PAST EXHIBITS

“Joy + Passion: New Work”

Solo Exhibition by

Alexis Marie Chute

October 15, 2023 – January 26, 2024

LOCATION

Wild Skies Art Gallery on the 2nd floor in The Renaissance Edmonton Airport Hotel  | 4236 36th Street East, Edmonton International Airport  T9E 0V4 Canada

Free to the public.

Family friendly.

Wheelchair accessible.

Opening Party:

December TBD, 2023, 7:00 – 9:00 PM

Wine, Curator talk, Artist Talk

FREE EVENT

Artist Bio:

Alexis Marie Chute is a creative force, boasting an illustrious career as an award-winning artist, photographer, filmmaker, curator, and bestselling author.

With over 20 years of experience as a professional, internationally exhibiting artist, Alexis’s portfolio boasts vibrant abstract paintings, conceptual mixed-media portraits, photography, hanging instillations and video art. Her work is represented by the Art Gallery of Alberta. In 2012-2013, she held the position of Artist in Residence at the Harcourt House Artist Run Centre. Alexis has been recognized as an “Emerging Canadian Photographer” by Photo Life Magazine and featured in Avenue Magazine’s “Top 40 Under 40”.

Alexis Marie Chute earned her Bachelor of Fine Arts in Art and Design from the University of Alberta, Canada, and graduated as valedictorian with a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from Lesley University in Cambridge, MA, USA. Her academic journey includes the receipt of a Horizon Award for distinguished graduates of the University of Alberta in 2018.

In the realm of literature, Alexis is celebrated for her deeply moving and multi award-winning memoir, Expecting Sunshine: A Journey of Grief, Healing and Pregnancy After Loss (2017). Additionally, she is the author of The 8th Island Trilogy, a young adult fantasy adventure series including the novels Above the Star (2018), Below the Moon (2019), and Inside the Sun (2020). She has also researched, written, and created the artwork for three non-fictions books, including: Prairie Spirits: Ghost Stories & Hauntings at the Red Brick School and Oppertshauser House in Stony Plain, Alberta (2021); The Eternal Summer of Alberta’s Herbarium (2022); and Memorable Murals: The Visual History of the Town of Stony Plain, Alberta (2023).

As a filmmaker, Alexis has garnered acclaim for multi-award-winning documentary “Expecting Sunshine,” which screened globally in 2018-2019, earning Outstanding Screenplay and Outstanding Long-Form Documentary awards at FAVA FEST (2019). She has also crafted several distinguished short films and documentaries, one of which—“Of Love & Light”—screened at the TIFF Bell Lightbox Theatre in Toronto during the 48 Hour Film Festival.

A dedicated art curator, advocate, and educator, Alexis holds the role of Curator at the Red Brick Common Public Art Gallery. She co-founded InFocus Photo Exhibit & Awards and established Wild Skies Art Gallery. A highly regarded inspirational speaker, Alexis has shared her expertise on various topics around the world.

“Material Existence”

By Alexis Marie Chute, 2023

Fiber-art hanging sculptures

Approximately 14’ x 2’ x 2’ Each (HxWxD in Feet)

NFS

“Material Existence” is a captivating artistic series where the boundaries of imagination intertwine with tangible reality. The essence of this project is manifested through ceiling-hung fiber-art explosions, meticulously hand-woven from neon yarn and various other radiant fabrics. These tactile creations dangle organically from above, resembling nature’s tendrils in their fluidity and grace.

This collection celebrates the marriage of unconventional materials and artistry. It is a visual embrace, soft and warm. The sculptures boast an uncanny allure that defies conventional artistic norms. They embody a union of color and texture, inviting the observer to delve into a world where creativity knows no bounds.

“LIFE LOVE”

Solo Exhibition by Deb Laninga

July 30 – October 12, 2023

LOCATION

Wild Skies Art Gallery on the 2nd floor in The Renaissance Edmonton Airport Hotel  | 4236 36th Street East, Edmonton International Airport  T9E 0V4 Canada

Free to the public.

Family friendly.

Wheelchair accessible.

Opening Party:

Thursday, September 7, 2023, 7:00 – 9:00 PM

Wine, Curator talk, Artist Talk

FREE EVENT

Artist Statement:

As a sculptor, I use realism to preserve “that moment.” Moments where our humanity shines or is most evident/revealing. I use portraits and figures, human, and animal to convey not only a likeness, but the spark of personality and spirit. I want my art to cause the viewer to reflect on their memories of family, friends, and community. I express those things which give my life meaning and make it worth living.

This show is really about the things I love most. My husband and my dogs are the great loves of my life, and I can’t help using them as both my models, inspiration for art, and I have sculpted and painted their portraits. My husband and dog modeled for the military man and bomb detection dog in “Comfort.”

I also have a great love for horses and in my youth had a retired gymkhana/barrel racing horse who would rather be groomed and fed carrots than rode. After a thorough rub-down he would use his head to pull me in for a hug, which inspired the piece, “The Embrace”.

The female figure “UN-Supportive” was inspired by my own struggles with self-image. In sculpture workshops they use very athletic “ideal” bodies for teaching anatomy, and I kept thinking about the “real” bodies out there, and how they are also beautiful and worthy of sculpting.

