
Arena 1 (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
Work ID: 78590
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2011
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Oeuvre d'art par Douglas Smith
Treaty of Westphalia
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78561
Description:
Des mesures : 127 x 254 cm
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2007
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Spectacle From Cartesian Heights (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78574
Description:
Des mesures : 213.36 x 254 cm
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2007
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Pantheon
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78575
Description:
Des mesures : 213.36 x 254 cm
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2007
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Scratching the Surface, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78603
Description: Sctraching the Surface, Plug In ICA, Winnipeg, 2007.
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2007
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Betrothal Process For Muskrat
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78562
Description:
Des mesures : 213.36 x 254 cm
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2007
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Pantheon (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78576
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2007
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Betrothal Process For Muskrat (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78563
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2007
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Scratching the Surface, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78601
Description: Sctraching the Surface, Plug In ICA, Winnipeg, 2007.
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2007
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Scratching the Surface, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78602
Description: Sctraching the Surface, Plug In ICA, Winnipeg, 2007.
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2007
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Transatlantic Tracks
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78560
Description:
Des mesures : 127 x 254 cm
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2007
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Portal
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78572
Description:
Des mesures : 213.36 x 254 cm
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2008
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Schematic for a Utopian Event (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78579
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2008
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Valhalla (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78565
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2008
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Schematic for a Utopian Event
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78577
Description:
Des mesures : 213.36 x 254 cm
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2008
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : drawn, Original CCCA
Valhalla
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78564
Description:
Des mesures : 213.36 x 254 cm
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2008
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Portal (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78573
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2008
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Pangaea (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78569
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2008
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Schematic for a Utopian Event (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78578
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2008
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Reverie in the Nocturne (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78571
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2008
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Pangaea (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78570
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2008
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Pangaea
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78568
Description:
Des mesures : 213.36 x 254 cm
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2008
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Reverie in the Nocturne
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78566
Description:
Des mesures : 213.36 x 254 cm
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2008
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Reverie in the Nocturne (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78567
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2008
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis I (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78582
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2010
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis II
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78584
Description:
Des mesures : 213.36 x 254 cm [4 paper panels]
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2010
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis I
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78580
Description:
Des mesures : 213.36 x 254 cm [4 paper panels]
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2010
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis III
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78587
Description:
Des mesures : 213.36 x 254 cm [4 paper panels]
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2010
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis II (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78585
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2010
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis I (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78581
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2010
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis III (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78588
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2010
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis II (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78586
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2010
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis I (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78583
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2010
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Arena 3 (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78594
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2011
Matériaux : graphite, pencil, acrylic on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Arena 1 (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78590
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2011
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Arena 3
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78593
Description:
Des mesures : 127 x 317.5 cm
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2011
Matériaux : graphite, pencil, acrylic on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Arena 2 (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78592
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2011
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Arena 1
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78589
Description:
Des mesures : 120 x 50 in
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2011
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Arena 2
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78591
Description:
Des mesures : 127 x 355.6 cm
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2011
Matériaux : graphite pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78607
Description: Catharsis, aceartinc., Winnipeg, 2012.
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2012
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78609
Description: Catharsis, aceartinc., Winnipeg, 2012.
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2012
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Arena 4
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78595
Description:
Des mesures : 254 x 330.2 cm
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2012
Matériaux : graphite, pencil, acrylic on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78608
Description: Catharsis, aceartinc., Winnipeg, 2012.
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2012
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78605
Description: Catharsis, aceartinc., Winnipeg, 2012.
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2012
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78606
Description: Catharsis, aceartinc., Winnipeg, 2012.
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2012
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Arena 4 (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78596
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2012
Matériaux : graphite, pencil, acrylic on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78618
Description: Catharsis, Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba, Brandon, 2013.
[introductory panel to the exhibition]:
Catharsis
Curated by Natalia Lebedinskaia
Doug Smith’s series of monumental drawings build on ideas of spectacle and transmigration. The Term catharsis has been used by Aristotle to describe the effect of purging social angst through evocation of pity and fear in tragic drama. However, it has since extended to further signify personal experiences of release, such as in revealing repressed emotions and memories.
