Arts Letter Vol. XXXIV No. 6 November/December 2014 Vol. XXXIV No. 6 November/December 2014 m Untitled, nd., A.J. Casson, serigraph, 4 ¾” x 3 ⅞”, Gift of J.W. McGinnis, 1984.01.06 2 j A Penticton Art Gallery 199 Marina Way Penticton, BC V2A 1H5 www.pentictonartgallery.com Publication Agreement #40032521 o v 1 3 Arts Letter Vol. XXXIV No. 6 November/December 2014 Mission Statement PENTICTON ART GALLERY 199 Marina Way, Penticton, BC V2A 1H5 Tel: 250-493-2928 Fax: 250-493-3992 E-mail: info@pentictonartgallery.com www.pentictonartgallery.com www.twitter.com/pentartgallery The Arts Letter is the newsletter for members of the Penticton Art Gallery. ISSN 1195-5643 Publication Agreement # 40032521 GALLERY HOURS Tuesday to Friday - 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday & Sunday - 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. GALLERY ADMISSION Members Free, Students & Children Free Weekends Free Adult Non-Members $2 MEMBERSHIP Members of the gallery pay an annual subscription fee and receive the following benefits: free admission to the gallery; six (6) issues of the Arts Letter; library and voting privileges; invitations to gallery receptions; exclusive discounts in the Gift Gallery, on workshops and for special events. The Penticton Art Gallery exists to exhibit, interpret, preserve and promote the visual artistic heritage of the region, the province and the nation. Values Statement In setting the Mission Statement, the Board of Directors also identifies the following values: Community Responsibility The gallery interacts with the community by designing programs that inspire, challenge, educate and entertain while recognizing excellence in the visual arts. Professional Responsibility The gallery employs curatorial expertise to implement the setting of exhibitions, programs and services in accordance with nationally recognized professional standards of operation. Fiscal Responsibility The gallery conducts the operations and programs within the scope of the financial and human resources available. Art on the Way NOVEMBER 7 ~ First Fridays ~ 7:30 p.m. NOVEMBER 11 ~ Remembrance Day Gallery Closed Annual Fees (including 5% gst) Corporate Small Business Individual Family/Dual Senior Senior Dual NOVEMBER 13 ~ Kitchen Stove Film ~ Railway Man & Young@Art - 3:15 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. $157.50 $ 94.50 $ 31.50 $ 47.25 $ 26.25 $ 36.75 BOARD OF DIRECTORS President: Nicholas Vincent, Vice-president: Gayle Cornish, Treasurer: Marcia Gee Directors: Karen Brownlee, Marissa Fox, Brigitte Liapis, NOVEMBER 14 ~ Annual Soup Bowls Project Doors Open 6:30 p.m. NOVEMBER 20 ~ Young@Art - 3:15 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. NOVEMBER 21 ~ Exhibition Openings ~ 7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. NOVEMBER 26 ~ Topics & Tea 2:00 p.m. Milton Orris ~ What is your CQ (creativity quotient)? Daniel Lo Board Email: board@pentictonartgallery.com NOV. 27 & DEC. 4 ~ Young@Art - 3:15 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. STAFF DECEMBER 5 ~ First Fridays ~ 7:30 p.m. Director-Curator: Paul Crawford DECEMBER 11 ~ Young@Art - 3:15 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Email: curator@pentictonartgallery.com DECEMBER 17 ~ Topics & Tea 2:00 p.m. Jenny Long ~ Abstract Portraits: Embracing Your Unique Visual Portrait Administrator: Rosemarie Fulbrook Email: admin@pentictonartgallery.com Art Preparator: Glenn Clark Email: artprep@pentictonartgallery.com DECEMBER 11 ~ Young@Art - 3:15 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Visitor Services Coordinator: Dawn Hoffert DECEMBER 25 - JANUARY 1 Gallery Closed Email: reception@pentictonartgallery.com Curatorial Assistant: Brooke Nyhus Email: education@pentictonartgallery.com Weekend Reception: Jacinta Ferrari Email: info@pentictonartgallery.com The gallery is wheelchair accessible. from all of us at the Penticton Art Gallery 2 Arts Letter Vol. XXXIV No. 6 November/December 2014 Director / Curator’s Report FALL @ THE GALLERY It’s been an incredible year and its hard to believe just how quickly its all slipped beneath my feet and become a blur in the rear view mirror. The end of the year forces one to acknowledge not only the passage of time, but also the compression of time and regardless of the laws of physics all I know is time is speeding up. This coming year I need to find ways to regain control and slow it back down to a pace that allows one to stop to take a breath more often and take in the view. I am excited to see what Brooke and Glenn have in store in this final exhibition of the year. Dipping into the vault they have gathered a selection of their favorite works, which have been generously donated to the gallery over the past number of years. This is the culmination of a year long project where we have been recataloguing these donations and building a database of artist