I work in clay and then mold and cast the sculptures. I love using both the creative side as well as the mechanical and technical side of my brain. I think about images in 3D and struggled earlier in my art trying to make paintings and drawings that matched what I saw in mind. I didn’t know I was a sculptor until my first clay portrait.

I have seen and experienced deep grief, exploitation, poverty, discrimination, tribal war, and conflict. But what stands out to me most are moments of love, connection, joy, comfort, sacrifice, positive self image, faith, and courage.

Artist Bio:

Originally from Spruce Grove, Deb Laninga loved art from an early age, drawing and painting. When preparing for university her family didn’t support art as a career, so she instead trained as a commercial pilot. She continued fine arts studies along with her aviation studies in university. She worked as a commercial pilot in northern and western Canada. Flew as a bush pilot, instructor, regional airline pilot and finally missionary pilot in Papua New Guinea. She returned to Canada when her parents became terminally ill and was their caregiver until they passed.

Deb always kept her passion for art though, and in 2014 took a workshop on “portraits in clay.” She found her favorite medium, clay, and began sculpting figures, both human and animal. Her finished pieces try to capture a “moment in time” of connection and are finished in either bronze, cold cast bronze resin, or fired clay. Each piece is very personal and carries a love for the subject and story. Now living north of Edmonton with a home studio, she has been a full-time sculptor/artist since 2019. When not sculpting she loves spending time with her husband and rescue dogs.

HIRAETH”

Solo Exhibition by A.S. Helwig

May 1 – July 28, 2023

LOCATION

Wild Skies Art Gallery on the 2nd floor in The Renaissance Edmonton Airport Hotel  | 4236 36th Street East, Edmonton International Airport  T9E 0V4 Canada

Free to the public.

Family friendly.

Wheelchair accessible.

Opening Party:

Thursday, May 11, 2023, 7:00 – 9:00 PM

Wine, Curator talk, Artist Talk

FREE EVENT

Exhibition Description:

“HIRAETH”

“A longing to be where your spirit lives.”

This kind of homesickness is a combination of the longing, nostalgia, and yearning for a home that you cannot return to. It no longer exists; or, maybe it never was. It can also include grief or sadness for who or what you have lost, losses that make your home different from the one you remember.

A.S. Helwig’s paintings are about resilience and hope, using familiar landscapes and skies as metaphors. This collection features work completed during the pandemic. Throughout this time, she sought peaceful scenes, looking for that ah-ha moment that takes your breath away. These pieces brood upon nostalgia for the home we cannot return to—what the Welsh call hiraeth, a longing to be where your spirit lives. For Helwig, painting is a profoundly spiritual and meditative act that draws inspiration from her roots in the southern Alberta landscape.

Helwig was born in Lethbridge, Alberta, and has drawn and painted since childhood. She finished a two-year commercial art program at Medicine Hat College and then earned a Bachelor of Education Degree (with Distinction) from the University of Lethbridge. Her award-winning work appears in galleries across western Canada.

Artist Statement:

A.S.HELWIG utilizes techniques such as collage, texturing, glazing and under painting to explore the prairie landscape.

“I am painting the landscape that is familiar to me,” says Helwig.  “The imagery that I have been working with has become spiritual and dreamlike.  The images are quick glances we have of the landscape as we move through it.”

Themes of alienation, awe, personal epiphanies and prayerfulness emerge. The fleeting moment transcends itself to reveal that feeling, that truth, which we intuitively understand but find difficult to articulate.  These are visual poems, which insinuate the eternal into our understanding of the immediate.

Her work is represented Blue Rock Gallery in Black Diamond and Rouge Gallery in Saskatoon.

Artist Bio:

A.S. HELWIG was born in Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada. From an early age she drew and painted. In fact, she has painted in acrylics since she was 14 years old in the coulee hills close to her family home.

Helwig took a two-year commercial art program at the Medicine Hat College and then a Bachelor of Education Degree (with Distinction) from the University of Lethbridge.  Looking for adventure she moved to Fox Lake, a small remote Indian village in Northern Alberta.  There she taught English and art while maintaining a studio in her home.  Presently residing in Calgary, Helwig remains an art educator, and a studio artist.   She hosted four seasons of “Canvas”, a painting show for Shaw Cable TV in Calgary.

Helwig attended the Banff Centre of Arts in a self-directed residency in 2008 and 2005.  Her award winning work in included in many private and corporate collections.

“InFocus Photo Exhibit & Awards 2023: Bringing Joy”

Exhibition of Canadian Photography

February 1 – April 29, 2023

LOCATION

Wild Skies Art Gallery on the 2nd floor in The Renaissance Edmonton Airport Hotel  | 4236 36th Street East, Edmonton International Airport  T9E 0V4 Canada

Free to the public.

Family friendly.

Wheelchair accessible.

Opening Party:

Thursday, February 9, 2023, 7:00 – 9:00 PM

Live music, wine, awards presentation, & Curator talk

FREE EVENT

Exhibition Description:

“BRINGING JOY”

InFocus Photo Exhibit & Awards is an annual presentation of the best in contemporary Canadian photography.

We welcomed submissions from amateur, emerging, and professional photographers from coast to coast showing us what joy means to them.

What brings you joy?

How do you bring joy to others?

How can you capture the emotion of joy in a photograph?

This is an open theme which allowed photographers to present their favorite images in the exhibition. The subject matter varies – including landscapes, portraits, still lives, editorial, commercial, fine art, and beyond –  all tied together by the idea of joy, however each photographer chose to interpret it.