Smith’s use of easily recognizable and ever-present images and symbols from visual and popular culture, such as commercial aircraft, military helicopters, human and bird figures, of references to architectural draftsmanship, create a simultaneous push and pull between accessibility of the drawings and absence of a fixed meaning. The sense of opaque familiarity brings into focus the space just below the surface of both personal and the collective consciousness, while a panoramic format builds a non-linear storyboard of repeated historic anxieties.
Smith’s sparse use of vibrant colour refers to a primordial state of chaos that exists outside the structures of organized power. The repeated elements in the rest of the drawings, however, present a familiar view: a world that is clearly ours, but whose logic belongs to forces beyond our control. The relationship between order and chaos plays out the scale of the drawings and the tiny stenciled figures swept up, released, and sent to march in formations. Are we being asked to follow, reflect, or resist these movements?
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2013
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78612
Description: Catharsis, Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba, Brandon, 2013.
[introductory panel to the exhibition]:
Catharsis
Curated by Natalia Lebedinskaia
Doug Smith’s series of monumental drawings build on ideas of spectacle and transmigration. The Term catharsis has been used by Aristotle to describe the effect of purging social angst through evocation of pity and fear in tragic drama. However, it has since extended to further signify personal experiences of release, such as in revealing repressed emotions and memories.
Smith’s use of easily recognizable and ever-present images and symbols from visual and popular culture, such as commercial aircraft, military helicopters, human and bird figures, of references to architectural draftsmanship, create a simultaneous push and pull between accessibility of the drawings and absence of a fixed meaning. The sense of opaque familiarity brings into focus the space just below the surface of both personal and the collective consciousness, while a panoramic format builds a non-linear storyboard of repeated historic anxieties.
Smith’s sparse use of vibrant colour refers to a primordial state of chaos that exists outside the structures of organized power. The repeated elements in the rest of the drawings, however, present a familiar view: a world that is clearly ours, but whose logic belongs to forces beyond our control. The relationship between order and chaos plays out the scale of the drawings and the tiny stenciled figures swept up, released, and sent to march in formations. Are we being asked to follow, reflect, or resist these movements?
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2013
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78610
Description: Catharsis, Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba, Brandon, 2013.
[introductory panel to the exhibition]:
Catharsis
Curated by Natalia Lebedinskaia
Doug Smith’s series of monumental drawings build on ideas of spectacle and transmigration. The Term catharsis has been used by Aristotle to describe the effect of purging social angst through evocation of pity and fear in tragic drama. However, it has since extended to further signify personal experiences of release, such as in revealing repressed emotions and memories.
Smith’s use of easily recognizable and ever-present images and symbols from visual and popular culture, such as commercial aircraft, military helicopters, human and bird figures, of references to architectural draftsmanship, create a simultaneous push and pull between accessibility of the drawings and absence of a fixed meaning. The sense of opaque familiarity brings into focus the space just below the surface of both personal and the collective consciousness, while a panoramic format builds a non-linear storyboard of repeated historic anxieties.
Smith’s sparse use of vibrant colour refers to a primordial state of chaos that exists outside the structures of organized power. The repeated elements in the rest of the drawings, however, present a familiar view: a world that is clearly ours, but whose logic belongs to forces beyond our control. The relationship between order and chaos plays out the scale of the drawings and the tiny stenciled figures swept up, released, and sent to march in formations. Are we being asked to follow, reflect, or resist these movements?
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2013
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78616
Description: Catharsis, Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba, Brandon, 2013.
[introductory panel to the exhibition]:
Catharsis
Curated by Natalia Lebedinskaia
Doug Smith’s series of monumental drawings build on ideas of spectacle and transmigration. The Term catharsis has been used by Aristotle to describe the effect of purging social angst through evocation of pity and fear in tragic drama. However, it has since extended to further signify personal experiences of release, such as in revealing repressed emotions and memories.
Smith’s use of easily recognizable and ever-present images and symbols from visual and popular culture, such as commercial aircraft, military helicopters, human and bird figures, of references to architectural draftsmanship, create a simultaneous push and pull between accessibility of the drawings and absence of a fixed meaning. The sense of opaque familiarity brings into focus the space just below the surface of both personal and the collective consciousness, while a panoramic format builds a non-linear storyboard of repeated historic anxieties.
