Grace Channer | |
---|---|
Born | 1959 (age 64–65) Britain |
Nationality | Canadian |
Education | MFA York University, PHD Brock University (in progress) |
Known for | Visual artist |
Grace Channer (born 1959) is an African-Canadian painter and multi-media visual artist. [1] [2]
Born in Britain, Channer studied in the Bachelor of Fine Arts degree program at Queen's University from 1977 to 1978. [3] She has also earned a postgraduate diploma in Animation Filmmaking from Sheridan College Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning. [4]
In 1987 Channer, along with painter Lynne Fernie, photographer Cyndra MacDowall, and filmmaker Marg Moores contributed to an exhibit titled Sight Specific: Lesbians and Representation. The exhibit explored connections between lesbian and artistic identities, relationships, narratives and politics. [5] The same year, Channer was one of six artists invited to participate in a site-specific mural project, Women On Site, curated by Sarah Denison for the A Space Community Arts Committee. Channer's mural, titled "Black Women Working", was located at the Parkdale Library in Toronto. [6] Channer is a member of the Diasporic African Women’s Art Collective (DAWA). She co-curated the travelling exhibition Black Wimmin: When and Where We Enter with Buseje Bailey in 1989. [7] She is the subject, alongside artist Faith Nolan, of Dionne Brand's 1993 documentary film, Long Time Comin', which explores the activism inherent in the practice of both artists. [8] [9] The movie is available for viewing on the ONF's website. [10] In 1998, Channer participated to Taking It to the Streets, which was a series of public art projects taking place in the Greater Toronto area organized by SAVAC (South Asian Visual Arts Collective). [11] Channer took part of the Street Art Postering Project to which she contributed posters like It takes Courage to Imagine Peace in collaboration with Melanie Liwanag Aguila, Courtnay McFarlane, Beeta M. Jafari and Tanya Lena and another one titled Gay and Lesbian Human Rights in collaboration with Aguila and McFarlane. [12]
In 2005, Channer participated in the exhibition Tribute: The Art of African Canadians curated by Robert Freeman and David Sommers at the Art Gallery of Peel and the Art Gallery of Mississauga. [13] Channer contributed to the exhibition her work Intolerance (1982), which is an oil triptych of a panoramic landscape echoeing the work of Hieronymus Bosch and Peter Bruegel through its exploration of themes and elements of the medieval tradition of fantasy, allegory and biblical proverbs. [14] Channer infuses this tradition of the medieval allegorical triptyc with the contemporary theme of hierarchical power. [15] Channer paints local community scenes that reveal some social or moral controversies which explore, in their unfolding, topics such as power, abuse, sex, sexuality, race, class, and religion. [16] In 2009, Channer participated to the 21st International Lesbian Feminist Film Festival of Paris with her short-length film But Some Are Brave where she won the Audience Award. [17] [18] Channer is a member of the W5ART Collective, an artist collective established in 2011 by Buseje Bailey, Grace Channer, Alexandra Gelis, Margie Macdonald and Alexandra Majerus. [19] In 2012, Channer was one of three artists, along with Sandra Brewster and Jay Stewart, who painted a 100-foot long mural celebrating women in visual and martial arts. Located in the East-end of Toronto, the public art piece is titled KIA: Unified Movement of Power, and it celebrates the strength of martial arts movement. [20]
"Who Will Fight For Our Liberation," Power Plant Gallery, 1992. [21]
"Tribute: The Art of African Canadians," Art Gallery of Peel (Brampton, Ont.) & Art Gallery of Mississauga (Mississauga, Ont.), 2005. [22]
In 2009, Grace Channer won third place in the short length category for her film But Some Are Brave at the Africa World Documentary Film Festival. [23]
In 2009, Channer also won the Audience Award for But Some Are Brave at the 21st International Lesbian Feminist Film Festival of Paris. [24]
The Group of Seven, once known as the Algonquin School, was a group of Canadian landscape painters from 1920 to 1933, with "a like vision". It originally consisted of Franklin Carmichael (1890–1945), Lawren Harris (1885–1970), A. Y. Jackson (1882–1974), Frank Johnston (1888–1949), Arthur Lismer (1885–1969), J. E. H. MacDonald (1873–1932), and Frederick Varley (1881–1969). A. J. Casson (1898–1992) was invited to join in 1926, Edwin Holgate (1892–1977) became a member in 1930, and Lionel LeMoine FitzGerald (1890–1956) joined in 1932.
The Canadian Society of Painters in Water Colour, founded in 1925, is considered to be Canada's official national watercolour Society. Since the 1980s the Society has enjoyed Vice-regal Patronage from the incumbent Governor-General of Canada. Recognized by a long list of international exhibitions it is the Canadian equivalent of such other national societies as the American Watercolor Society of the United States, the Royal Watercolour Society of the United Kingdom, etc.
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Janice Gurney is a Canadian contemporary artist born in Winnipeg, Manitoba. She graduated University of Manitoba in 1973 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts Honours degree and later received a Master of Visual Studies degree from University of Toronto in 2007 with a collaborative degree in Book History and Print Culture. She went on to get a PhD in Art and Visual Culture at Western University in 2012.
Black Wimmin: When and Where We Enter, organized by the Diasporic African Women’s Art Collective (DAWA), was a travelling exhibition that circulated in Canada in 1989. It is considered to be the first Canadian exhibition to feature only the work of Black women artists, and it was the first to be organized and curated by Black women curators.
Winsom is a Canadian-Jamaican Maroon multi-media artist working in textiles, painting, video, installations, and puppetry. Her work explores human spirituality.
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Louise Liliefeldt is a Canadian artist primarily working in performance and painting. She was born in South Africa and currently lives and works in Toronto, Canada. Liliefeldt’s artistic practice draws directly from her lived experience and is apparent in the use of symbol, colour and material in her work. Other influences include Italian, Latin and Eastern European horror films, surrealism and African cinema. Taken as a whole, Liliefeldt’s work is an embodied investigation of the culture and politics of identity, as influenced by collective issues such as gender, race and class. Her performance work has developed through many prolific and specific periods.
The Diasporic African Women’s Art Collective (DAWA) is a collective of Black women artists based in Canada. It was founded in 1984 by Grace Channer, Buseje Bailey, Foluké Olubaiyu, Pauline Peters and DZI..AN. DAWA was a non-profit community network of Black Canadian women artists. The word DAWA means "medicine" in Kiswahili.
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