InFocus Photo Exhibit 2023 will bestow portrait, landscape, and emerging photographer awards, plus the audience-selected People’s Choice Award.

InFocus Photo Exhibit is mounted at Wild Skies Art Gallery in the Renaissance Hotel attached to the Edmonton International Airport. The hotel is visited by travelers and locals year-round. InFocus is also presented during Exposure Photography Festival.

InFocus Photo Exhibit is curated by Alexis Marie Chute, MFA, BFA. 2023 is the 9th installment of this annual exhibition.

About InFocus Photo Exhibit & Awards:

More about InFocus Photo Exhibit & Awards: www.infocusphoto.ca

Featured Photographers:

Tope Akindele – Edmonton, AB

Ian Alter – Toronto, ON

Amanda Anderton – Red Deer, AB

Tobi Asmoucha – East York, ON

Argo Basu – Edmonton, AB

Kathy Beamer – Calgary, AB

Robert Boschman – Calgary, AB

Paula Gerein – Edmonton, AB

Heidi Griffin – Calgary, AB

Christine Hassay – Edmonton, AB

Bohdan Hrynyshyn – Edmonton, AB

Heather Inglis – Edmonton, AB

Nozomi Kamei – Edmonton, AB

Atreyi Mukherji – Dundas, ON

Rob Pohl – Edmonton, AB

Negar Pooya – Woodbridge, ON

Steve Ricketts – Sherwood Park, AB

Mitra Samavaki – Calgary, AB

Timothy Starchuk – Edmonton, AB

Evelyn Van Diest & Leigh Kovesy – Edmonton, AB

Montana Woytovich – Calgary, AB

“Wild & Free”

Alexis Marie Chute Solo Exhibition

November 1, 2022 – January 27, 2023

LOCATION

Wild Skies Art Gallery on the 2nd floor in The Renaissance Edmonton Airport Hotel  | 4236 36th Street East, Edmonton International Airport  T9E 0V4 Canada

Free to the public.

Family friendly.

Wheelchair accessible.

Exhibition Description:

Enjoy bold colours and playful shapes in the new evolution of abstract paintings by award-winning artist Alexis Marie Chute. Free-flowing compositions will draw you in with their dynamic lines, hues, and wild spirit, while others are beautifully calm and elegant. Some pieces in this new collection are word-and-image mixed-media creations that will provoke and illuminate viewers. Get lost in the busy, energetic, and free spirited creations as much a reflection of the artist herself as the joyful way of life she champions.

About the Artist:

Alexis Marie Chute is an award-winning visual artist, filmmaker, art gallery curator, and bestselling author. Her artwork is represented by the Art Gallery of Alberta. Her books include the fantasy trilogy Above the Star, Below the Moon, Inside the Sun, and memoir Expecting Sunshine. Her latest non-fiction book is entitled Prairie Spirits and is an account of a rural Alberta ghost haunting. Her documentary films have screened worldwide. She is the curator of Wild Skies Art Gallery, the Multicultural Heritage Centre Public Art Gallery, and is co-founder of InFocus Photo Exhibit & Awards. Alexis is an outside-the-box innovator, passionate storyteller, cultural connector, and international speaker. She holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Art and Design and a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing. Alexis is passionate about creativity, healing, resiliency, and wellbeing on the “joy journey.”

www.AlexisMarieChute.com Instagram: @alexismariejoy

“Characters”

Russell Thomas Solo Exhibition

May 1 – October 28, 2022

LOCATION

Wild Skies Art Gallery on the 2nd floor in The Renaissance Edmonton Airport Hotel  | 4236 36th Street East, Edmonton International Airport  T9E 0V4 Canada

In-person show, please wear masks and respect physical distancing.

Free to the public.

Family friendly.

Wheelchair accessible.

OPENING PARTY

Thursday, May 5, 2022, at 7:00 PM MT

Wild Skies Art Gallery, Renaissance Edmonton Airport Hotel

VIRTUAL EXHIBITION PREMIERE

  • Thursday, May 19. 2022
  • 7:00 pm Mountain Time
  • Wild Skies Art Gallery YouTube Channel
  • Tune in live to be the first to see the exhibit
  • Accessible to international audiences
  • Engage in the live chat window before 7:00pm and during the premiere

Exhibition Description:

I have always been fascinated by the human face. As a younger person, I would spend hours sketching portraits. As a late career emerging artist, I started exploring faces with water colours and eventually acrylics. I’ve discovered that each human being, each character, has a key – a facial detail that makes them uniquely them. With just a passing glance, people who walk by this exhibition will recognize and be drawn in by iconic faces and unforgettable characters. Some are defiant, determined and deeply focused. Others are curious, playful, and inexplicably charismatic. This exploration uses an abundance of colour and an absence of colour. Both approaches provide mental and emotional pathways for the viewer to connect with the subject. My hope is that these characters spark memories, feelings and a reminder of the beauty and complexity of the human spirit.

