CCCA Academy 2013 Project
Global Engagements in Contemporary Canadian Art:
Thirty-Nine Exhibition Essays and Fifty-Five Artists
Global Engagements in Contemporary Canadian Art: Thirty-Nine Exhibition Essays
and Fifty-Five Artists is the second project conducted under the banner of the CCCA Academy and the first e-publication of the Gail and Stephen A.
Jarislowsky Institute for Studies in Canadian Art, Faculty of Fine Arts, Concordia University. The curatorial
essays collected here contribute to the discourse on global art from a Canadian perspective. The writings are
based on research conducted by graduate students in Concordia's Department of Art History in 2012 for the seminar
Envisioning Virtual Exhibitions. In contrast to
the website that inaugurated the CCCA Academy in 2012, the 2013 curatorial project was to create an on-line catalogue of
virtual exhibitions (course syllabus).
Under the supervision of Dr. Loren Lerner, the students investigated how globalization and increasing mobility of
artists and artworks have impacted Canada's field of contemporary art. They researched the work of Canadian and
Canada-based artists who work and exhibit their artworks in multiple locations both inside and outside Canada.
Working at the intersection of the local and the global, their objective was to reveal how the global's social,
political, cultural, and aesthetic connections are reflected in contemporary Canadian art. Simultaneously, the
participants explored how the global's broad cultural, geographical, and temporal perspectives on Canadian art
could be translated into virtual exhibitions in order make their findings accessible to diverse audiences outside
the physical space of the white cube.
The CCCA Canadian Art Database, now permanently housed at Concordia University, served as the main resource for
this endeavour. Over twelve weeks, each student developed three exhibition proposals with a concrete theme and
focus on transnational Canadian art. In the first part of the class, students curated a virtual exhibition with
the works of artists who were already part of the CCCA Database. For the second exhibition the students researched
Canadian artists and artists active in Canada who were not part of the CCCA Database, and with their curatorial
statements in hand, recommended to the CCCA that these artists be included in their repository. The third and
final exhibition project consisted of an exhibition with one artist from the first and second exhibition, and a
design for an online exhibition. Rich and diverse in content and form, the students' curatorial statements and
exhibition concepts draw attention to the current state of mind in contemporary Canadian art, and embrace the
World Wide Web as an alternative exhibition space.
Copyright ©1997, 2020, 2024. The CCCA Canadian Art Database. All rights reserved.