grunt gallery

grunt gallery
Established 1984
Location Mount Pleasant, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Type art gallery
Director Glenn Alteen [1]
Curator By Committee
Website grunt gallery

grunt gallery is an artist-run centre located in Vancouver, BC, with a vision to be an internationally renowned artist-run centre furthering contemporary art practice. Through the exploration of diverse Canadian cultural identity, grunt has built strong links with the Aboriginal community. The gallery offers public programming in exhibitions, performances, artist talks, publications and special projects. The main goal of this non-profit organization is to inspire public dialogue by creating an environment conducive to the emergence of innovative, collaborative, and provocative Canadian contemporary art. Grunt has long been committed to presenting creative work that is cutting-edge, challenging and often controversial, work that would not be championed or exposed otherwise. Over the past 26 years, grunt has produced hundreds of ongoing programs in exhibitions, performance, publications and special projects.

History

Established in 1984, grunt gallery was part of the second generation of Vancouver’s artist-run centres, such as Main Exit (1980–84), Unit/Pitt (1980-), Reflections (1982–83), Or Gallery (1983-), (N)on Commercial (1984–1985), the Convertible Showroom (1984–86), Artspeak (1986-), Clochard (1987-) and Gallery T.O.O (1988–89).[2] It was founded by Glenn Alteen, Kempton Dexter, Danielle Peacock, Susan MacKinley, Garry Ross, Dawn Richards, Billy Gene, Hillary Wood and Daniel Olson.[3] The first meetings for the Vancouver Fringe Festival happened at grunt in 1985 and grunt was a venue for the festival until 1989. From 1987 until 1994 singer Kate Hammett Vaughan and guitarist Ron Samworth produce a weekly jazz improv series called Jazz in the Gallery. After 1990 grunt developed a number of Performance Series that ran at the same time as the Vancouver Fringe Festival including the 1990 Vancouver Performance Art Series, 1991 The Chicago Series, Performance Poets Series Masque of the Red Death and 1992 First Nations Performance Series. In 1993 Queer City Festival and Two Spirit Performance Series were produced. In 1994, grunt and artist Pat Beaton produced the Mount Pleasant Community Fence, one of Vancouver’s first engaged public art projects. In 1995, grunt produced the series Halfbred, that focused on issues of miscegenation, bisexuality and transgender communities with the Pitt Gallery. This is also the year when grunt obtained its own space. In 1996, production of the Mattering Map by Pia Masse, another engaged community public art focused on the working class diners of East Vancouver. In 1999, grunt produced Live at the End of the Century, a six-week performance festival celebrating the 20th Anniversary of the Living Art Festival in 1979. Thanks to this event’s success, grunt created “Live Biennial of Performance Art” in 2001, which still exists today. In 2008, grunt produced the Medicine Project, a website by Dana Claxton and Tania Willard.[4] In 2009, the Vancouver Art in the 60’s web site was produced by Lorna Brown with the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery at UBC.[5] In 2010, grunt launched Media Lab Campaign and Activating The Archive Project begins. In 2011, the Media lab opened and ATA series of web site projects were developed.

Involvement in First Nation Art

With over 20 years work with the First Nations artists’ communities, grunt’s archive contains documentary reproduction of many works: performances on video, black and white photography and exhibitions on slides, more recently accompanied by digital photography. The gallery specialized throughout the 1990s in First Nation’s artists of all levels of experience and media could exhibit their works. Among the most important of the First Nations events developed by grunt is, in 1997, the performance An Indian Act Shooting the Indian Act by Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun. In two locations in the UK took place the project Positive+ looking at issues of HIV and AIDS, after the cocktail, with the Roundhouse Community Centre. In 2002, grunt produced the conference, Indian Acts - Aboriginal Performance Art with TRIBE.[6] In 2005, as a part of LIVE Biennial, grunt created the community project Nova Library and also its first archival Website First Nations Performance.[7] In 2006, grunt launched the First Visions Project with three websites,[8] this is also the year when Grunt Gallery Legacy Endowment was set up through the Vancouver Foundation. In 2007, Live In Public- The Art of Engagement Conference[9] and Aboriginal Creators Project with websites by Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun,[10] Rebecca Belmore[11] and Dana Claxton[12] were created.

Beat Nation project

Working with a diverse group of artists and musicians, grunt gallery director Glenn Alteen initiated a project for an online gallery and invited Tania Willard and Skeena Reece, Aboriginal artists and curators, both with ties to Aboriginal youth communities, to curate an online exhibition.[13] Beat Nation took off, and continues to grow, from an art exhibition and performance at SAW Gallery as part of BC Scene in Ottawa, Ontario to performance art events with Beat Nation artists in Saskatoon and co-curator Skeena Reece’s performance as part of the 2010 Sydney Biennale in Australia.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.