About the Artist:

Russell Thomas started painting in earnest at the age of 47 at a time in his life when he was transitioning out of local politics and a 15 year career in senior marketing and communication roles. His move toward painting was unplanned and unexpected, as were his early successes with wild colour portraits. After three years he left traditional employment and became a full-time artist.  Philanthropy has been an important part of Russell’s creative journey. His art donations and live painting performances have raised over $400,000 for charities. He is currently in the middle of his 52 Week Painting Challenge, raising funds for Bracelets For Buildings, a charity that builds homes for the very poor in rural Cambodia. Russell began his art journey in Fort McMurray, but now lives and paints in Okotoks. He and his wife own and operate Birdsong Studios on historic Elma Street.
Artist Website

InFocus Photo Exhibit & Awards

Theme: Time of Our Lives

January 31—April 29, 2022

This exhibition is presented during Exposure Photography Festival 2022.

LOCATION

Wild Skies Art Gallery on the 2nd floor in The Renaissance Edmonton Airport Hotel  | 4236 36th Street East, Edmonton International Airport  T9E 0V4 Canada

In-person show, please wear masks and respect physical distancing.

Free to the public.

Family friendly.

Wheelchair accessible.

VIRTUAL EXHIBITION PREMIERE

  • Thursday, February 17, 2021
  • 7:30 pm Mountain Time
  • Wild Skies Art Gallery YouTube Channel
  • Tune in live to be the first to see the exhibit
  • Accessible to international audiences
  • Engage in the live chat window before 7:00pm and during the premiere

Featured Photographers:

Steve Ricketts | Alexis McKeown | Colin Vince | Stephen Chan | Atreyi Mukherji | Kevin Tuong | Montana Woytovich | Brian Searwar | Robert Boschman | Karin Richter | Bohdan Hrynyshyn | Erin Klatt | David Aaron

Watch the Virtual Exhibit Video:

Watch the Virtual Awards Presentation:

Exhibition Description:

InFocus Photo Exhibit & Awards is an annual presentation of the best in contemporary Canadian photography.

The theme of InFocus Photo Exhibit 2022 is the “Time of Our Lives.” These are the moments that define us. The exhibition champions photographers who capture meaningful images—from awe-inspiring landscapes, to the moments of joy that bring tears to our eyes, to the gritty resiliency of human struggle. From private experiences to widespread movements, and the full spectrum in-between.

The COVID-19 pandemic has caused us all to reflect on what matters most, to remember the milestones which have shaped who we are individually, nationally, and as people around the world. As we embark on a new era of human history, experience photographs that will move you.

InFocus Photo Exhibit will bestow portrait, landscape, and emerging photographer awards, plus the audience-selected People’s Choice Award.

InFocus Photo Exhibit will be mounted at Wild Skies Art Gallery in the Renaissance Hotel attached to the Edmonton International Airport. The hotel is visited by travelers and locals year-round. InFocus will also be presented as a virtual exhibition accessible to people around the world.

InFocus Photo Exhibit is curated by Alexis Marie Chute, MFA, BFA. 2022 is the 8th installment of this annual exhibition.

“Athabasca Falls Ammolite” by Brie Adkins

“Ammolite Alberta”

A Solo Exhibition of Mixed-Media Artist Brie Adkins

October 25, 2021 – January 28, 2022

“Ammolite Alberta” will be featured for three months at Wild Skies Art Gallery.

LOCATION

Wild Skies Art Gallery on the 2nd floor in The Renaissance Edmonton Airport Hotel  | 4236 36th Street East, Edmonton International Airport  T9E 0V4 Canada

In-person show, please wear masks and respect physical distancing.

Free to the public.

Family friendly.

Wheelchair accessible.

VIRTUAL EXHIBITION PREMIERE

  • Thursday, November 18, 2021
  • 7:00 pm Mountain Time
  • Wild Skies Art Gallery YouTube Channel
  • Tune in live to be the first to see the exhibit
  • Accessible to international audiences
  • Engage in the live chat window before 7:00pm and during the premiere

WATCH THE VIRTUAL EXHIBITION:

 

Exhibition Description:

The Ammolite Alberta exhibition merges many iconic aspects of Alberta into a collection of dazzling ephemeral moments. First the artist, Brie Adkins uses a one-of-a-kind self developed technique to harness the shine and glimmer of the gemstone ammolite. Secondly, to the artist it made sense to pair the story of ammolite with threatened species in Alberta and iconic landscapes. Ammolite is arguably the rarest gemstone in the world, only found in the Bearspaw formation in Southern Alberta. Due to its unique location and rarity it will be mined and marketed out of this lifetime.

Creating the works through the lens of ammolite opens our minds to its potential to be extracted to extinction in this lifetime. Paired with the subject it raises the question, what other aspects are at risk of being extirpated in this lifetime?

The subject matter is endangered animals like the woodland caribou, grizzly bear and ferruginous hawk, just a few species currently under threat in Alberta. The environment is also considered with subjects like the pine tree and the pine beetle and life giving waterways that come from our mountains.  As a collection, the subject matter should convey that everything at this point is subject to change. Our province’s identity is our pine trees, our wildlife, our water, landscapes and our strength. It is also dynamically changing.

As an Albertan, a mother and an artist, Brie already does not swim in lakes her parents used to and wants to convey a sense of understanding and appreciation for the moments that pass us so easily. Without being conscious could these gems of our province, like ammolite, be commodified to extinction?

The technique was created with the gemstone properties in mind. Ammolite has 7 different types of shine and colors with a wide range of chromatic shift. The technique Brie uses has built in 6 layers of shine; silver, glitter, Golden interference paint, dichroic film, and Art Resin. The 6th ‘layer’ is the reflected shine that happens when light is on the finished works.