biography’s for inclusion on our webpage as a virtual exhibition. This will become an invaluable resource for those looking for more information on our permanent collection and the artists whose work we have collected. It’s an interesting process stepping back and letting go and I look forward to where this exhibition may lead to in the future. I thank you all for your continued prayers and best wishes for Rosemarie and we are all hoping that she will be able to get down to the gallery more often in the new year as her presence has been missed and the hole hard to fill. If I am afforded one Christmas wish this year I am sending it her way and wish her and her family nothing but the best and hope that the treatments begin to take hold and turn the tide in her favour. I am also grateful to the amazing staff I get to work with on a daily basis and this past year they have each proved their worth time and time again stepping up in more ways than I could have imagined. Thank you for your commitment and belief in this organization and for being the backbone of this fantastic community resource. Their presence is further enhanced by the incredible volunteers who help out on so many occasions and this coming year we are looking to further enhance our volunteer program and I hope that we will have new opportunities for volunteers to get involved in the daily operations of the gallery not just with special events. As space is short I would like to end with a huge thanks to all those who have supported the gallery in any way, shape or form over the past year be it through a much needed donation of artwork, cash, time, the purchase of a ticket to an event or program, the purchase of a membership or payment of admission, the sharing of the gallery with friends, serving on our board, attending our AGM, exhibition openings, special events, as a funder, sponsor and donor, and any other way big and small not mentioned above, you have all made an investment in your community gallery and we couldn’t survive if it were not for this incredible and widespread support. In closing I wish you all the very best of the upcoming holiday season and I hope and trust you will all have an opportunity to spend time with those you love and take stock of all that is important to you in your life and give thanks to the little things that far too often go unrecognized. Please take care to be safe and take some time to look out for those who are less fortunate and spread some of that holiday cheers we hear so much about. Thanks again and I look forward to seeing you all in the new year and to meeting the newest member of the gallery family due on New Year’s Eve to our Board President Nicholas and his wife Jennifer Vincent. Sincerely, Paul Crawford 3 Arts Letter Vol. XXXIV No. 6 November/December 2014 Toni Onley Gallery ~ NOVEMBER 14 - DECEMBER 24, 2014 UNDER $300 CHRISTMAS SALE 2014 Annual Appeal Exhibition Opening: Friday, November 21st ~ 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. November 4, 2014 Every October the gallery puts a call out to artists of all kinds to submit three artworks all priced at $300 or under and each year this Dear Gallery Friends and Supporters: exhibition receives more and more interest from artisans, crafters and visual artists working in all media from across British ColumThe Penticton Art Gallery has limitless potential and is well bia. known as a welcoming community space where you can come and Some of you keeners may already be underway in your holiday engage and experience the visual arts in its many different forms. purchases while others leave their shopping until last minute. ReOur Gallery is a place for experimentation, learning, creativity, gardless, this annual show is always something to check out, whethand building connections. It is a refuge, a place to become iner it be a gift for a friend, loved one, or that perfect little something spired, and feel challenged… and best of all, the Penticton Art for yourself. Gallery is your community asset and it belongs to you! This exhibition is open to any artist who wants to submit. It not It’s been a number of years since we have reached out to our com- only provides us with some tempting, unique and wonderful gifts, but an excellent cross-section of the talent and artistic happenings munity and undertaken an Annual Appeal and this comes at an in our community. The mixture of artists range from professional, exciting time for the Gallery and our community as we are both exhibiting artists to teenagers showing their work for the first time poised on the cusp of renewed growth and revitalization. It’s exand everything in between. citing to see that our community recognizes the arts and culture sector as a key component of the future economic development of It is always amazing to see the support and turn out we get for this Penticton, providing employment and attracting