Sean O'Neill (born January 21, 1985, in Hamilton, Ontario) is a Canadian producer and television personality. From 2015 to 2017, O'Neill was the host of the CBC Television art challenge show Crash Gallery , [1] [2] and in 2018 he co-created the CBC Television documentary series In the Making , which he executive produced and hosted. [3]
He is the former director of public programs and partnerships at the Art Gallery of Ontario, [1] [4] where he developed projects including First Thursdays and AGO Creative Minds at Massey Hall. [5] [6]
O'Neill was an actor as a child, and appeared in various Canadian film and television productions including Baby Blues , Never Cry Werewolf and Degrassi: The Next Generation . [7]
In 2020 O'Neill created an arts focussed production company Visitor Media and in association with the National Ballet of Canada produced the documentary Crystal Pite: Angels' Atlas which premiered at the Vancouver International Film Festival in 2022. [8]
Year | Title | Role | Note |
---|---|---|---|
1998 | Real Kids, Real Adventures | Derek | Episode: "Apartment Rescue" |
1998 | The Famous Jett Jackson | Nic Twitty | Episode: Vootle-Muck-a-Heeve |
1999 | Jenny and the Queen of Light | Jim | |
2000 | Common Ground | Barber Shop Boy | |
2001 | In a Heartbeat | Keith | Episode: "Hero" |
2004 | Prom Queen: The Marc Hall Story | Pretty Boy | |
2004 | Doc | Don | Episode: The Last Ride (2004) |
2005 | Show Me Yours | Will | Episode: The F-Word (2005) |
2005 | Queer as Folk | Keith | Episode: #5.3 (2005), #5.4 (2005) |
2005 | 1-800-Missing | Brad Curry | Episode: Last Night (2005) |
2008 | Degrassi: The Next Generation | Robson | Episode: Didn't We Almost Have It All (2008) |
2008 | The Cross Road | Paul | |
2008 | Never Cry Werewolf | Steven Kepkie | |
2008 | Baby Blues | Max | |
2015 | Crash Gallery | Host | |
2018 | In the Making | Host, Executive Producer | |
2022 | Lido TV | Producer | |
2022 | Crystal Pite: Angels' Atlas | Producer | |
2023 | Swan Song | Producer, writer |
The Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) is a museum of art, world culture and natural history in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is one of the largest museums in North America and the largest in Canada. It attracts more than one million visitors every year, making it the most-visited museum in Canada. It is north of Queen's Park, in the University of Toronto district, with its main entrance on Bloor Street West. Museum subway station is named after it and, since a 2008 renovation, is decorated to resemble the ROM's collection at the platform level.
The Art Gallery of Ontario is an art museum in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, located in the Grange Park neighbourhood of downtown Toronto, on Dundas Street West. The building complex takes up 45,000 square metres (480,000 sq ft) of physical space, making it one of the largest art museums in North America and the second-largest art museum in Toronto, after the Royal Ontario Museum. In addition to exhibition spaces, the museum also houses an artist-in-residence office and studio, dining facilities, event spaces, gift shop, library and archives, theatre and lecture hall, research centre, and a workshop.
Kim Ondaatje is a Canadian painter, photographer, and documentary filmmaker.
Edward Burtynsky is a Canadian photographer and artist known for his large format photographs of industrial landscapes. His works depict locations from around the world that represent the increasing development of industrialization and its impacts on nature and the human existence. It is most often connected to the philosophical concept of the sublime, a trait established by the grand scale of the work he creates, though they are equally disturbing in the way they reveal the context of rapid industrialization.
Charles William Jefferys, also known as C. W. Jefferys, was a Canadian painter, illustrator, author and teacher, best known as a historical illustrator.
Christi Marlene Belcourt is a Métis visual artist and author living and working in Canada. She is best known for her acrylic paintings which depict floral patterns inspired by Métis and First Nations historical beadwork art. Belcourt's work often focuses on questions around identity, culture, place and divisions within communities.