The final execution of the works is the play of light. During opening receptions and artists talk Brie Adkins ‘casts a light’ onto the works which sends a dichroic shimmering reflection onto the viewers. It has been called the ‘Northern Lights effect’ by curators. This creates the atmosphere of wonder in the room and brings the audience to reflect and experience on what role they play.

Brie Adkins Artist Bio:

Brie Adkins is a former machinist and highly ticketed oilfield worker, but left it behind five years ago to pursue her dream of being an artist. Equipped with the confidence to build with her hands and life-long drawing skills Brie invests her energy into her art practice. After studying at the University of Alberta and with local professional artists, she had discovered a voice through her mixed media pieces that depict ephemeral moments in Alberta.

Brie is drawn to enviro-politics, animals, landscapes and takes unique approaches to showcasing fleeting moments in this lifetime. This artist believes each person has the power to change this world, however slight. That inspired theme is in her work and in her teaching practices.

Brie also owns Salt of the Earth Gallery in Entwistle, her hometown, where her art practice has overflown into her community. This gallery represents women artists and makers from Alberta and hosts an open studio and classes for those curious minds.

This past year there has been major growth in the public art development of Brie’s practice having completed six murals since 2020 and has upcoming mural projects with brands like Telus. While away from the canvas, she spends family time with her husband and twin boys, and enjoys weekend hiking and kayaking outings.

“Fire Weed” Photograph by Calgary artist Angela Boehm

“The Giving Trees”

A Solo Exhibition of the Documentary Photography of Calgary Artist Angela Boehm

July 25 – October 22, 2021

This exhibition is presented during Alberta Culture Days and Month of the Artist in September 2021 in partnership between the Multicultural Heritage Centre Public Art Gallery and Wild Skies Art Gallery.

LOCATION

Wild Skies Art Gallery on the 2nd floor in The Renaissance Edmonton Airport Hotel  | 4236 36th Street East, Edmonton International Airport  T9E 0V4 Canada

In-person show, please wear masks and respect physical distancing.

Free to the public.

Family friendly.

Wheelchair accessible.

VIRTUAL EXHIBITION PREMIERE

  • Thursday, September 9, 2021
  • 7:00 pm Mountain Time
  • Wild Skies Art Gallery YouTube Channel
  • Tune in live to be the first to see the exhibit
  • Accessible to international audiences
  • Engage in the live chat window before 7:00pm and during the premiere

WATCH THE VIRTUAL EXHIBIT NOW

 

Exhibition Description:

The Giving Trees” by Angela Boehm is a photographic exhibition portraying forests post-burn covering a 25-year timeline of fires. The images share both the ephemeral repose of a burned forest and the strength of its regeneration. Images are from forest fires started by lightening during the years 2003 to 2020 in various locations in Alberta and BC.

Recent fires in Alberta near residential areas have been disastrous for communities. It has put us all on edge with concern for fires, including in our forests. The narrative around fires has shifted to one that all fires are disasters. For decades policies have prevented forest fires, producing highly flammable homogenous forests, where the dominant species chokes out much of the variety of life. In prior eras, fire was one of the prominent renewal disturbances of forests.

The narrative surrounding forest fires is deserving of adjustment – one that is balanced with the “good fires,” an integral part of forest life. As a documentary photographer, conveying this positive message is Angela Boehm’s motivation to carefully photograph forests following fire in various stages of regeneration for others to witness. Working with researchers at both the University of Alberta and the University of Calgary, as well as informing herself through interviews with fire management personnel in our parks, and interviewing those with knowledge of indigenous fires practices, Boehm has come to see that fire is yet another process in nature, with its own unique beauty.  That the lightning strikes in our forests are part of their cycle and are the impetus of much new life.

To find these areas where fire has started renewal, Angela Boehm packs up her 4×4 and heads deep into the uninhabited areas of Alberta.  Using a combination of fire access roads and logging roads, she ventures as deep and remote as she can before heading out on foot. Once there, with a pack of cameras on her back, Boehm wander into these burned forests and lets them show her and her camera how life is returning. She is frequently awe struck by yet another beauty in nature, one much less appreciated. Her eye, and by extension her camera, are drawn to the charred remains of a forest. The silence that accompanies it is unique, no leaves in the breeze, no birds in a nest. Nature intended this temporary silence, and, as an artist, Boehm is grateful for having experienced it.

It is Angela Boehm’s intent through this project that many come to remember how fire is a part of nature, how it is not the end of life in the woods but the beginning of a renewing process that will spark rapid growth of many species. It is her hope that when people hear of fire in the forest they can pause and consider the life that will spring forward.

Angela Boehm Artist Statement:

I realized I was driving through a timeline of forest fires.

During a drive through the mountains in British Columbia, a winding scenic route we typically follow on the way to our favourite lake, I realized I was driving through a timeline of forest fires. There had been many fires in this area over the last few decades since we started these summer excursions, and today what I saw was a forest in many different stages of regeneration: tufts of foliage, vibrant green, seedlings racing upwards, thick populations of young trees surrounding their charred elders. This transformation is fast, vibrant, thick and surprising. One could even describe it as forceful. I realized that what I was seeing was not pure devastation and loss, but a message of hope. I was witnessing the resilience of nature, the tenacity of a forest to live. So, I began to photograph these burned lands, to celebrate the forest’s renewal.