tourists and locals sale. It’s even more intriguing to see the artwork that people caredowntown, thereby increasing the dollars spent on accommodafully choose to take home with them. It sure makes a one of a kind tion, restaurants, bars, transportation and shopping. gift! As members and supporters, we know you value the contribution the Penticton Art Gallery makes to the cultural, social and economic fabric of our community. We greatly appreciate the support you have shown us through your feedback, input, volunteer hours, donations, letters and participation in our programs over the past number of years. Although the City and other funders have been generous with their support, we still need the support of the community. We need our members and friends to join us in achieving our goal of continuing to develop a world-class cultural asset and resource in our community. We are passionate about the sustainability of the Gallery, our plan for facility development, and our goals for the upcoming year (s), and we are asking for your help. Please show your support by making a contribution of any amount to our Annual Appeal, investing not only in our future, but also that of our community ensuring that we will continue to provide meaningful visual arts programming for all members of our community for years to come. We would like to thank everyone who has submitted works to this year’s show. Whether you’re a first timer or have been submitting since the beginning, we appreciate your hard work and support of your gallery. So get into the festive spirit and come on down to view these amazing artworks and potentially make one of them your own. We here at the gallery get an early Christmas this year with unwrapping roughly 200 works and hanging them up for display. We make sure the show is hung for our Soup Bowls Project which is running in its 18th year on November 14th. Roughly 350 people are in the gallery that evening and it’s a great kick-off to the sale. The official opening of the Christmas Sale will be November 21st from 7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. The show runs until December 24th, 2014. I look forward to working with you for many years to come, and if you have any questions regarding the gallery, would like more information on our collection and/or programs, or perhaps you would like a personal tour of our facility, please contact me here at the gallery and let’s make arrangements to meet in person. Oh behalf of the board and staff of the Penticton Art Gallery, I wish you and your family the very best of the season and we look forward to seeing you more often over the coming year. Sincerely yours, Paul Crawford Director / Curator Sisters Thaw & Paw Simon (pictured) along with Ka Nyaw Simon are returning to Mae Sot Thailand bringing donated art supplies to the Mae La Refugee Camp. The PAG will host an exhibit of their art in 2016. Julie Fowler & Paul Crawford visited there last April. 4 Arts Letter Vol. XXXIV No. 6 November/December 2014 Main Gallery ~ NOVEMBER 21 - JANUARY 18, 2015 SHIFTING CULTURAL BOUNDARIES WORKS FROM THE PERMANENT COLLECTION Exhibition Opening: Friday, November 21st ~ 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. Wounded by Holiness Icon, nd. ManWoman mixed media Gift of Edward Mile We all surround ourselves with things that give us comfort and let’s be honest, we live in a consumerist society and all feel a bit of guilty pleasure every once in a while after purchasing certain things. For some it becomes an addiction of sorts, and our personal belongings become akin to a museum collection. This hard push for acquisitions would be a good way to describe the gallery holdings of late, with several works of art from important artists joining the vault every year. Unlike at home though, this collection is for the benefit of the entire community, province and nation, not unlike our exhibiting mandate. Museum collections are varied and the public collections of individual galleries like the PAG often reflect the historic and contemporary artistic endeavors of its particular region. Our collections policy may have a regional focus, but does not exclude works of art from other regions which help to place the works created in this region within a provincial, national or international context. The policy allows us to seek out works of art specific to the region, either by subject matter or by artist, works can be sought out which relate in some way to the cultural fabric of society in the South Okanagan. New additions to the collection must be considered carefully when considering the museum’s defined area of interest. Accessioning an object carries an obligation to care for that object in perpetuity and is a serious decision and therefore before a work is accessioned into the collection it must go through a formal, legal process. Final decision to accept an object