麻豆传媒

 

Dal community set to show its artistic talents

Student, Staff, Faculty and Alumni exhibition at the Dal Art Gallery

- December 13, 2012

John Pennoyer, "Sub-Exposition" (right) and "Spill Hat" (left), acrylic on canvas. (Wes Johnston photos)
John Pennoyer, "Sub-Exposition" (right) and "Spill Hat" (left), acrylic on canvas. (Wes Johnston photos)

It鈥檚 that time of year again: students are in the midst of exams and everyone is preparing for the holidays. But it鈥檚 also time for the artists within the Dal community to show us their talents at the annual Student, Staff, Faculty and Alumni (SSFA) Exhibition.

This year marks the 59th SSFA show and, as usual, the work on display features a wide range of media, subjects, and formats 鈥 everything from traditional watercolour paintings to pieces in more unusual media.

Here are the stories behind just a few of the great contributions you can discover at the exhibit, which runs through December 22 at the 麻豆传媒 Art Gallery. (For operating hours, .) An opening reception will be held Thursday, Dec. 13 at 8 p.m.

The miracle of photography


Professor emeritus in the Department of Biochemistry at 麻豆传媒, Ford Doolittle has been submitting art to the SSFA exhibition for the past 20 years. He鈥檚 been attending NSCAD University part time almost as long.

Dr. Doolittle鈥檚 submission to this year鈥檚 show, a triptych of digital photos titled Sin and Redemption, is testament to his years of hard work 鈥 and to his passion for the medium.

鈥淧hotography takes me outside of myself,鈥 he explains. 鈥淧hotography is about the world, [whereas] my academic life is about what鈥檚 inside my head.鈥 He adds that spending time on his NSCAD assignments has also helped him solve problems in his 鈥渟cience life.鈥

Dr. Doolittle took the photos in Dublin, Ireland when visiting for a conference. Aside from the location, they鈥檙e also linked by the colour red: reflections in a bar window; a pair of shoes nestled together outside Dublin鈥檚 General Post Office; and a religious iconography shop. The title, of course, pulls the three together.

As he doesn鈥檛 travel all that often, he says it鈥檚 鈥渂etter to find interesting subjects in what鈥檚 close at hand.鈥 Whatever his subject, Dr. Doolittle finds photography a means of expressing that it鈥檚 鈥渕iraculous that the world exists at all 鈥 that鈥檚 what photography is for. You can find [the miraculous] anywhere.鈥

Memories, characters and more


The medium of photography is presented another way in 49 to 55, a delicate collage of 20-some photos transferred onto silk organza and hand-stitched together. The photos were taken from 麻豆传媒 yearbooks between 1949 and 1959 鈥 back when Anneke Henderson鈥檚 parents were students at Dal.

Prof. Henderson, instructor in the Department of Theatre鈥檚 Costume Studies program and a Dal alumna herself, says her motivation to create the piece came from a desire 鈥渢o celebrate [my parents] and their time at Dal. It鈥檚 100 per cent sentimental.鈥

Most of the images in 49 to 55 (see image below) are glimpses into her parents鈥 social lives, from varsity teams to the many formal dances they attended (including Prof. Henderson鈥檚 favourite image: her mother鈥檚 dance card from a Munro Day Dance).



Those discoveries illuminate the community side of university life. 鈥淵ou spend a lot of time with the same people in your own field of study, sharing experiences,鈥 she explains, adding that she hopes her own students appreciate the relationships they鈥檙e building now.

Prof. Henderson isn鈥檛 alone in representing the Department of Theatre. John Pennoyer, also in Costume Studies, submitted two figurative paintings, Sub-Exposition and Spill Hat (pictured at the top of this story), featuring a central character he dubs 鈥淭he Hide-Bound Man.鈥

鈥淸The Hide-Bound Man] represents a person bound up with preconceptions and cultural assumptions,鈥 Prof. Pennoyer explains. 鈥淗e鈥檚 essentially a self-portrait. But everyone makes automatic assumptions.鈥

He first creates his images in Photoshop, then grids them for transfer to canvas. 鈥淢y mouse dexterity is something fierce!鈥 he says. His skill with a paintbrush is a force to be reckoned with too, thanks to formal training in draftsmanship.

