‘Meatspace’ & ‘Paraphernalia’

For the last three months local ceramics whiz-kid Brendan Lee Satish Tang has been an artist-in-residence at Burrard Arts Foundation, as well as teaching Foundation Ceramics at Emily Carr U. He is currently showing the resulting work in the BAF Gallery at 108 East Broadway, Vancouver along with fellow artist Lucien Durey.

The Opening Reception was on Thursday January 11th, one of those truly dreadful rainy Vancouver Winter evenings, so I opted instead to go to a talk given by the two artists on Saturday Jan. 13th. It turned out to be a very good idea because we were given a thorough explanation of their intentions (and I could then enjoy wandering around trendy Main street boutiques and finding local murals afterwards).

 

Brendan is known for his Manga/Ormolu series of ceramic sculptures in which he creates mash-ups of highly decorated Ormulu vases with mechanical additions/inserts resembling the colours and shapes of Japanese Manga Art. To bother us completely the vases look as if they’re being squashed and the additions seem to be robots.

Brendan Tang & Carol Mayer

Moving on from this series of work Brendan has spent the last three months of concentrated studio time working with entirely different materials. The exhibition’s title “Meatspace” comes from a term coined by web guru John Perry Barlow to differentiate the physical world from the virtual world of “cyberspace.”  The new sculptures represent clouds which could be real ones or ‘The Cloud’. He has painstakingly fabricated them from black foam core and jointed wooden framework. He described the complexity of having decided to work with totally unexpected angles, giving himself hours and hours of carpentry, cutting and gluing. The finished pieces are suspended in the gallery space, along with some white neon tube lights, and he has completed the installation by defining some of the angular shadows on the walls and floor with black electrician’s tape.

 

 

 

 

 

 

In the studio space behind the gallery, which he occupied for the three months, I found other pieces displayed, including a drawing which could be part of the Manga/Ormulu series, and other 3D Mash-up shapes, in clay. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

His fellow artist, Lucien Durey had only the Christmas holiday time to install his work in the adjacent gallery, but he expressed gratitude for the opportunity provided by BAF to have a show. “Paraphernalia” reveals his fascination with found objects or gifts and he uses them to remind himself and us of events in his life. He has developed some discarded photographic film and framed these grainy images from fifty years ago, and leaves us to imagine where this painterly place is. Other objects have been altered with the addition of batik-type colour on old curtains, or simply displayed for us to wonder at.

Lucien Durey
‘Leaving’ 2016 C-prints

His inner gallery space is painted dark grey and contains a curvy table cut from a door, laminated with resin with glass inclusions and lit with a lone thrift-store lamp.

My photos show a dilapidated kitschy toy parrot, which has sentimental resonance for him, and a sixties pottery lamp with an odd pink light bulb. With great sincerity Lucien explained the reasons for each item or arrangement in his show. He invited us to a special performance of musical compositions, I believe Feb 13th, when his songs will be ‘impermanent captions’ (instead of didactic texts).

Lucien Durey ‘Peonies’ 2018 Beeswax, dye and gesso on found curtain

This paragraph is taken from BAF’s website and explains the purpose of the Foundation:

Our Mission
The mission of the Burrard Arts Foundation (BAF) is to promote the development of, and excellence in, the visual arts in Canada – accomplished through innovative art projects and programs. BAF seeks to advance the understanding and appreciation of the Arts in Vancouver by showcasing local and global artistic talent and dialogue from the creative minds of today and tomorrow in dynamic ways, and within the public’s grasp. Our objective is to provide opportunities that enable artists to produce their work and share it with the World.

Eric Metcalfe was one of the artists the Foundation invited to prepare work for ‘Facade Festival 2016″. His painting was projected on the facade of Vancouver Art Gallery on August 30th of that year, along with several other artists on other days. One of those was another ‘Raider’, Renée Van Halm. Eric also had his mural ‘Stellar’ installed in the Foundations’ downtown headquarters at 1030 West Georgia street in 2014.

http://www.burrardarts.org/project/stellar/

These two shows can be seen at BAF, 108 East Broadway (between Quebec and Main) until March 10th.

Gillian McMillan

Gillian writes blogs about ceramics in and around Vancouver and sometimes talks about other Art, her garden, travels and family.

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