generally lies with the museum's board of trustees. Once the decision has been made to accept an object, it is formally accessioned through a Deed of Gift and entered into the museum's catalog records. Once accessioned into the collection, museum objects must be appropriately cared for. Museum storage conditions are meant to protect the object and to minimize any deterioration. This often means keeping objects in a stable climate, preventing exposure to pests, minimizing any handling and using only archival materials that will not deteriorate or harm the objects. Object safety also includes providing appropriate security, and planning for disasters and other threats, and making sure that museum staff are trained in proper handling procedures. The collection then becomes a public resource and is often used by historians, scholars, family members, other artists or interested individuals doing research. It is impossible to showcase the entire gallery holdings with over one thousands objects in our care, but it is our obligation, if not honour, to periodically roll out exhibitions from our collection. This exhibition will focus on works donated in the previous six years or so and will be a potpourri of contemporary and historical works by British Columbian artists. Curators have long been considered the authority in their field, and so it is interesting to see what kind of work they collect and how it reflects upon their taste and point of view. When choosing art for the collection the curator typically looks at work singularly in comparison to choosing an exhibition of highlights where many things must be considered amongst them being the significance of each particular piece of art as it relates to another. The art must pass the curatorial standard of excellence and importance and it should have a sound provenance and its creator should have a strong exhibition history and be a contributor to the artistic fabric of the region, province or nation. The art produced by these artists goes beyond decoration, this is the art that tackles the tough issues such as war, environment, corruption, love, it is the art that comes with a message. It is what is defined as high art. High art comes with an elitist stigma and this is where it becomes tricky for the curator trying to balance exhibiting work deemed elitist in a socialist manner. During the nineteenth century social commentators were discussing and defining the trends set apart by the elite classes from the bourgeoisie and the populace. The ideologies of ‘high’ or ‘elite’ art and culture versus those of ‘low’ art and culture were being defined and established around this time. The mass produced culture borne of industrialisation was a form of low culture for the working classes and it has endured since. It is thought the disruptive nature of the raw and uncultivated masses would interfere with politics and affect the social structure and order and that the social function of culture is to police this disruptive presence. This debasement of art and culture, an intellectually reduced culture, is a debasement of emotional life and the quality of living. The shift in culture has never been more complex with the advent of the internet and the modern audience has more tools to investigate the depth of understanding. However mainstream media continues to blur the lines of high art/low art concepts, in turn controlled to shape our consumption habits. Where does the modern curator draw the line? How does the curator separate and blend high from low, and does the modern day art museum shed the elitist stigma that has dogged it for centuries by doing so? Thus begins the delicate dance between high art and low art; what is what and how it pertains to the gallery mandate to promote audience participation, education, artistic excellence and viewer appreciation. When making a distinction between high and low art we should think about the difference between art as a business venture and art as a product of the creative process. Art is typically something that is created and bought as part of the business of the art world, whereas creativity is something all people do at some point in their lives. As a result, popular and traditional forms of art now influence each other, therefore closing the divide between high and low culture. It is important then for today’s curators to differentiate the categories, or is it? This complex relationship between art, the artist and the audience is reflected nowhere more clearly than in the galleries which display them, people will always want to see works in person. The recent shifting of subculture or mainstream culture into high culture has allowed contemporary curators to acknowledge these class differences and by blending them, modern museums are not only bucking the trend of art for the bourgeoisie but are also letting galleries become stewards for things like social justice and the environment. This makes art a powerful tool by enlightening people and fostering critical thought. Continued on page 7... 