Float Copper - Nich Hance McElroy Photo
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@gallery295
Float Copper - Nich Hance McElroy Photo

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A SUBTLE KIND OF BEYOND Works by Katie Shapiro
Gallery 295
295 East 2 Ave, Back Entrance. Vancouver
August 28 - October 10, 2015 Opening: Friday, August 28th, 7pm - 9pm Gallery 295 is thrilled to exhibit the photographic practice of L.A. based artist Katie Shapiro in her Canadian debut exhibition titled A Subtle Kind of Beyond. --- In A Subtle Kind of Beyond Katie Shapiro uses photography as a way to cast the energetic draw embodied in a metaphysical relationship to space, perception, and consciousness. Coming from a background in documentary photography, Shapiro moves beyond representational convention to express an internalized sensation of the world as a rhizomatic negotiation of image space. In doing so she asks, “How does one photograph the invisible?” and finds the answer in an expression of experience that is an internalized interpretation of photographic time. In this exhibition, Shapiro provides her own visualization of the invisible experience. To photograph the ineffable brings it out as a crystalized moment and transforms it into an expression of what is real. For Shapiro the invisible is an energy vortex, an affective place known as a site for metaphysical renewal that pulls one deeper. To image the invisible through photographic processes calls it into view and generates an interpretative position, which embodied as an event-horizon for the particular individual for whom the experience is discreetly individualized yet historically shared. When a particularly affective moment in the landscape is shared, Shapiro considers it is as a perceivable pull toward the energetic field of the earth. As a planet with a magnetic core, there are many points on the earth that activate metaphysical attitudes of being. What gets generated in these spaces is not the sudden foregrounding of the continuously backgrounded landscape, but through the body in nature, the sudden realization and feeling of the physical beyond. Shapiro titles this body of work A Subtle Kind of Beyond in emphasis of a filmic third meaning. Using the tools of refraction and layering, Shapiro imagines the ineffable and intangible matter of energy vortices through landscape photography. In doing so, she is taking an anthropological position of interpretation using the language of images as a means of exploring an internal realm of consciousness that responds to these particular arenas. These sites of affectation are fixed with an understanding of the limitations of belief and lived knowledge. The locations in Shapiro’s exhibition are all contended sites of a metaphysical renewal. These instances of energetic pulls that are felt rather than seen are pinned in her material understanding of the limitations that the photograph and camera have when recording. In this manner, what is seen is an alternative to what is unseen. In her pieces, the landscape is interrupted with lighting gels in the effort to visualize the invisible presence of energies to which so many are historically drawn. Gels, prisms, and electricity are all tied through the gestures of her own understood embodiment as image. Shapiro generates her own representational realms as she moves through the photographic realm as an interpreter of a site beyond. Here, Shapiro self-generates as an event-horizon of sites and materials sustaining the liminal and engaging with new perceptions of reality. --- KATIE SHAPIRO was born in Los Angeles (1983) where she currently lives and works. She received her BFA in Photography from the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) and her MFA from UC Irvine. Recently her work has been shown at the Cohen gallery in Los Angeles, the Foley Gallery in New York City, and the Armory Center for the Arts in Pasadena. Her work is housed in many private collections as well as The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens.
Pictured:Â Shasta Flare, 2015. Katie Shapiro Inkjet print on vinyl, 30" x 32".
VISITORS Vanessa Brown Light Box Project Space Gallery 295
295 East 2 Avenue, Vancouver
August 28 - December 5, 2015 Opening Reception: August 28th, 7-9PM One Hour Photo: Artist Talk TBD --- Moving from a sculptural practice into a two-dimensional image, Vanessa Brown presents us with a gestural investigation in the way she builds on her understanding of visual and sculptural planes. In Visitors, we are faced with the monolithic flatness of an image space compounded by the gestural removal of negative space. Substituting a selection tool for a plasma-cutter and a solid colour space for sheet steel, Brown flattens her sculptural practice even further into the photographic plane and presents it at a scale that relates to a sculptural relationship to the body. Brown highlights the sculptural element that the photographic image can claim in how images present physical space as a composition of planes through a certain forced uni-focal perspective. In generating a work for the Light-Box Project Space, Brown recognizes that the tools of digital photographic software mirror those that she uses when working with sculpture. Brown is compelled to leave traces of the tools she used, keeping the gesture of her unsteady hand recorded uncorrected. She does so overtop a series of images taken from a visit to Waimea Canyon, Kauai, presenting the 6th iteration within the light-box itself. On this island Brown takes an understanding of the landscape from her sculptural practice into the realm of the photographic act. For Brown, the monolithic blue void that blocks our view parallels her removal from the scene and her circumstantial inability to enjoy the serene beauty. Brown considers this simultaneous attraction to and removal from a location parallel to the methodological flow of translating a sculptural practice to one that is located in digital photo collage. --- VANESSA BROWN is a Vancouver-based artist who works predominantly in sculpture and painting. She graduated with a BFA from Emily Carr University in 2013 and was the recipient of the Chancellor’s Award. She has exhibited in Canada and in Germany. Her recent exhibitions include Wil Aballe Art Projects, FIELD Contemporary, and Erin Stump Projects.