Appreciating fire is part of nature’s process: “good” fires, I have since learned, are an integral part of forest life. As a documentary photographer, conveying this positive message is my motivation for this project. I carefully photograph forests in various stages of regeneration, following fire – from recent burns to those that have occurred years ago. The photographs in this series are all from uninhabited areas of the forest, and all from lightning strikes.

I ventured out into the forests during the pandemic, staying close to home. But the forest drew me in for other reasons. Three personal losses of people close to me preceded this journey. I see these fires and the recovery of these forests through a world struggling to make sense of the monumental pandemic losses we have faced together – the loss of life, of ways of life, and the ways of approaching life – as well as through personal tragedy. These are places of silence and regeneration, once ravaged, again thriving.

I am grateful to those who have contributed their considerable time and wisdom to this project. Academics at the University of Alberta and the University of Calgary provided me with science-based insight into the long-term impact of fire. Fire management personnel in our Canadian Parks system informed my understanding of policy and practical aspects related to fire management and behaviour. In recent times, we have learned that the oral histories of Canada’s indigenous peoples contain vital insights into fire as part of forest, nature and wildlife management. Interviewing those with knowledge of indigenous fire practices has informed my perspective on “breathing good fire into the landscape.” I’ve come to understand that fire is yet another habitual process in nature, with its own unique beauty and logic. It is part of the life cycle of a forest and the start of much new life.

It’s my hope that through this exhibit, viewers will come to appreciate how fire is a part of nature, how fire is not the end of life in the woods, but the beginning of a renewing process that will inevitably spark rapid growth of many species, even some that need fire to be born. It is my hope that when people hear of fire occurring in a nearby forest they will pause and consider the life that will spring forward when the fire clears.

Angela Boehm Artist Bio:

Angela Boehm is a documentary photographer who works on long-term projects. She is known for her exploration of generations; teenagers, midlife and seniors. In building these projects her emphasis is on creating empathy for those she collaborates with and their stage of life, quietly exposing what it is like to be in their world.

During the time of Covid, Boehm turned her focus to a different kind of portraiture, with forest as subject, documenting their recovery after fires. Her work “The Giving Trees” has been exhibited in Calgary at cSpace Gallery, at InFocus Festival in Edmonton, and at London Photo Festival in the UK. She is currently working on a book of this work.

In 2021 Boehm was the recipient of Exposure Festival – Emerging Photographer Award; InFocus Film Festival, Landscape Award; and London Photo Festival, Landscape Competition Award. She has exhibited her work in solo and group exhibitions internationally.

Boehm grew up on a farm in Saskatchewan and holds a degree in Business. After retiring from a successful career in business and philanthropy, she turned to photography. Boehm has travelled the globe to make her images, and has studied photography at International Center for Photography in New York. She was recently accepted into the Magnum Photos Mentorship Program.

DO YOU SEE WHAT I SEE? ABSTRACT ART IN THE AGE OF IDEAS  

May 1 – July 23, 2021

In-person show, please wear masks and respect physical distancing

Location: Wild Skies Art Gallery located in The Renaissance Edmonton Airport Hotel

4236 36th Street East, Edmonton International Airport  T9E 0V4 Canada

Wheelchair accessible, family friendly

VIRTUAL EXHIBITION PREMIERE

  • Thursday, May 6, 2021
  • 7:00 pm Mountain Time
  • Wild Skies Art Gallery YouTube Channel
  • Tune in live to be the first to see the exhibit
  • Accessible to international audiences
  • Engage in the live chat window before 7:00pm and during the premiere

About the Exhibit:

Do You See What I See? is an exhibition featuring the artwork of Emily Roth and Lisa Matthias.

Watch the virtual exhibition:

VIRTUAL ARTIST FEATURE PREMIERES

Lisa Matthias Bio

Lisa Matthias is an artist and ecologist living in rural Alberta, Canada, outside of Edmonton. She has a Master of Fine Arts in printmaking (University of Alberta), a Master of Science in plant ecology (University of Manitoba), and a Bachelor of Science in biology (University of Guelph). Her interdisciplinary artwork is driven by her love of nature and science. She uses a variety of traditional and experimental printmaking media in her studio. She often uses microscopes and sound recording in her creative research. Her work is experimental, abstract, and has a strong element of hand-made craftsmanship. Lisa’s work has been exhibited in Canada, the US, and internationally.

Lisa Matthias Artist Statement

My interdisciplinary artistic practice is driven by my love of nature and my scientific training. As an artist who is also an ecologist, I’m interested in artwork about our environmental footprint in the Anthropocene Epoch, including the different scales at which we can view our impacts. Printmaking is a field of study that I’ve been focused on for more than a decade. I’m inspired by many different kinds of visual artists, but for generating my own work, there is nothing to compare to the experimental and technical processes and aesthetic qualifies of print media. I’m primarily a printmaker, using a variety of traditional and experimental print media, but regularly use other media like sound recording and animation in my creative practice. Much of my practice has a strong element of hand-made craftsmanship. However, technology is embedded in the process and work, and contributes to my conceptual explorations of technology as a way to see and care for the environment. My artwork reflects how the interdisciplinarity of contemporary art and ecology can offer a unique visual perspective.