5 Arts Letter Vol. XXXIV No. 6 November/December 2014 Penticton Art Gallery is a lovely place to work, and over the years we have received expressions of interest from many kind people who wanted to volunteer their services — whether it be to help with the mailing of our newsletter, working at the front desk or doing odd jobs at one of our famous fundraisers. We are in the process of establishing a more structured volunteer program, and step one of this process is to verify that we have current contact information for all our volunteers. Towards this end, in October we sent out an email to all volunteers for whom we have an email address; we are currently phoning the remainder. In the meantime, if you happen to be at the gallery in person, we invite you to stop by our front desk to update the information on your form. We would also be delighted to accept applications from new volunteers. Whether you would enjoy setting up tables and pouring tea at our monthly Topics & Tea, manning the microphone at the First Fridays or de-cobwebbing our windows and shelving books in the library, we will find a niche for your talents. By January we hope to have everything updated, and the gallery humming with the activity of happy volunteers. Paul Kirschmann is a Naramata resident who be- gan wood turning as a hobby many years ago. His patience and skill has allowed him to create some amazing items that we are happy to have on display in our Gift Gallery. He only uses local fruit woods to create his pieces which means each work is truly an Okanagan original. Please visit our Gift Gallery to view this amazing work. 6 Arts Letter Vol. XXXIV No. 6 November/December 2014 OTHER GALLERIES IN THE INTERIOR... SHIFTING CULTURAL BOUNDARIES WORKS FROM THE PERMANENT COLLECTION continued... It is the artists that make the observation, and the gallery to share those insights and visual thoughts. Our curator has done a brilliant job of late in engaging the local public with many tough and hard hitting exhibitions that challenge the status quo. This exhibition, while highlighting a half decade of collecting at the PAG, will also reflect the taste and intellectual leanings of our Curator. It will showcase some of the best art produced in the province during the twentieth century, it will challenge the notion of class distinctions by bringing it to the public domain, and it will inspire the viewer through the excellence of its creation. It must be exciting work being the curator of a gallery, and this exhibition will question the politics that affect the social structure and order while highlighting the accomplishments of those bearing the message. Art is a powerful tool and to wield it properly takes many years of practice, and this gathering of work by likeminded artists will attest to the notion of shifting cultural boundaries within a world where nothing ever seems to change at all. -Glenn Clark ALTERNATOR GALLERY, KELOWNA www.alternatorgallery.com Please contact the gallery for exhibit information GALLERY VERTIGO, VERNON www.galleryvertigo.com Please contact the gallery for exhibit information *GRAND FORKS ART GALLERY www.grandforksartgallery.ca September 27-November 15 Brent Bukowski—by-product Brian Roche ~ Resume * KAMLOOPS ART GALLERY www.kag.bc.ca October 18-December 31 A Terrible Beauty ~ Edward Burtynsky in Dialogue with Emily Carr * KELOWNA ART GALLERY www.kelownaartgallery.com October 11-January 4 Professional Native Indian Artists Inc. * KOOTENAY GALLERY OF ART, CASTLEGAR www.kootenaygallery.com November 14-December 24 Christmas at the Gallery OSOYOOS ART GALLERY www.osoyoosarts.com May 17 - September 6 Summer Show & Sale SALMON ARM ART GALLERY www.salmonarmartscentre.ca/visit/ November 8-29 Cindy Whitehead ~ Heart Wide Open December 3—20 Dark Nights ~ Group Exhibition SUMMERLAND ART GALLERY www.summerlandarts.com Until November 15 Doug Wilson ~ Magic Light, An Interplay of light and Colour Three Stages, 1990 Laurie Papou oil on panel Donated by Iain Ross and Laurie Papou, 2008.09.01 *TOUCHSTONES NELSON www.touchstonesnelson.ca Please contact the gallery for exhibit information *TWO RIVERS GALLERY, PRINCE GEORGE www.tworiversartgallery.com October 23-February 1 Sonny Assu ~ Recent Work Selected Works from the Permanent Collection * VERNON ART GALLERY www.vernonpublicartgallery.com July 31 - October 9 Sonny Assu, Jordan Bennett, Cheryl L’Hirondelle, Nigit’stil Norbert, Barry Pottle; Bear Witness ~ Decolonize Me Adultery is a Sin, 2005 William Featherstone oil on panel Gift of Steve Featherstone, 2009.05.01 7 * Indicates Reciprocal Membership Arts Letter Vol. XXXIV No. 6 November/December 2014 A Kitchen Stove Film Presentation Available at the Penticton Art Gallery - 199 Marina Way (250-493-2928) and The Book Shop – 242 Main Street (250-492-6661) All movies are screened at the Landmark 7 Cinema, 250 Winnipeg Street, Penticton. *Limited single tickets $15 may be available at the door. No refunds or exchanges.