'
 s primary interest.</p><p>The exhibition opening is sponsored by Vancouver 
 Island University Faculty of International Education. Many THANKS for their
  sponsorship!<br /><a href="http://www.nanaimoartgallery.com" target="blank
 " rel="noopener noreferrer">http://www.nanaimoartgallery.com</a></p>
LOCATION:Campus Gallery
GEO:49.310465;-123.052155
URL;VALUE=URI:https://ahva.ubc.ca/events/event/waterscapes-migration-along-
 the-vancouver-island-fraser-and-yangzi-rivers/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ahva.cms.arts.ubc.ca/wp-content/uploads/sites/37/2021/05/1019.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/Vancouver
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0800
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
DTSTART:20110313T100000
TZNAME:PDT
END:DAYLIGHT
END:VTIMEZONE
END:VCALENDAR