This series of woodblock prints and collages stems from a collaboration with a scientist who studies algae and aquatic ecology. Ecology is the study of organisms and their relationships to each other and their environments; it’s about how things are connected. These artworks explore a microscopic group of algae called diatoms. Ever since I first saw an image of a diatom in a high school biology class I’ve been fascinated by these singled-celled aquatic plants. I went on to study them in university and in my first job as a biologist. They’re covered in exquisitely patterned glass cell walls, called frustules. They’re responsible for producing a huge proportion of Earth’s oxygen. They’re incredibly diverse – there are 1000s of different species. I collected samples of diatoms from in and around Parkland County where I live, and examined them under microscopes. I wasn’t interested in just making images of exactly what I saw, but in using my inspiration from these incredible organisms to create abstracted artworks that take on their own meanings. Broadly, these artworks are about ecology, science and technology, and our environment. I would love to hear what other people see in these prints.

Emily Roth Bio

Emily is a local artist born and raised in Edmonton. With a love for colour and naturally occurring elements Emily easily finds her influence for choice of medium and composition. She demonstrates fluidity of motion through abstract alcohol ink inviting the viewer to interpret their own meanings from her work.  Emily takes part in several local shows annually and her pieces can be found in local surrounding shops and in the homes of avid art collectors. She balances her time with creating commissioned works of art, selling through her Etsy shop online and developing new pieces for upcoming shows. Most recently, Emily is excited to be a featured artist for the upcoming International Art Fair in Brussels Belgium Fall 2021.

Emily Roth Artist Statement

My art focuses on the abstract rather than the concrete and realistic. Through organic forms with no true shape or obvious meaning the viewer is able to remove preconceived notions of what they should be thinking or feeling and instead focus on what they are thinking or feeling while viewing the works. Each piece has its own story and narrative that the viewer gets to create and interact with on a personal level. Some people remark they can see bodies, animals or faces in the pieces but those that connect with my art in the way it was meant to be connected with take it in as a whole and are affected emotionally some way. I am inspired by the unseen, impermanence, and natural elements such as wind, water, feelings, and fleeting thoughts or emotions. Each composition is balanced or imbalanced intentionally on the page through use of white space. Tension is created through the relation of white space to colour depending on its placement and amount creating differing interpretations of each piece.

INFOCUS PHOTO EXHIBIT & AWARDS 2021: BRAVE NEW WORLD  

February 1 – April 30, 2021

In-person show, please wear masks and respect physical distancing

Location: Wild Skies Art Gallery located in The Renaissance Edmonton Airport Hotel

4236 36th Street East, Edmonton International Airport  T9E 0V4 Canada

Wheelchair accessible, family friendly

VIRTUAL EXHIBITION PREMIERE

  • Thursday, February 11, 2021
  • 7:30 pm Mountain Time
  • InFocus Photo Exhibit YouTube Channel
  • Tune in live to be the first to see the exhibit
  • Accessible to international audiences
  • Engage in the live chat window before 7:30pm and during the premiere
  • Curator Talk & Awards presentation

About InFocus Photo Exhibit & Awards: InFocusPhoto.ca

The theme of InFocus Photo Exhibit & Awards 2021 is “Brave New World.” Borrowing the title of Aldous Huxley’s novel Brave New World, this photographic exhibition captures the world we are living in today. InFocus 2021 photographers present their take on major world issues, how life in Canada is impacted, the good and the bad, the tragic and the hopeful. Does modern life fit a dystopian model, or are we on the brink of a new, more peaceful, healthy, happy age? What is our place in the world and how do we make sense of self amidst our rapidly changing ways of life? From COVID-19 to politics to social and environmental issues, InFocus Photo Exhibit: Brave New World is a 2021 must-see Canadian exhibition curated by award-winning arts advocate and art curator Alexis Marie Chute.

Exhibiting artists include Angela Boehm, Robert Boschman, Braedyn Brosda, Edna Cabalo, Heather Fryer, Daniel Gadowski, Jamal Ghouzlan, Aidan Guerra, Bohdan Hrynyshyn, Tyler Jordan, Gerhard Kaiser, Katherine Kerr, Brenda Lakeman, Ken Lorenz, Drew May, Nahanni McKay, Clayton Reitzel, Brian Searwar, Paul Seaton, Behzad Soltani, Kevin Tuong, Colin Vince, Kristy Wolfe, Rob Pohl and George Pimentel.

InFocus Photo Exhibit is an annual thematic survey of the best of Canadian photography. InFocus presents the current cultural climate in photography within Canada. The mission of InFocus Photo Exhibit is to promote and exhibit innovative, thoughtful, and provocative photography created by Canadian contemporary image-makers. InFocus 2021 is the seventh annual InFocus exhibition. InFocus Photo Exhibit was founded by Alexis Marie Chute and Aaron Chute in 2014.