* Pre-purchased Single Tickets: $13 each Railway Man November 13th 4 p.m. ~ 7 p.m. (Australia/UK) Director: Johnathan Teplitzky Cast: Nicole Kidman, Collin Firth, Stellan Skarsgård, Hiroyuki Sanada R The Railway Man recounts the incredible true story of Eric Lomax, a British soldier who endured gruelling conditions as a forced labourer on the infamous “Death Railway” between Bangkok and Rangoon after being captured by Japanese troops during World War II. A quiet, middle-aged radio and railway enthusiast, Lomax (Firth) meets Patti Wallace (Kidman) on a Scottish train in 1983. After a whirlwind courtship, the couple are married— but on their wedding night, and for many nights to come, Eric is gripped by paralyzing nightmares that he refuses to explain to his new bride. Confused and hurt by her husband’s remoteness, Patti turns to Eric’s friend Finlay (Skarsgård) who finally reveals Eric’s story. Railway Man is a vital story of hope and redemption for a world often overcome by violence and hatred. The Hundred Year-Old Man… January 22nd , 2015 4 p.m. ~ 7 p.m. (Sweden) Director: Felix Herngren Cast: Robert Gustafsson, Bianco Cruzeiro, David Wilberg, Iwar Wiklander Unrated The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared follows the unlikely story of a centenarian who decides it’s not too late to start over. Desperate to avoid his 100th birthday party, Allan Karlsson (Gustafsson) defenestrates from his room at a nursing home and heads to the nearest bus station, intending to travel as far as his pocket money will take him. But a spur-of-the-moment decision to steal a suitcase from a fellow passenger launches Allan on a strange and unforeseen journey involving, among other things, some nasty criminals, a very large pile of cash, and an elephant named Sonya. Quirky and utterly unique, The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared is an engaging tale of a life lived to the fullest. PROJECT ROOM ~ NOVEMBER 21 - JANUARY 18, 2015 CONTINUED Levi George’s installation is still underway and will continue into the New Year! We cannot wait to see the final stage of this magnificent, ever-growing tree. Everyone at the gallery and its visitors have loved this installation and enjoyed being able to see the progress of its growth over the past several weeks. We hope you come down to witness this exceptional work of Levi’s. Who knows, it might get some Christmas decorations in December! Levi George is a member of the Syilx Nation in Penticton, British Columbia. He is a young father, uncle, and an invaluable role model within his community and he sees his artwork as a way to inspire his community to be proud of their culture and their commitment and connection to the land. As a professional visual artist his work is rooted in Syilx culture and language, using emotion and expression to connect with his audience. In speaking of his work he writes: “I want to remind people what’s really important in our lives. Our relationship with our planet and following our hearts are far more important than that next big promotion, buying our new clothes and filling our lives with material possession.” Levi is a graduate of the National Aboriginal Professional Artist Training Program in Penticton BC. He works as a Professional Multidisciplinary Visual Artist and is a member of the Ullus Collective. Using what he learns, he works to create a bridge for his viewers to deepen their connections to each other and to nature. 8 ... Levi George, Our Nature, October 2014 LEVI “SNK’LIP” GEORGE: OUR NATURE Arts Letter Vol. XXXIV No. 6 November/December 2014 Proudly sponsored by Come explore the current exhibitions & enjoy a cup of tea and baked goods compliments of The Bench Artisan Food Market. Wednesday, November 26th, 2:00 - 3:00 p.m. Milton Orris ~ What is your CQ (creativity quotient)? An Interactive Session - All of us are familiar with the concept of IQ. However, few of us are aware of our Creativity Quotient – that internal capability that often remains untapped. It can when uncovered lead us into some of the most pleasurable and productive moments in our lives. He will help you uncover and explore your CQ and what it can mean for you in the future. NOVEMBER 7TH & DECEMBER 5TH Open Mic Night in the Tea Room Come down for a jam session, sit and listen, draw, paint, create, it’s up to you! Tea, coffee and snacks by donation. Wednesday, December 17th, 2:00 - 3:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Free Admission ~ Jenny Long ~ “Abstract Portraits: Embracing Your Unique All Ages Welcome Visual Language” Attendees will be introduced to the tools and techniques that Long uses as they watch her demonstrate the entire journey a painting of a portrait takes from beginning to finished state. From the importance of colour mixing as a foundational component, to using a variety of tools and applications of paint to create interesting visual elements, Jenny will go through the process of creating an artwork. THURSDAY AFTERNOONS OCTOBER 30TH—DECEMBER 18TH Glenn & Brooke are back in session. This member drop -in program is open to teenagers ages 11 to 14 on Thursday afternoons from 3:15 – 4:45 p.m. Students draw, paint and focus on projects of particular interest to them. Admission is free for members but pre-registration is required!! Please call the gallery at 250-493-2928. 