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SUMMARY:The Way Things Are & How To Be
URL:http://www.harbourliving.ca/event/the-way-things-are-how-to-be/
LOCATION:Comox Valley Art Gallery :: 580 Duncan Avenue Courtenay, V9N 2M7
DESCRIPTION;ENCODING=QUOTED-PRINTABLE:<p>Kelly Gough and Joyce Lindemulder<br /><em><strong>The Way Things Are &amp; How To Be</strong></em><br />works on paper/ sculpture/ performance<br /><br />Exhibition: January 24 &ndash; March 7, 2015<br />Opening: Friday, January 23, 7 &ndash; 9 pm<br />Preshow Talk: Friday, January 23, 6 pm<br /><br />Artist Talk: Saturday, February 14, 1:15 pm<br />with adjunct CVAG performance events starting at noon<br />Public Performances/Interactions: Fridays from 11am to 1pm<br />January 30, February 6, 13, 20, 27 and March 6<br /><br />Kelly Gough&rsquo;s and Joyce Lindemulder&rsquo;s works each incorporate a kind of dissection. A way to ask questions about &ldquo;the way things are and how to be.&rdquo; Kelly considers female domestic labour and the way that work is related to various metals. Her pieces isolate those metals and reconfigure them in a way that comments on the woman&rsquo;s bodily relationship to them. Through the act of cutting and hole-punching Joyce also works to decontextualize; in this case, skin from any other association one might have with the way &ldquo;races&rdquo; are constructed. When regarded on their own, the skin tones are no longer judged in relation to the rest of the model&rsquo;s features. The collage pieces likewise separate and reconfigure otherwise disparate clippings from magazines and books, creating new meaning from the materials used. Through the process of stripping wire, cords, cutting copper, and distending steel cable Kelly&rsquo;s works propose a kind of violent action. This is also evident in Joyce&rsquo;s pieces through the process of hole punching skin samples from the bodies of Vogue models. However, both Joyce and Kelly arrive at different visual destinations. Literal and conceptual layers emerge in the various dimensions, materiality and methodology represented in each work.<br /><br />The artist&rsquo;s intention through this joint project is not to answer questions, but to ask them. Their hope is that the works in The Way Things Are &amp; How To Be, created by two women artists, contains within it the energy to generate change through dialogue between the artists, the works, the gallery, and with the audience.<br /><br /><strong>Kelly Gough</strong> is a passionate 3-dimensional assemblage and performance artist from Vancouver Island, BC. Her evocative installation artworks are rooted in her life experiences and present a powerful and sometimes comedic voice from the common and mundane materials that surround our everyday lives. She describes the repetition of ordinary objects, fastening of materials in unexpected ways, and the merging of incongruent substances as the underpinning that define her work as a material artist.<br />kellygough.com<br /><br /><strong>Joyce Lindemulder</strong>&rsquo;s practice focusses on ideological Whiteness, as well as the theories that surround, intersect, and overlap it. She explains: I explore difference and gender in the context of life as a female who is racially coded as White. This questioning occurs within the contention that identity constructions are fluid and malleable.<br /><br />I look for ways to explore a given idea and find the most appropriate method for conveying that concept whether it is animation, drawing, painting, or creating a three dimensional object. It is my hope that interrogating various materials, methods, and methodologies in a visual practice will produce a space/place that permits thinking and dialogue.<br /><br />Joyce lives and works in an enclave of Whiteness on the western edge of Canada.<br />joycelindemulder.com</p>
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