Geoffrey Farmer

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Geoffrey Farmer
Born1967 (age 5657)
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Education San Francisco Art Institute, San Francisco, USA (1991); Emily Carr University, Vancouver (1992)

Geoffrey Farmer (born 1967) is best known for extensive multimedia installations made of cut-out images which form collages. [1]

Contents

Early career

Farmer was born at St. Paul's Hospital in Vancouver, BC in 1967 and grew up in the Dundarave neighbourhood of West Vancouver, BC. His career as an artist was unplanned, but he attended an art class with his sister when he was 21 and became interested. [2] He received his art training at the San Francisco Art Institute (1991-1992) and Emily Carr University (1993). [3]

Art practice

Geoffrey Farmer creates installation-based artworks to create intersections of personal and lived experiences. [4] He uses a combination of a broad range of elements, [5] including: drawing, photography, video, sculpture, performance, found materials, and sometimes sound, bronze casting and waterworks. [4] His work offers a subtle take on the legacies of minimalist and postminimalist art. Minimalism emphasized the artwork's ability to instill in the viewer a powerful sense of their own presence; Farmer's work begins with this idea of the art gallery as a site of phenomenological experience. Postminimalism represents a refinement of minimalism in the way it emphasizes the role the gallery context plays in creating the meaning of an artwork. Farmer adds to both traditions by focusing on the nature of meaning itself, emphasizing its fragility. He devises ways of fostering engagement with his work. Whereas minimalist artists, such as Donald Judd and Dan Flavin, were said by art critic Michael Fried to theatricalize the gallery-going experience, Farmer uses the idioms of theatre and performance as analogies of the process of meaning. This places him within the international trend, in which "installation art is a theatrical set without a stage play to give it meaning." For instance, Farmer's piece Hunchback Kit (2000-7 at the Tate [6] uses a hard shell case with custom foam insert to house props for staging performances of The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Farmer creates the art exhibition as a set of components made available for the viewer's interpretation. In this process, he casts himself in the role of the 'artist', continuing to add to and transform an exhibition during the time it is on view. In For Every Jetliner Used in an Artwork… (2006), for instance, Farmer presented a video in the exhibition of himself working to alter an installation during the night while the show is closed. By explicitly portraying the exhibition as being 'in process', Farmer ensures that "a degree of openness and instability is built in to his work." [7] According to Mark Clintberg writing in The Drawing Room, London for Canadian Art International Farmer's work The Last Two Million Years (2007), takes the ephemerality of time as its theme, making small delicate sculptures from the pages of an Encyclopedia. [8] Creating hybrid figurative objects out of disparate historical time periods, Farmer undoes the fixity of museum display and the agreed sequence of historical events.

In A Way Out of the Mirror (2017), he added bronze casting and waterworks to the list of materials he uses and transformed the site into an open-air stage. [4]

Work

His first figurative work was Trailer (2002), a large reproduction of a transport truck’s trailer, part reality (dirt covers the surface, and mud is splattered across the gas tank) and part artifice (the trailer looks like a movie prop). [9] He followed this with many figurative works such as The Last Two Million Years (2007), The Idea and the Absence of the Idea (2008), The Surgeon and the Photographer (2009) (Vancouver Art Gallery), made of 365 three-dimensional collages, and Leaves of Grass (2012) (National Gallery of Canada), an installation 124 feet long, of more than 15,000 images cut from 50 years of Life magazine, arranged chronologically on stalks of dried grass. [10] He viewed The Surgeon and the Photographer, along with The Last Two Million Years (2007) and Leaves of Grass (2012) as a trilogy of installations, based on the accumulation of images. [11]