9 Happy Halloween from our Young@Art instructors, Brooke, Glenn and Dorothy! Arts Letter Vol. XXXIV No. 6 November/December 2014 Thanks to our 2013 Supporters Foundational Donation Marion Armstrong (d.) Donations of $1000 plus Anonymous Donor ~ “For the Menacing & the Wild” Lisa Birnie & John Koerner Vickie Garrett Diane Koerner & Stephen Owen Telus Charitable Giving ~ Rosemary Edge ~ Jim Henderson ~ Cornelia King ~ Claire Hawrys ~ Judy Pratt ~ Travis Vakenti Donations of $500 plus Anonymous Donor Yvonne Adams Robert & Bonnie Ross Donations of $200 plus Mary Chapman Richard & Kathleen Chapman Tom Donaghy Karel Doruyter Hazel Fry & Hal Whyte Jafa Industries Ltd. Brian & Lynn Jackson Tom & Kathleen Jasper Jill Johns & James Robertson Stan & Helen McPherson Wilfrid & Sally Mennell Stewart & Patricia Mulvey Shirley Myers Alan & Gail Nixon Paul Wickland Donations of $100 plus Anonymous Donor Robert & Margaret Abbey Barbara Bell Marielle Brule James Corbett George & Gayle Cornish Lee Davison Bob & Joan Dingman Norm & Cheryl Filipenko GIFTS IN KIND The Bench Artisan Food Market George & Gayle Cornish Jim & Sandra Henderson Douglas B. Johnson Gerry Karr Kemp Harvey Kemp Inc. John Koerner (d.) Robert Kolysher John Kenneth Morrey Naramata Bench Winery Association Maria Pattison Shadowfax Communications MEDIA Penticton Western News Tony & Cheryl Gallowy Jim & Anne Ginns Anne Hargrave & Scott Smith Carole Henderson Kurt & Marianne Hutterli Robert & Mary Jenkins Zuzana Kaufrinder Gisela Kiesewetter Andreas & Georgia Krebs Peter (d.)& Cathie Kroeger Diane Lawrence Ted Lederer Keary & Barbara Levant John Lewall Viv Lieskovsky Peter & Lynne Lighthall Ian & Joan Luckhart Benjamin Manea & Sharon Wiener Carol Meiklejohn Doreen Olson Jack & Jennie Prowse Chris & Sandra Purton Harvey & Sonya Quamme Fred Ritchie Kirsten Robertson & SUPPORTERS Annual Art Auction Classic Gallery Frames Inc. Milchard Design, Summerland Naramata Bench Winery Association Printfactory Soup Bowls Project Bench 1775 Winery Cannery Brewing Co. Penticton Potters’ Guild Corporate Sponsor Innov8 Digital Solutions Inc. Simon Wells Saint Germain Café-Gallery Janice Taaffe Rosita Tovell Richard Williams Donations of $50 plus Ellie Ainsworth Katie Apgar-Knezacek Susan Austen Cindi Lou Baker John & Marilyn Barnay Antonina Cattani Chris Cornett Marilyn Hansen Jack & Norma Howard Shelley Lippert Shirley Malakoff Martha Neufeld Harold & Donna Schellenberg Ursula Todd Brigitta Tate Stephan Wade GIFTS TO THE PERMANENT COLLECTION Dorothea Adaskin Mike & Gail Alcock Stephen Buckle Con Buckley Ruth Budd Rose Braun Barbara James Douglas B. Johnson Keith & Win Lowell Ross Muirhead Maria Pattison David Price Estate of Sophie Rankin Dorothy Redivo Shawn Serfas Takao Tanabe Laura Widmer The Penticton Art Gallery gratefully acknowledges all donations to, and supporters of our income development events including the Annual Art Auction, Kitchen Stove Film Series, Soup Bowls Project and In the Eye of the Beholder. Charitable Organization # 11879 0419 RR0001 10 Arts Letter Vol. XXXIV No. 6 November/December 2014 Foundational Donors End Notes ... Thank you ~ Virginia Jewell for reception assistance ~ Vickie Garrett, Marianne Lobel & Jennifer Cline for helping with Arts Letter mail out ~ Winter Vanasse & Vickie Garrett for assisting at the opening ~ Martin Bouchard for helping install our shiny new dishwasher ~ Dorothy Tinning for helping instruct in our Young@Art program! With thanks to our donors from February 21 to April 25: Robert & Margaret Abbey, Ellie Ainsworth, Katie Apgar-Knezacek, Richard & Kathleen Chapman, Joanne Forsyth, Tom & Kathleen Jasper, Gisela Kiesewetter, Andreas & Georgia Krebs, John Lewall, Wilfred & Sally Mennell, Stewart & Patricia Mulvey, Doreen Olson, Sandy & Bonnie Ross, Henk & Johanna Saaltink, Harold & Donna Schellenberg, Margot Stolz, Janice Taaffe, Paul Wickland, Richard Williams The Penticton Art Gallery is grateful for all donations in any amount. Donations over $10 are acknowledged when received by a letter of thanks, a tax receipt and publication in the next edition of the Arts Letter. Financial contributions of $50 or more, In-kind donations valued over $200 and donations to the Permanent