Smith’s sparse use of vibrant colour refers to a primordial state of chaos that exists outside the structures of organized power. The repeated elements in the rest of the drawings, however, present a familiar view: a world that is clearly ours, but whose logic belongs to forces beyond our control. The relationship between order and chaos plays out the scale of the drawings and the tiny stenciled figures swept up, released, and sent to march in formations. Are we being asked to follow, reflect, or resist these movements?
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2013
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Arena 5 (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78599
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2013
Matériaux : graphite, pencil, coloured pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78615
Description: Catharsis, Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba, Brandon, 2013.
[introductory panel to the exhibition]:
Catharsis
Curated by Natalia Lebedinskaia
Doug Smith’s series of monumental drawings build on ideas of spectacle and transmigration. The Term catharsis has been used by Aristotle to describe the effect of purging social angst through evocation of pity and fear in tragic drama. However, it has since extended to further signify personal experiences of release, such as in revealing repressed emotions and memories.
Smith’s use of easily recognizable and ever-present images and symbols from visual and popular culture, such as commercial aircraft, military helicopters, human and bird figures, of references to architectural draftsmanship, create a simultaneous push and pull between accessibility of the drawings and absence of a fixed meaning. The sense of opaque familiarity brings into focus the space just below the surface of both personal and the collective consciousness, while a panoramic format builds a non-linear storyboard of repeated historic anxieties.
Smith’s sparse use of vibrant colour refers to a primordial state of chaos that exists outside the structures of organized power. The repeated elements in the rest of the drawings, however, present a familiar view: a world that is clearly ours, but whose logic belongs to forces beyond our control. The relationship between order and chaos plays out the scale of the drawings and the tiny stenciled figures swept up, released, and sent to march in formations. Are we being asked to follow, reflect, or resist these movements?
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2013
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78617
Description: Catharsis, Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba, Brandon, 2013.
[introductory panel to the exhibition]:
Catharsis
Curated by Natalia Lebedinskaia
Doug Smith’s series of monumental drawings build on ideas of spectacle and transmigration. The Term catharsis has been used by Aristotle to describe the effect of purging social angst through evocation of pity and fear in tragic drama. However, it has since extended to further signify personal experiences of release, such as in revealing repressed emotions and memories.
Smith’s use of easily recognizable and ever-present images and symbols from visual and popular culture, such as commercial aircraft, military helicopters, human and bird figures, of references to architectural draftsmanship, create a simultaneous push and pull between accessibility of the drawings and absence of a fixed meaning. The sense of opaque familiarity brings into focus the space just below the surface of both personal and the collective consciousness, while a panoramic format builds a non-linear storyboard of repeated historic anxieties.
Smith’s sparse use of vibrant colour refers to a primordial state of chaos that exists outside the structures of organized power. The repeated elements in the rest of the drawings, however, present a familiar view: a world that is clearly ours, but whose logic belongs to forces beyond our control. The relationship between order and chaos plays out the scale of the drawings and the tiny stenciled figures swept up, released, and sent to march in formations. Are we being asked to follow, reflect, or resist these movements?
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2013
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78613
Description: Catharsis, Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba, Brandon, 2013.
[introductory panel to the exhibition]:
Catharsis
Curated by Natalia Lebedinskaia
Doug Smith’s series of monumental drawings build on ideas of spectacle and transmigration. The Term catharsis has been used by Aristotle to describe the effect of purging social angst through evocation of pity and fear in tragic drama. However, it has since extended to further signify personal experiences of release, such as in revealing repressed emotions and memories.
Smith’s use of easily recognizable and ever-present images and symbols from visual and popular culture, such as commercial aircraft, military helicopters, human and bird figures, of references to architectural draftsmanship, create a simultaneous push and pull between accessibility of the drawings and absence of a fixed meaning. The sense of opaque familiarity brings into focus the space just below the surface of both personal and the collective consciousness, while a panoramic format builds a non-linear storyboard of repeated historic anxieties.
Smith’s sparse use of vibrant colour refers to a primordial state of chaos that exists outside the structures of organized power. The repeated elements in the rest of the drawings, however, present a familiar view: a world that is clearly ours, but whose logic belongs to forces beyond our control. The relationship between order and chaos plays out the scale of the drawings and the tiny stenciled figures swept up, released, and sent to march in formations. Are we being asked to follow, reflect, or resist these movements?
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2013
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78614
Description: Catharsis, Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba, Brandon, 2013.
