Monika Vrečar
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Buffy Sainte-Marie
Sainte-Marie’s work opens up what she calls—in reference to her treatment of Indigenous themes through new media—an “alter-native” dimension.
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“One Queer City”
Whereas Millan and Dempsey’s original project articulated queer people’s struggle to express their identity within a public space governed by restrictive heteronormative ideology, the new works face a different challenge, one rooted precisely in an apparent abundance of freedom.
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Hunky Dory
“Time may change me, but I can’t trace time,” David Bowie sings in “Changes,” a song from his fourth studio album, Hunky Dory—an album that provided the inspiration for a recent collaborative show by the Winnipeg-based artists and lifelong friends Jen Funk and Alexis L. Grisé.
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Chen Zhe
Beijing-based multimedia artist Chen Zhe gained international recognition with her deeply personal project “The Bearable & Bees,” 2007–2012, comprised of two related series of photographs and texts.
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Karen Asher
Winnipeg artist Karen Asher has so far been known primarily for her impressive photography. Her intimate portraits, which could call to mind Nan Goldin and Diane Arbus, are often set in unstaged domestic environments or unidentifiable outdoor locations and focus on everyday people.
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Przemek Pyszczek
During my very first conversation with Przemek Pyszczek, about four years ago at his home in Berlin, he was showing me with great excitement, videos of metallic sports cars with “chameleonic,” hue-changing paint.
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“STAGES: Drawing the Curtain”
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