Shown: Visitors 6, 2015. Vanessa Brown Light-Jet chromogenic print on DuraTrans, 48” x 72”.
Our founding director, Jason Gowans, is surrounded by talent on TIME’s re-defining landscape photography list! We are excited for the work he’s making for his upcoming exhibition at Wil Aballe Art Projects - WAAP this fall.
Gallery 295 is looking for a few volunteers! This position is ideal for artists working in the medium of photography looking to make connections in the field and reduce their production costs.
Weekly commitment is needed during exhibition runs. (One set day per week) Additionally, maintaining a presence in the gallery to welcome and inform the public about current exhibitions. Interns are required to fill gallery vacancies from 1pm - 5pm. We have exhibitions running until December 4th this year, and back in early January 2016. Please let us know which days you are available between Monday - Friday.
Interns receive 40% off film processing & printing at The Lab.
Send CV & a quick brief about yourself via email to [email protected] marked “Internship, Attn: Patryk Stasieczek” by Monday August 24th, 2015.

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As part of Carfac's Emerging Artist Workshop series, Gallery 295 Curator @Michael Love will be leading "From Proposal to Exhibition: Documenting Your Work and Writing Effective Exhibition Proposals " on October 25, 2015
Join Gallery 295 Curator and photographer Michael Love as he details how to appropriately document your work for your artist portfolio and demystifies the exhibition proposal. Learn how to navigate the application process by analyzing submission guidelines and preparing professional materials through lectures, discussions, and peer review.
http://www.carfacbc.org/category/events/
Taught by our Director, Patryk Stasieczek and Felicia E. Gail, at Emily Carr University:
Photographic Materiality: Process, Iteration, Form
In this senior-level photography-minded course, each artist will breathe photographic materiality into process, iteration, as well as their individualized and collaborative forms. Resisting, and reacting to a hierarchy of historical legacies, each student will consider a specific context within the discourses of photography, the post-modern construction of photography as image, idea, and thing, as well as an experimentation of form through various gestures, and material studies. These will be explored by-way-of interactive lectures, applied workshops in techno-conceptual processes, and writing, as well as modes of context and display.
http://www.ecuad.ca/programs/courses/PHOT/323/F001
Congratulations to Gallery 295 intern, Nicholas McElroy for being selected as a Jurors Pick by Karen McQuaid (The Photographers' Gallery, UK) for the Daylight Photo Awards!
About his project, "Float Copper": “This is an intriguing visual investigation into a geologic phenomena called 'floating copper'. McElroy's camera speedily traps light as it meddles between one reflective surface and another, but also traps the dense mineral landscape as it lurches forward at a glacial pace. The project seems to deftly question photography's potential for fixing anything at all. Despite the concrete nature of the subject matter, I enjoy the images all the more for their uncertainty. It is as if each forms part of a detective's notice board, connecting to uncover some other-worldly narrative to be discovered somewhere between the magical mineral properties and the grubby terrain from which they emerge.”
