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Under the canvas : camping and indigenization in Emily Carr's writingsGodolphin, Helen Maria. 10 April 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Hanging Emily : exhibition strategies and Emily CarrKnutson, Karen Leslie 05 1900 (has links)
This study examines the impact of new museological theory on museum education
practice at the Vancouver Art Gallery in relation to a re-installation of Emily Carr's work. It is a
case study that concerns both the negotiation of meanings around Emily Carr's work as they
are situated within current and traditional art historical/ historical beliefs, and the desire to offer
museum visitors a more sufficient or comprehensive educational experience.
The dissertation examines the installation of Carr in a variety of galleries across
Canada (National Gallery, Art Gallery of Ontario, Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, Vancouver
Art Gallery) as a means of contextualizing a range of problems associated with museum
practice. The National Gallery chapter explores issues of ideology raised by the new
museology. The chapter concerning the display at the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria
concerns the particularities of site and place (Victoria was Carr's birthplace) as well as
notions of resonance and contextualization in art displays. The discussion of the Art Gallery
of Ontario concerns contextualization of a different sort, the display created with a solid
foundation in educational literature. A temporary exhibition of Carr's work juxtaposed with
that of Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun in Vancouver offers an entry point into a discussion of
subjectivity and curatorial epistemic authority, while the resulting re-installation of Carr at the
Vancouver Art Gallery (the case) is explored as one possible approach to issues raised in
the earlier chapters, by the challenges of post-modem theorists to historical understanding,
historiography, and museum practice.
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Canadian art and cultural appropriation : Emily Carr and the 1927 exhibition of Canadian West Coast Art - Native and ModernMorrison, Ann Katherine, 1929- January 1991 (has links)
In December 1927, Emily Carr's paintings were shown for the first time in central Canada in an exhibition called Canadian West Coast Art - Native and Modern. This event was held at the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa, and marked a major turning point in Carr's career, for it brought her acceptance by the intellectual and artistic elite with their powerful networks of influence, as well as national acclaim in the public press. To this point, art historical writings have tended to focus on the artist and her own experiences, and in the process, the importance of this experimental exhibition in which her work was included has been overlooked and marginalized.
This thesis attempts to redress this imbalance by examining the exhibition in detail: first, to analyze the complexities of its ideological premises and the cultural implications of juxtaposing, for the first time in Canada, aboriginal and non-native artistic production within an art gallery setting; second, to consider the roles played by the two curators, Eric Brown, Director of the National Gallery, and C. Marius Barbeau, chief ethnologist at the National Museum; and third, to indicate the ways in which Emily Carr's works and those of the other non-native artists functioned within the exhibition.
During the 1920s, both the National Gallery and the National Museum were caught up in the competitive dynamic of asserting their leadership positions in the cause of Canadian nationalism and the development of a national cultural identity. In this 1927 exhibition, these issues of nationalism, self-definition and the development of a distinctly "Canadian" art permeated its organization and presentation. The appropriated aboriginal cultural material in the museum collections that had languished within storage cases was to be given a contemporary function. It was to be redeemed as "art," specifically as a "primitive" stage in the teleological development of the constructed field of "Canadian" art history. In this elision process, the curators relegated the native culture to a prehistoric and early historic past, suppressing its own parallel historical and cultural development.
The exhibition also presented the native objects as an available source of decorative design motifs to be exploited by non-native artists, designers and industrial firms in their production of Canadian products, underlining the assumption of the right to control and manipulate the culture of the colonized "Other."
Emily Carr"s twenty-six paintings, four hooked rugs and decorated pottery represented the largest contribution from any single artist. In their interpretations of the native culture, Carr and the other non-native artists were also engaged in a "self-other" definition, and had filtered their perceptions through the practices and conventions of western art traditions, especially in the use of modernist techniques. In the context of the exhibition, the artistic production by the fourteen non-native artists, including Carr, was caught up in a reaffirmation of the ideological and cultural positions of the two curators and the institutions they represented. The alternate discourses that could have been provided by the native people remained unheard. / Arts, Faculty of / Art History, Visual Art and Theory, Department of / Graduate
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Hanging Emily : exhibition strategies and Emily CarrKnutson, Karen Leslie 05 1900 (has links)
This study examines the impact of new museological theory on museum education
practice at the Vancouver Art Gallery in relation to a re-installation of Emily Carr's work. It is a
case study that concerns both the negotiation of meanings around Emily Carr's work as they
are situated within current and traditional art historical/ historical beliefs, and the desire to offer
museum visitors a more sufficient or comprehensive educational experience.
The dissertation examines the installation of Carr in a variety of galleries across
Canada (National Gallery, Art Gallery of Ontario, Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, Vancouver
Art Gallery) as a means of contextualizing a range of problems associated with museum
practice. The National Gallery chapter explores issues of ideology raised by the new
museology. The chapter concerning the display at the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria
concerns the particularities of site and place (Victoria was Carr's birthplace) as well as
notions of resonance and contextualization in art displays. The discussion of the Art Gallery
of Ontario concerns contextualization of a different sort, the display created with a solid
foundation in educational literature. A temporary exhibition of Carr's work juxtaposed with
that of Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun in Vancouver offers an entry point into a discussion of
subjectivity and curatorial epistemic authority, while the resulting re-installation of Carr at the
Vancouver Art Gallery (the case) is explored as one possible approach to issues raised in
the earlier chapters, by the challenges of post-modem theorists to historical understanding,
historiography, and museum practice. / Education, Faculty of / Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of / Graduate
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Violent femmes : identification and the autobiographical works of Virginia Woolf, Radclyffe Hall, and Emily CarrStewart, Janice, 1966- January 1999 (has links)
The questions posed and examined in Violent Femmes take their genesis from psychoanalytic arguments which contend that identity is not a stable monadic thing but rather a continuing process of engagement and negotiation between the self and others. Sigmund Freud, Melanie Klein, D. W. Winnicott, and Christopher Bollas, amongst others, have noted the temporary, coalitional, and provisional nature of the ways in which identity is apprehended and experienced. This thesis expands upon such a theoretical framework of identity formation to specifically question the ways in which the formation and maturation of an artistic identity may, in part, be predicated upon the psychological capacity to enact violence within the realm of the imaginary. Violent Femmes examines the complex relationship between psychological violence and artistic identity as that relationship is recorded in the autobiographical writings of Virginia Woolf, Radclyffe Hall, and Emily Carr. / This project traces the written vestiges of Woolfs, Hall's, and Carr's individual internalised struggles to formulate an artistic identity in specific relationship with an already established 'model' of artistic creativity and identity. Woolfs, Hall's, and Carr's struggles to claim a personal artistic identity, in some ways from their individual model of the artist, are waged within the minds of the authors themselves. However, the violence enacted within their imaginations---the violence perpetrated against the models of the artist---is thrust into the external world, not only within the writings of these three women, but also by the ways in which each author resolves or fails to resolve her own violent conflict with her imaginary model of the artist.
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Violent femmes : identification and the autobiographical works of Virginia Woolf, Radclyffe Hall, and Emily CarrStewart, Janice, 1966- January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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