Thank you to our sponsors:

Exposure Photography Festival, Technicare Premiere Photo Lab, Renaissance Edmonton Airport Hotel, Wild Skies Art Gallery, Alberta Views Magazine, Preview Art Magazine, Vistek Edmonton, Canada COVID Portrait, and McBain Camera

Watch the Virtual Exhibition Video:

Watch the Virtual Awards Presentation:

InFocus Award Winners

InFocus Landscape Award Winner, Angela Boehm (Calgary, AB)
InFocus Landscape Award Honourable Mention, Nahanni McKay (Banff, AB)
InFocus Portrait Award Winner, George Pimentel (Toronto, ON)
InFocus Portrait Award Honourable Mention, Colin Vince (Edmonton, AB)
InFocus People’s Choice Award Winner, Kristy Wolfe (Canmore, AB)
InFocus People’s Choice Honourable Mention, Edna Cabalo (Sherwood Park, AB)
Canada COVID Portrait Prize Winner, Braedyn Brosda (Edmonton, AB)

“Alberta Views: Our Landscape, Our Home, Our Legacy”

Exhibit Dates: August 23—October 31, 2020

Exhibit Description:

“Alberta Views: Our Landscape, Our Home, Our Legacy” is an exhibition of female Alberta landscape artists who are inspired by the environment of their majestic province. All working in a variety of artistic styles and using a range of creative materials, these artists present their perspective on the Alberta landscape in paint, photograph, sculpture, and mixed-media art. They challenge us to contemplate the land beneath our feet, how it has changed and continues to develop and play a role in our lives. “Alberta Views” artists inspire us to pause, give thanks, and explore the diverse landscape on our doorsteps. Think vibrant prairie skies, looming mountains, and beyond. The Indigenous artists in the exhibit help us appreciate their unique bond to the province and their continued celebration of their ancestral land.

Featuring Artwork By: Cynthia McLaren, Mary Hughes, Suzan Berwald, Michelle Erickson, Dawn Saunders Dahl, Dawn Marie Marchand

 Curated By: Alexis Marie Chute

 

CURATOR STATEMENT, Alexis Marie Chute, Curator, MFA, BFA

Alberta is a province with a distinct natural landscape and climate that defines how its inhabitants live, work, and play. This land tells many stories: from the Indigenous people, to the resiliency of Albertans who endure and enjoy its dramatic temperatures, to our unique history of trade and travel. Alberta boasts the stunning majesty of the Rocky Mountains, the peaceful prairies, and everything in between. Alberta’s landscape impacts the artists of this province through the imagery they create to the way they create it.

My goal with “Alberta Views: Our Landscape, Our Home, Our Legacy” was to curate an exhibition that pays homage to Alberta artists and the place they call home. I chose the artists for this show through public submissions and by invitation. I looked for artists creating across varied art mediums, stylistic approaches, and conceptual considerations. I had a personal mandate of including Indigenous voices in the exhibit. Partnering with the Women’s Art Museum of Canada, my additional directive was curating “Alberta Views” as an all-female show.

The exhibition includes artists Cynthia McLaren, Mary Hughes, Dawn Marie Marchand, Suzan Berwald, Dawn Saunders Dahl, and Michelle Erickson. I chose these artists for their excellence, vision, and representation of the land.

Cynthia McLaren’s work is representational and dimensional through the inclusion of a wooden plane within her frames. She depicts Peyto Lake flanked by rugged mountains, sparce trees in a prairie-scape, and a vivid red Canadian Pacific Train boldly racing mountainside. Her work is lush with colour and animated skies.

Photographer Mary Hughes captures an iconic location in our province—Spirit Island—in her hyper focused image with its long depth of field. The impassioned sky, lake reflection, and textured overlay create a dreamy, nostalgic view of the beloved destination for locals and travelers alike.

Dawn Marie Marchand is an Indigenous artist. Her artwork in “Alberta Views” features glossy abstracted washes of colour incorporating real trees, ribbons, and beading. She speaks to honouring land treaties and the struggles and successes of Indigenous artists in our province.

Suzan Berwald’s soft pastel drawing of a yellow canola field elevates the shockingly saturated landscape Albertans may take for granted or miss entirely in the city. She uses her bold pastel strokes and tilting point-of-view to draw viewers eyes to the land and the sky in a diptych that tells a story of a lonely rock in a windswept field.

Dawn Saunders Dahl uses a conceptual approach in artistic research of her Indigenous heritage, tracing her lineage back through multiple generations. Her earth and water samples speak to the tactile nature of her work, which is documented and exhibited in Polaroid photographs and a short film. Her watercolour paintings are fluid, gestural, and impressionistic, capturing the spirit of the landscapes they represent.

The artwork of Michelle Erickson defies right angles, incorporating a stylistic technique of alcohol ink and ArtResin applied to circular aluminum panels. Her paintings are expressive, boldly coloured, and abstractly graphic in their depictions of mountains, Earth’s mantle, and crust. Her impressionistic compositions are circular windows into the evolution and ever-changing seasonal appearance of the Alberta landscape.

Viewers of this exhibit will feel awe at sharp rugged peaks, quiet prairie fields, and mirror-like lakes. No people are pictured in the artwork, though the scenes are familiar favorites and often visited. “Alberta Views: Our Landscape, Our Home, Our Legacy” will inspire the creativity and desire to explore of Albertans and viewers from beyond our provincial borders.

I curated this exhibit for Alberta Culture Days and Month of the Artist. It can be seen in-person September and October 2020 at the Renaissance Edmonton Airport Hotel and online on the Women’s Art Museum of Canada’s YouTube channel.

For more information, contact the Curator, Alexis Marie Chute:  info@alexismariechute.com, www.AlexisMarieChute.com, 780-499-4311.