[introductory panel to the exhibition]:
Catharsis
Curated by Natalia Lebedinskaia
Doug Smith’s series of monumental drawings build on ideas of spectacle and transmigration. The Term catharsis has been used by Aristotle to describe the effect of purging social angst through evocation of pity and fear in tragic drama. However, it has since extended to further signify personal experiences of release, such as in revealing repressed emotions and memories.
Smith’s use of easily recognizable and ever-present images and symbols from visual and popular culture, such as commercial aircraft, military helicopters, human and bird figures, of references to architectural draftsmanship, create a simultaneous push and pull between accessibility of the drawings and absence of a fixed meaning. The sense of opaque familiarity brings into focus the space just below the surface of both personal and the collective consciousness, while a panoramic format builds a non-linear storyboard of repeated historic anxieties.
Smith’s sparse use of vibrant colour refers to a primordial state of chaos that exists outside the structures of organized power. The repeated elements in the rest of the drawings, however, present a familiar view: a world that is clearly ours, but whose logic belongs to forces beyond our control. The relationship between order and chaos plays out the scale of the drawings and the tiny stenciled figures swept up, released, and sent to march in formations. Are we being asked to follow, reflect, or resist these movements?
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2013
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78611
Description: Catharsis, Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba, Brandon, 2013.
[introductory panel to the exhibition]:
Catharsis
Curated by Natalia Lebedinskaia
Doug Smith’s series of monumental drawings build on ideas of spectacle and transmigration. The Term catharsis has been used by Aristotle to describe the effect of purging social angst through evocation of pity and fear in tragic drama. However, it has since extended to further signify personal experiences of release, such as in revealing repressed emotions and memories.
Smith’s use of easily recognizable and ever-present images and symbols from visual and popular culture, such as commercial aircraft, military helicopters, human and bird figures, of references to architectural draftsmanship, create a simultaneous push and pull between accessibility of the drawings and absence of a fixed meaning. The sense of opaque familiarity brings into focus the space just below the surface of both personal and the collective consciousness, while a panoramic format builds a non-linear storyboard of repeated historic anxieties.
Smith’s sparse use of vibrant colour refers to a primordial state of chaos that exists outside the structures of organized power. The repeated elements in the rest of the drawings, however, present a familiar view: a world that is clearly ours, but whose logic belongs to forces beyond our control. The relationship between order and chaos plays out the scale of the drawings and the tiny stenciled figures swept up, released, and sent to march in formations. Are we being asked to follow, reflect, or resist these movements?
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2013
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Arena 5 (detail)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78598
Description:
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2013
Matériaux : graphite, pencil, coloured pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Arena 5 (composite)
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78597
Description:
Des mesures : 127 x 889 cm
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2013
Matériaux : graphite, pencil, coloured pencil on paper
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA
Catharsis, Exhibition installation view
Artist: Douglas Smith
ID : 78619
Description: Catharsis, Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba, Brandon, 2013.
[introductory panel to the exhibition]:
Catharsis
Curated by Natalia Lebedinskaia
Doug Smith’s series of monumental drawings build on ideas of spectacle and transmigration. The Term catharsis has been used by Aristotle to describe the effect of purging social angst through evocation of pity and fear in tragic drama. However, it has since extended to further signify personal experiences of release, such as in revealing repressed emotions and memories.
Smith’s use of easily recognizable and ever-present images and symbols from visual and popular culture, such as commercial aircraft, military helicopters, human and bird figures, of references to architectural draftsmanship, create a simultaneous push and pull between accessibility of the drawings and absence of a fixed meaning. The sense of opaque familiarity brings into focus the space just below the surface of both personal and the collective consciousness, while a panoramic format builds a non-linear storyboard of repeated historic anxieties.
Smith’s sparse use of vibrant colour refers to a primordial state of chaos that exists outside the structures of organized power. The repeated elements in the rest of the drawings, however, present a familiar view: a world that is clearly ours, but whose logic belongs to forces beyond our control. The relationship between order and chaos plays out the scale of the drawings and the tiny stenciled figures swept up, released, and sent to march in formations. Are we being asked to follow, reflect, or resist these movements?
Des mesures :
Collection:
Date de réalisation : 2013
Matériaux :
Collection virtuelle : Original CCCA