Collection receive annually updated recognition on the Sustaining Supporters page in the Arts Letter and the Annual Report and are featured on the donor wall located in the foyer of the gallery. Thank you for your support of the Penticton Art Gallery; it is greatly appreciated. Honorary Life Members Honorary Life Memberships are given to individuals who have rendered extraordinary service to the gallery: June Argyle, Yvonne Adams, Marion Armstrong, Jim Brittain, Alan and Laila Campbell, Betty Clark, Robert Doull, Candy Foran, Vickie Garrett, Rob Hill, Sandra Henderson, Virginia Jewell, Jeanne Lamb, Audrey Lawrie, Natalie Minunzie, Evan Mitchell, Dennis Nielsen, Stan & Elizabeth Pringle, Marge Punnett, Sophie Rankin, Jill Leir Salter, Ruth Schiller, Ret Tinning, Roy & Olga Tomlinson, Lillian Vander Zalm, Barbara Watson, Alphons & Nel Witteman. The Penticton Art Gallery has over 400 members We welcome the following new and renewing members from August 29—October 23 Marlene Aikens Rosanne Bennett & Larry Van Kampen Soni Bone Andrew & Bev Church Jennifer Cline & Celeste Brill Lawrence & Kena Cormier Roger & Sandi Cormier Marlene Cox-Bishop Susan Delatour Dan & Veronica Dimich Colin & Rosemary Edge Shannon Ford & Denis Pelletier Ann Forsyth David & Karen Fort Eveline Gagne Jim & Ann Ginns Joan Grant Russell Harris Barb Hillier Paul & Barb Hofer John & Norma Howard Lois Hunt Ernie Ingles Jackie Inskip Jim Kalnin Zuzana Kaufrinder Donna Keefe Brigid Kemp Merle Kindred Jim & Elizabeth Landecker Jill Lennie Shelley Lippert Barb MacDonald Heather MacDonald Dale & Cyndi McLean Heather Mehrer Lorie Meyer P.J. Mohr Shirley Myers Carole Pient Dorothy Redivo Kirsten Robertson Anne Romanow Elaine Rutherford & Larry Saidman Doug & Don Slater Sue Sloan David Smyth Mike & Kay Townley Laura Turnbull Jill Ummenhofer Merle Waite Larry & Laura Widmer 11 The Penticton Art Gallery recognizes those donors who have made a significant financial contribution to the gallery ($20,000+) through either a onetime gift, or cumulative support over several years. The following categories are considered: permanent collection donations, cash donations, gifts-in-kind and gallery support. The following supporters have contributed at the foundational level from the gallery’s inception to Dec/13: George & Kay Angliss (d.); Thayre, Kim & Gina Angliss Marion Armstrong (d.) Bob & Naomi Birtch Alan & Laila Campbell Jan Crawford Robert Doull & Leanne Nash Estate of Bill Featherston; Gail Featherston Estate of Judith Foster; Anna Vakar Estate of Ethel Joslin Lawrie & Linda Lock Toni Onley (d.) Laurie Papou & Iain Ross Estate of Kathleen Daly Pepper Joseph Plaskett Fred & Percival (d.) Ritchie; Jane Ritchie Derek (d.) & Jill Leir Salter Estate of Doris Sadbolt; Simon Fraser University Southern Mechanical Services Inc. Estate of Doreen Tait Takao Tanabe Vancouver Foundation Reciprocal Membership The Penticton Art Gallery has collaborated with several cultural organizations to establish a reciprocal membership program. Upon presentation of your current membership card, you will receive benefits such as free or discounted admission, gift shop discounts and more at the following institutions: Barkerville Historic Town, Grand Forks Art Gallery, Island Mountain Art Gallery (Wells, BC), Kamloops Art Gallery, Kootenay Art Gallery (Castlegar, BC), McMichael Canadian Art Collection (Kleinberg, ON), Nickle Arts Museum (Calgary, AB), Northwest Museum of Art & Culture (Spokane, WA), Old Log Church Museum (Whitehorse, YK), Touchstones Nelson: Museum of Art and History (Nelson, BC), Two Rivers Art Gallery (Prince George, BC), S.S. Sicamous (Penticton, BC), Vernon Public Art Gallery, Whatcom Museum of History & Art (Bellingham, WA), Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies (Banff, AB). All Canadian Museums Association members receive free admission and gift gallery discounts at the Penticton Art Gallery. Arts Letter Vol. XXXIV No. 6 November/December 2014 “More than just storage” 650 Duncan Avenue W, Penticton Tel 250-492-3006 Fax 250-492-6440 www.affordable.ca DRAGON’S DEN Art Supplies, Greeting Cards, etc. 12 Front Street, Penticton The Okanagan’s Racing Shop Mountain Bike Specialists 300 Westminster Ave. W, Penticton 250- 492-4140 250-492-3011 Kemp Harvey Kemp Inc. Fine Foods Delicatessen & Espresso Bar 368 Vancouver Ave, Penticton 250-492-2222 Certified General Accountants 445 Ellis Street, Penticton, V2A 4M1 250.492.8800 www.khgcga.com World Cinema Over 19,000 Videos & DVDs for Rent New, Used & Out of Print Books www.bookspenticton.com 250-493-7977 242 Main Street, Penticton 250-492-6661 go d dar dar chite cture .c om www.pentictonacademyofmusic.ca HENRY YORKE MANN ARCHITECT B.ARCH. MRAIC. MAIBC. 250-492-4019 222 Old Camp McKinney Road Oliver B.C. V0H 1T8 250- 498-4766 687 Main Street, Penticton See it. Hear it. 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