A season for inspiration

A season for inspiration

By Communications Staff

September 13, 2016

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[Comrade Objects]
Ciara Phillips: Comrade Objects is one of three exhibitions featured for the Fall Season at the Agnes Etherington Art Centre. (Supplied Photo)

With Queen鈥檚 University marking its 175th anniversary it is only fitting that the Agnes Etherington Art Centre be part of the celebrations.

The Agnes will be celebrating the Fall Season launch on Thursday, Sept. 15 with three new exhibitions 鈥 Ciara Phillips: Comrade Objects; Treasures and Tales: Queen鈥檚 Early Collections; and The Other NFB: The National Film Board of Canada鈥檚 Still Photography Division, 1941鈥1971.

鈥淭wo of our three new exhibitions this season are inspired by Queen鈥檚 University鈥檚 175th anniversary,鈥 Agnes Director Jan Allen points out. 鈥Treasures and Tales: Queen鈥檚 Early Collections brings the past to life through the rare art, artifacts and documents that formed the foundational holdings of the Agnes and Queen鈥檚 Archives. Every item reveals the personalities, aspirations and shifting networks of influence that shaped the university and the nation itself. Ciara Phillips: Comrade Objects projects this history into the present and the future through the practice of an extremely talented alumna, who holds social forces up to scrutiny while exploding graphics across our gallery spaces.鈥

[Arthur Lismer]
Arthur Lismer, Quebec Village (Saint-Hilarion), 1926, oil on canvas. Agnes Etherington Art Centre, 成人大片. Gift of H. S. Southam, 1949 (00-094).

A graduate of the Bachelor of Fine Arts program at Queen鈥檚, Ciara Phillips was a finalist for the prestigious Turner Award in 2014 and returned to her alma mater as the Koerner Visiting Artist last year. This year she will be on campus for six weeks as a Queen鈥檚 University Artist in Residence. Her exhibition for the Agnes, , presents a new body of work that brings together energetic blocks of colour, echoing motifs, useful slogans and black and white portraits of women engaged in focused work.

At the same time Ms. Phillips is offering a new iteration of her Turner Prize-nominated Workshop (2010鈥搊ngoing), which brings screen printing equipment into the gallery to create an active space of investigation, discussion and debate.

To explore the ethics and potential of 鈥渕aking together,鈥 Ms. Phillips has invited fellow Canadian artist, artist-curator and artist-publisher Clive Robertson to co-produce posters and publications.

With , curators Alicia Boutilier and Deirdre Bryden mark Queen鈥檚 175th anniversary through significant artworks and archival documents from the university鈥檚 early collections.

Produced by Carleton University Art Gallery and curated by Carol Payne and Sandra Dyck, looks at how the National Film Board of Canada (NFB) imagined Canada and Canadian identity, the role photographs played in that imagining, and how the NFB鈥檚 photographic archive was 鈥 and continues to be 鈥 used.

The Fall Season launch starts with a members鈥 preview from 5 to 6:30 pm with brief curatorial presentations and Ms. Phillips will introduce her work. Formal remarks will take place at 6:30 pm, at the beginning of the public reception, which runs to 8 pm. Artists and special guests will be present. All are welcome to attend.

[NFB]
Unknown photographer, Veronica Foster, an employee of John Inglis Co. Ltd. and known as 鈥淭he Bren Gun Girl鈥 in the John Inglis Co. Ltd. plant, Toronto, 10 May 1941, Contemporary print from vintage negative, National Film Board of Canada.

Ms. Allen says she is eager to celebrate and scrutinize the shows through new eyes.

鈥淭he season launch is a special moment in which the culmination of prolonged effort encounters its audience; I always learn something unforeseen about the exhibitions from our visitors,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e very excited to present these extremely fine new and continuing shows.鈥

A number of events are also being held this fall at the Agnes to mark the 175th anniversary of Queen鈥檚. During Homecoming Weekend the Agnes will extend its hours to 10 am-5pm to welcome alumni back to the university. A special guided tour is available on Friday, Oct. 14 from 2-3pm. The Agnes will also host an Open House 175th Anniversary Party on Thursday, Oct. 20 from 4-8 pm. Visitors will be able to see the new David McTavish Art Study Room in action while selected works of art will also be brought out of the vault with Agnes curators on hand to discuss the pieces that are currently not on display.

Continuing exhibitions at the Agnes are Stories to Tell: Africans and the Diaspora Respond to the Lang Collection and Singular Figures: Portraits and Character Studies in Northern Baroque Painting. The latter features the recent addition to The Bader Collection, Rembrandt鈥檚 splendid Portrait of a Man with Arms Akimbo. Additional new installations are featured in the Atrium and Etherington House.

For more information visit the