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UFV Art Exhibitions —
UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS
The Visual Arts Gallery schedule is set from January through April 2013. View that schedule and further details of each exhibition in the January 11th UFV Today Blog post. UFV Visual Arts Alumni will be exhibiting a variety of media throughout 2013, including selected works from Hope Senior Secondary's Senior art class, instructed by 2010 BFA grad, Chris Janzen.
Also, save the date for the annual Silent Art Auction, where all moneys generated support the 2013 BFA grad show! And don't miss the intriguing faculty show, Work in Progress.
If you are interested in exhibiting in the Visual Arts Gallery, please send inquiries on how to submit an exhibition proposal to visualarts@ufv.ca
Past Exhibitions, 2012 —
VA 402 Open Studio
ONE NIGHT ONLY! November 28th, 5 - 7 pm. C 1402 and C 1403 For the night of November 28th only, from 5pm to 7pm, senior seminar students will be opening the studio doors to the public. This is a unique opportunity to see the visual art works of senior visual arts students of UFV - their practices and spaces - and to meet and converse with the artists themselves.
- Lindsay Craig
- Jenessa Galmut
- Chalie Howes
- Jessica Laibahas
- Lauraless Lamarche
- Majd Mansour
- Jenaya McChesney
- Charissa Smith
- Jeff Stackhouse
&
VA 116 Multiples
Nov 28 - Dec 11, Visual Arts Gallery Building B Multiples will provide the unifying theme for this collaborative installation of works that examinen the space, nooks & crannies of both the gallery and the psyche. Works of 30 students will be installed into a unified installation, engaging the audience with a physical, visual, psychological and sentient experience.
 Figure Painting
Oct 29 to Nov 12, Visual Arts Gallery Building B This show represents the work of UFV 3rd level Painting/Drawing students, exhibting live model painting studies from an in-class assignment accomplishes in an 8 hour duration.
Oct 10-24, Visual Arts Gallery Building B The works presented in Recollective are photo-based images dealing with the role of photography within personal and collective memory. See what the photo students have been up to as some of them have experimented with the liquid light medium, a challenging and time-consuming process which allows for the application of liquid emulsion onto any surface.
DEVELOPMENT PROPOSAL
Sep 24- Oct 9, Visual Arts Gallery Building B The UFV Visual Arts Department is pleased to present the world of Aaron Moran, a Fraser Valley artist who recently completed his residency with the Ranger Station Gallery, in Harrison, B.C.
Composed principally of reclaimed materials from demolition and development projects scattering the Lower Mainland, DEVELOPMENT PROPOSAL aims to reverse the trend of erasing histories by producing tangible visual placeholders from the very materials that stand in the way of so-called progress. Mirrored in the work are glimpses into the increasing wastelands of toppled architecture and upturned land. Hard geometric lines reflect the manner in which land is zoned and sectioned off for appropriate use, seemingly with emphasis on replacing the natural environment with the most unnatural of structures.
We Insist!
An exhibition featuring students from the Directed Studies painting course. This exhibition is held in the Visual Arts Gallery, Building B. Sep 6 - Sept 21 Opening Reception Sept 6, from 6pm - 8pm
Participating students include:
- Lindsay Craig
- Kate Feltren
- Candice Kruger
- Jessica Laibahas
- Janie Nadeau
- Alicia Williams
For The Duration
 The Visual Arts Department presents student works from VA 116 – Introduction to Studio II: Space, Form, Time.
The exhibition "For The Duration..." runs Monday to Friday (9:00 – 5:30) June 21 - 26 in B136 & C1401 Opening Reception Thursday June 21 in B 136 at 7pm
Participating students include :
- Caitlin Smyth
- Cheyenne Bell
- Chris Kim
- Evelyn Dewar
- Jessica Macbeth
- Jocelyn Smith
- John Park
- Kristi Kotanko
- Li xin Liang
- LoAnne Nguyen
- Meshaal Alzeer
- Wenhao Shi
VA115 student works Opening Reception Wednesday April 11, 4:00-6:30
2387 Ware Street
March 23 - April 17, 2012
Opening Sunday March 15 1:00 - 4:00 pm Visual Arts Diploma Graduation Exhibition
Sitelines in S'ólh Téméxw
March 30 - April 11, 2012, weekdays 9:00 am - 5:00 pm
Opening Friday March 30 3:00 pm in B136 Gallery 5:00 pm in B101 The students in the Lens of Empowerment project invite you to attend the exhibit Sitelines in S'ólh Téméxw on the Abbotsford campus of the University of the Fraser Valley. Through video and photo, eleven Visual Arts students at UFV examine women's identity and citizenship in Stó:lō Traditional Territory. We look forward to having you join us Friday, March 30 for our Stó:lō opening ceremony, light refreshments, photo exhibit (B136) and video screening (B101).
For moreinformation about this project, read the article in the latest summer 2012issue of Skookum magazine available at: http://blogs.ufv.ca/skookum/
Sinter
March 14 - 27, 2012 VA331 student works
UFV Visual Arts Faculty
February 24 - March 9, 2012 9:00 - 5:00 pm Opening: Thursday, March 1 5:00 pm
recent work by UFV visual arts faculty
Epilogue
opening Jan 26, 2012
3:00 - 4:00 pm
VA115 student works
Cultural Poster Exhibition
January 11 - February 3, 2012

WHY HASN'T EVERYTHING ALREADY DISAPPEARED?
Dec 7, 2011- Jan 16, 2012 AH401 student works The human species is doubtless the only one to have invented a specific mode of disappearance that has nothing to do with Nature's law. Perhaps even an art of disappearance.
The current exhibition started out as a creative critical writing project, in which students of AH 401/The Idea of Art were asked to address theorist Jean Baudrillard's text, Why Hasn't Everything Already Disappeared? (Seagull Books, 2007) and thesis on the vanishing of reality through the transmutation of the real into the virtual (blurb). True to the spirit of the classical dialectic of thesis and anti-thesis what you behold is less a synthesis than it is a deconstruction – a deconstruction of a deconstruction. Thus, address Jean Baudrillard's question: Why hasn't everything already disappeared? This is indeed a slippery question. On the one hand it implies disappearance, or, at the very least, it implies the possibility of disappearance – that disappearance is imminent (as in pending, forthcoming) and immanent, within, inherent, inevitable. On the other, it posits astonishment: Why hasn't everything already disappeared? The astonishment resides in Baudrillard's use of the adverb already. It is the author's choice of this word precisely that makes the noun disappearance inevitable. Thus his query is a statement of surprise perhaps even disbelief, shocking as it is. We should have disappeared – already! Yet here we are – disappearing?
Past Exhibitions, 2011 —
multiples
opening reception Nov 30 5:30 - 7:00 pm
continues (weekdays) Nov 30 - Dec 6, 2011 VA116 student works
trans
Dec 1 - 9, 2011 VA131 student works
21 days
Sep 26 - Oct 3, 2011 VA132 student works
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