Exhibition May 27th to June 14th, 2008
Opening Wednesday, May 28th, 2008 (5pm-7pm)
return to "Past Exhibitions" page

 

Braemer

Braemer

(UNITED STATES)
Exuberant, vibrant and prodigious, are the recent words used by a New York writer to describe William Braemer’s unique talents. William Braemer has created a unique series of work for his first solo exhibition in Canada. In this series, William has created paintings with vibrant colors, textures and high gloss finishes. His works are mixed media on canvas each one exploding with passion diversity and excitement.











Prokop

PROKOP

(HUNGARY)
Prokop was born in Budapest in 1953. He graduated from the Teacher Training College in Eger as a teacher of Biology and drawing in 1978. He studied Biology at József Attila University of Arts between 1981 and 1983 in Szeged, then philosophy in 1984 in Budapest, film aesthetics in 1987 and between 1991 and 1993 he studied design at the University of Applied Arts. He has studied and worked in New York, Heidelberg, Auckland and several other parts of the world. As well as painting and drawing, he has worked with glass for 20 years, learning the process of making lead-glass and tiffany. The surfaces, panels and pictures, like a mosaic, reflect the natural forms seen during the author's trips, through the eyes of a biologist-artist.


Bélanger

bÉLANGER

(CANADA)
Bélanger is an architect who has been developing his practice in the region of Quebec since 1980. He obtained his Masters in Architecture, along with his Doctorate in Geography from the University of Laval. Bélanger has taught "Architectural Composition" and practical training in the Architectural School of the University of Laval. His pictoral practice has a direct link to his concept of "architecture as organization of living space". For him, each canvas is a field of exploration of spatial distribution, used to experiment and to illustrate the principles of architectural morphology: the relationships between form/structure, chance/necessity and object/context. In this way, figurative and abstract art are not excluded, but are complementary to the illustration of the concepts of pictoral composition.