Crystal Pite is a Canadian choreographer and dancer. She began her professional dance career in 1988 at Ballet BC, and in 1996 she joined Ballett Frankfurt under the tutelage of William Forsythe. After leaving Ballett Frankfurt she became the resident choreographer of Montreal company Les Ballets Jazz de Montreal from 2001 to 2004. She then returned to Vancouver where she focused on choreographing while continuing to dance in her own pieces until 2010. In 2002 she formed her own company called Kidd Pivot, which produced her original works Uncollected Work (2003), Double Story (2004), Lost Action (2006), Dark Matters (2009), The You Show (2010), The Tempest Replica (2011), Betroffenheit (2015), and Revisor (2019) to date. Throughout her career she has been commissioned by many international dance companies to create new pieces, including The Second Person (2007) for Netherlands Dans Theater and Emergence (2009) for the National Ballet of Canada, the latter of which was awarded four Dora Mavor Moore Awards.
Chelsea McMullan is a Canadian documentary filmmaker, best known for their 2013 film My Prairie Home, a film about transgender musician Rae Spoon.
Raven Davis is a multimedia Indigenous artist, curator, activist, and community organizer of the Anishinaabe (Ojibway) Nation in Manitoba. Davis's work centers themes of culture, colonization, sexuality, and gender and racial justice. Davis currently lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia and works between Halifax and Toronto, Ontario. Davis is also a traditional dancer, singer, and drummer.
Deanna Bowen is an interdisciplinary artist whose practice includes films, video installations, performances, drawing, sculpture and photography. Her work addresses issues of trauma and memory through an investigation of personal and official histories related to slavery, migration, civil rights, and white supremacy in Canada and the United States. Bowen is a dual citizen of the US and Canada. She lives and works in Montreal.
Divya Mehra is a Canadian artist from Winnipeg, Manitoba. Mehra's work deals with her diasporic experiences and historical narratives. As reminders of the realities of displacement, loss, and oppression, she incorporates found artifacts and readymade objects. She received the Sobey Art Award, presented annually by the National Gallery of Canada, in 2022.
Max Dean is a Canadian multidisciplinary artist.
Cris Derksen is a two-spirit Juno Award–nominated Cree cellist from Northern Alberta, Canada. Derksen is known for her unique musical sound which blends classical music with traditional Indigenous music. Her music is often described as "electronic cello" or classical traditional fusion.
Mouna Traoré is a Canadian actress and filmmaker. She is known for her performances in a variety of television series, such as Global TV's Rookie Blue (2012), CBC's Murdoch Mysteries (2015–2018), and Netflix's The Umbrella Academy (2020). Her film work includes the 2017 films The Drop In, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, and Brown Girl Begins, directed by Sharon Lewis.
Tara Cooper is a Canadian multidisciplinary artist based in Toronto, Ontario. She is currently an assistant professor in the Department of Fine Arts at the University of Waterloo and a member of the Loop artist collective. Cooper received her BFA, BEd from Queen's University, in 1994 and her MFA with a specialization in print media from Cornell University in 2008. Accomplishments include residencies at Anderson Ranch Art Center, The Wassaic Project and Landfall Trust, as well as arts council grants from Ontario and Canada.
Laakkuluk Williamson Bathory or Laakkuluk, is a Kalaaleq performance artist, spoken word poet, actor, storyteller and writer based in Iqaluit, Nunavut. She is known for performing uaajeerneq, a Greenlandic mask dance that involves storytelling and centers three elements: fear, humour and sexuality. Bathory describes uaajeerneq as both a political and cultural act and an idiosyncratic art form.
Xiaojing Yan is a contemporary Chinese Canadian artist known for her work in sculpture, installation and public art.
In the Making is a Canadian television documentary series, which premiered on CBC Television on September 21, 2018. Co-created and hosted by Sean O'Neill, the series explores the creative process by profiling notable Canadian artists as they meet pivotal moments in their lives and work.
Rajni Perera is a painter and sculptor, known for exploring how power works through the imagery of science fiction. She sees in science fiction a way of combating oppression which she combines with her ideas of revolution and social reform. Perera uses mixed media to actively engage in discussion with the viewing audience about the aesthetic treatment of gender and identity politics.
Crystal Pite: Angels' Atlas is a 2022 Canadian documentary film, directed by Chelsea McMullan. The film profiles choreographer Crystal Pite as she works with the National Ballet of Canada to stage her ballet Angels' Atlas as the company's first new stage production since the COVID-19 pandemic shut down live stage productions in 2020, illuminating her creative process through the depiction of rehearsals until ending with a full, uninterrupted performance of the work.
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