He says Spill Hat is a response to the BP oil spill. The painting鈥檚 serious content seems in contrast to its visual effect: a carnival of colours and patterns, surrounding a man sporting a bulbous, blue jellyfish. But as Prof. Pennoyer points out, grinning, 鈥渏ust because it鈥檚 serious doesn鈥檛 mean it can鈥檛 be amusing.鈥

Students combining academics and art


There鈥檚 a similar contrast in another collage titled Understand, with a somewhat serious message conveyed by a colourful image. Created by the students in Ayesha Mushtaq鈥檚 English for Academic Purposes (EAP) class, the piece was an assignment about 鈥渉ow multiculturalism in Canada should be a two-way phenomenon.鈥

Small flags, including those of the students鈥 home countries, were carefully overlaid inside a map of Canada, creating a mosaic effect. In the corners are words meaning 鈥渉ello鈥 and 鈥渃omprehend鈥 in Chinese, Arabic, French and a regional dialect of Burkina Faso.

Prof. Mushtaq says the project was 鈥渁 covert method of teaching vocabulary, encouraging critical thinking and generating discussion in class,鈥 as well as an opportunity for the students to participate in university culture outside the Department of Continuing Education as they prepare to begin regular academic classes at Dal in the winter semester.

Collaborating on the collage were students from China, Saudi Arabia and Burkina Faso: Mohammed Al-rashed, Wenfen Zhu, Jian Han, Jing Zhen, Noha, Nouf, Hankun, Arnold Zound, Mohammed Nasser, Sultan Alanazi, Wael Jefry, and Khaled Al-qahtani.

Also representing the student population is Kelsey Evaniew, a second-year student in the Sculich School of Law. While completing her physiology degree, Evaniew was too busy to draw. But now her interest in human physiology has another outlet.

Hold On, a pencil drawing of a human heart, is very realistic 鈥 up to a point. 鈥淭he heart, arteries and veins are anatomically correct,鈥 she explains. 鈥淏ut I took liberties where the veins and arteries start to branch out.鈥

She says drawing helps her maintain her life balance: 鈥淒oing art . . . ensures I鈥檓 not studying all day and night,鈥 she adds.

Father-daughter painting challenge


When Dr. Jock Murray was doing post-graduate studies in the late 1960s, he and his wife went to England with their four small children. They were poor students, he says, but they bought a Westfalia camper van and made trips around the UK on weekends.

鈥淲e spent a wonderful year in this camper,鈥 recalls Dr. Murray, professor emeritus with 麻豆传媒 Medical School. 鈥淚t鈥檚 become an important symbol of our family.鈥

Memories of that year are captured in one of Dr. Murray鈥檚 three submissions, 4 Kids and a Westfalia, a charming portrait of the blue camper van in question. The piece has an unexpected feature: hanging from the bottom of the frame is the original license plate.

The piece is also the product of a challenge he and his daughter Shannon started last Spring. (Shannon is an English professor at the University of Prince Edward Island and submitted two paintings this year.) 鈥淚 used to paint when I was young,鈥 Dr. J. Murray says. 鈥淢y daughter was also starting to paint around the time I started again, and we decided to try doing a painting a day for a month.鈥

Both of Shannon鈥檚 paintings are playful explorations of colour using different techniques. Calm is a small painting of a dingy against bright ochre sand and deep blue water, with smooth, almost invisible brushstrokes. Currents captures a bloom of jellyfish in thick purple and blue impasto paint 鈥 it鈥檚 鈥渢he result of seeing what appeared when I put way too much paint on a canvas,鈥 she says.

She adds that during their month-long painting challenge, she and her father emailed photos of their work to each other. 鈥淗e is my kindest critic,鈥 she says.