Exhibitions

Farmer`s first group exhibition took place in 1995 in Mexico. His first solo exhibition took place in Vancouver at Or Gallery. Since then, his exhibition history has been extensive, with shows nationally, and abroad. For dOCUMENTA (13) in 2012, [12] Farmer produced Leaves of Grass. In 2015, he had a large mid-career retrospective co-curated by himself and Daina Augaitis at the Vancouver Art Gallery in which he used items from the Gallery’s artist archives to create installations that filled the entire gallery space. The exhibition was titled How Do I Fit This Ghost in My Mouth. In 2017, he represented Canada at the 57th Venice Biennale, in Venice with a show titled A Way Out of the Mirror. [13] In 2017, he also had a show titled The Care With Which The Rain Is Wrong, at the Schinkel Pavillon, Berlin, Germany in which he used art monographs and his own digital library of illustrations and collection of sounds for his installations. [14] In 2024, the exhibition Geoffrey Farmer: The Sound of Footsteps as Summer Walks Away was shown at the West Vancouver Art Museum. [15] He is represented by Catriona Jeffries, Vancouver.

Public Art Projects

Residencies

Awards

Farmer lives and works on Kauai, Hawaii, USA

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References

  1. "Geoffrey Farmer". www.e-flux.com. The Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, 2016. Retrieved 31 July 2021.
  2. "Who is Geoffrey Farmer". www.tate.org.uk. The Tate Gallery, England. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  3. "Geoffrey Farmer". ccca.concordia.ca. Concordia University, Montreal. Retrieved 1 August 2021.
  4. 1 2 3 "Geoffrey Farmer". www.e-flux.com. e-flux. Retrieved 3 August 2021.
  5. Witte de With, Center for Contemporary Art, Rotterdam Archived 2008-05-26 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved November 16, 2010
  6. Tate online Archived 2010-12-18 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved November 16, 2010
  7. Frieze.com Archived 2011-02-24 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved November 15, 2010
  8. Mark Clintberg, Canadian Art International Archived 2011-01-27 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved November 16, 2010
  9. Zimonjic, Peter. "Making the Personal Universal: Geoffrey Farmer at the Vancouver Art Gallery. Magazine, June 11, 2015". www.gallery.ca. National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 1 August 2021.
  10. "Leaves of Grass by Geoffrey Farmer". www.frameweb.com. Frame. Retrieved 1 August 2021.
  11. "Geoffrey Farmer: The Surgeon and the Photographer". 150ans150oeuvres.uqam.ca. UQAM. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  12. "Artists exhibited". universes.art. dOCUMENTA (13). Retrieved 1 August 2021.
  13. "Canada - Geoffrey Farmer - A Way Out Of The Mirror - Venice Biennale 2017". www.youtube.com. National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  14. "Geoffrey Farmer: The Care With Which The Rain Is Wrong". www.schinkelpavillon.de. Schinkel Pavilion, Berlin. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  15. "Exhibitions". westvancouverartmuseum.ca. West Vancouver Art Museum. Retrieved 14 December 2024.
  16. 1 2 Peck, Aaron (16 September 2010). "Geoffrey Farmer". www.artforum.com. artforum. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  17. "The CAFAD Newsletter" (PDF). cafad.ca. CAFAD. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  18. "Geoffrey Farmer". kadist.org. Kadish Art Foundation. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  19. "Below Another Sky". www.edinburghprintmakers.co.uk. Edinburgh Printmakers, UK. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  20. "B.C. ARTISTS RECEIVE $10,000 CASH AWARDS" (PDF). www.shadboltfoundation.org. Shadbolt Foundation. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  21. "Canada Council announces winners of the Victor Martyn Lynch-Staunton Awards". www.canada.ca. 16 December 2008. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  22. "HNATYSHYN FOUNDATION VISUAL ARTS AWARDS 2011 RECIPIENTS". www.rjhf.com. Hnatyshyn Foundation. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  23. Adams, James (2014). "Geoffrey Farmer brings light and shadow, sound and silence to AGO". Globe and Mail. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  24. "Vancouver's Geoffrey Farmer wins prestigious art prize". www.cbc.ca. Archived from the original on 13 December 2015. Retrieved 24 November 2015.

Bibliography