http://us5.campaign-archive2.com/…
http://www.nhmcelroy.com/Float-Copper
Today at One Hour Photo, with the artists exhibiting in Residual Noise. Artists Barrie Jones, Kate Henderson, and Pascale Théorêt-Groulx discussed their works and contextualized their pieces within the exhibition. Jones & Henderson were present for the talk, and Théorêt-Groulx video conferenced from Montréal. ‪#‎residualnoise‬ 📷 @karenzalamea
ONE HOUR PHOTO - RESIDUAL NOISE
Gallery 295
295 East 2nd, Vancouver
Saturday, August 8th at 1:00PM Gallery 295 is pleased to announce an artist talk with the artists exhibiting in Residual Noise. Artists Barrie Jones, Kate Henderson, and Pascale Théorêt-Groulx will be discussing their works and will contextualize their pieces within the exhibition. Jones & Henderson will be present for the talk, and Théorêt-Groulx will be video conferencing in from Montréal. One Hour Photo is series of discussions presented by Gallery 295 in order to engage emerging artists in the practice of discussion and elaborate on the elements of the exhibition & respected practices. One Hour Photo corresponds with programmed exhibitions within the gallery and also includes sessions by artists between exhibitions. Please be aware that there will be salon style seating and chairs are LIMITED. www.gallery295.com ----- What remains of something when most is gone? The work in the exhibition Residual Noise weaves together narratives that touch on notions of collective trauma, historical weight, and dogma through mediated imagery bringing into question the long lasting and immeasurable effects of conflict and distress. In the work Berlin Project 1945-2013, Barrie Jones has photographed the scars left on architecture in Berlin dated back to the Second World War. Mostly patched, these surface tears from shrapnel and bullet holes act as a physical reminder of the conflict that threatened to destroy an entire generation. Jones points to an ordeal that continues to have political and social ramifications. His objective gaze recognizes a past, which is embodied in the surface of patched concrete and stone. Kate Henderson’s series, Disintegrations 1 – 45, is a collection of images found on the Internet. Working with low-res images of various types of cloud, dust and debris, Henderson’s work feels both familiar and disorienting as one tries to pinpoint the events embedded in the pixelated image. Henderson’s work not only explores the idea of shared memory by navigating the internet as a source of archive, but also highlights the oversaturation and loss that happens in the breakdown when an image is translated from digital media to print. “efficiency, precision and dignity”, a two channel video by Pascale Théorêt-Groulx, uses The Canadian Forces Manual for Drill and Ceremony as an entry point to instruct participants in a set of tasks. The booming anonymous voice of the instructor commands the contributors to perform a directionless group of gestures that begin to spiral into the unknown and the absurd. While humorous on the surface, Théorêt-Groulx’s work sharply critiques the power structures in the given scenario and further questions the dogmatic nature of the source material. What Remains of something when most is gone? This question is seeded in the works phrased in this exhibition. With Jones what remains is resurfaced and transformed in the preservation of these architectural wounds as a form of remembrance and moving forward. With Henderson what remains is a tapestry of events signified as a bombardment of images that one cannot separate nor define, but is constantly in the process of negotiating. With Théorêt-Groulx she is drawing political lines, exposing the ideological apparatus that makes conflict happen. Together these pieces collectively navigate history and how it is presented, remembered, forgotten and interpreted.
Pictured: “efficiency, precision and dignity”. Pascale Théorêt-Groulx Two-channel video, installation view, Gallery 295.

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#PIGEARS
#25 by Josh Hite, 2015.
This concludes INDEX 2015, and Josh Hite’s #PIGEARS takeover.
#PIGEARS
#24 by Josh Hite, 2015.
#PIGEARS
#23 by Josh Hite, 2015.
Risidual Noise - Works by Barrie Jones, Kate Henderson and Pascale Théorêt-Groulx July 17 – August 15, 2015 Opening Reception: July 17th, 7-9PM Photo: #14 (Berlin Project 1945-2013), Barrie Jones. What remains of something when most is gone? The work in the exhibition Residual Noise weaves together narratives that touch on notions of collective trauma, historical weight, and dogma through mediated imagery bringing into question the long lasting and immeasurable effects of conflict and distress. In the work Berlin Project 1945-2013, Barrie Jones has photographed the scars left on architecture in Berlin dated back to the Second World War. Mostly patched, these surface tears from shrapnel and bullet holes act as a physical reminder of the conflict that threatened to destroy an entire generation. Jones points to an ordeal that continues to have political and social ramifications. His objective gaze recognizes a past, which is embodied in the surface of patched concrete and stone. Kate Henderson’s series, Disintegrations 1 – 45, is a collection of images found on the Internet. Working with low-res images of various types of cloud, dust and debris, Henderson’s work feels both familiar and disorienting as one tries to pinpoint the events embedded in the pixelated image. Henderson’s work not only explores the idea of shared memory by navigating the internet as a source of archive, but also highlights the oversaturation and loss that happens in the breakdown when an image is translated from digital media to print. “efficiency, precision and dignity”, a two channel video by Pascale Théorêt-Groulx, uses The Canadian Forces Manual for Drill and Ceremony as an entry point to instruct participants in a set of tasks. The booming anonymous voice of the instructor commands the contributors to perform a directionless group of gestures that begin to spiral into the unknown and the absurd. While humorous on the surface, Théorêt-Groulx’s work sharply critiques the power structures in the given scenario and further questions the dogmatic nature of the source material. What Remains of something when most is gone? This question is seeded in the works phrased in this exhibition. With Jones what remains is resurfaced and transformed in the preservation of these architectural wounds as a form of remembrance and moving forward. With Henderson what remains is a tapestry of events signified as a bombardment of images that one cannot separate nor define, but is constantly in the process of negotiating. With Théorêt-Groulx she is drawing political lines, exposing the ideological apparatus that makes conflict happen. Together these pieces collectively navigate history and how it is presented, remembered, forgotten and interpreted.
#PIGEARS
#22 by Josh Hite, 2015.

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Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
#PIGEARS
#21 by Josh Hite, 2015.
#PIGEARS
#20 By Josh Hite, 2015.