GG_sm Lorna Mills and Sally McKay

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Lorna Mills: Artworks / Persona Volare / contact

Sally McKay: GIFS / cv and contact

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rachel_1
Rachel McRae ABOMASUM 2007 chocolate, mixed media, pre-performance

Rachel_2
Rachel McRae ABOMASUM 2007 performance shot

Rachel_3
Rachel McRae ABOMASUM 2007 post-performance

This was my favourite performance, the middle image does not fully convey her grim determination during the slaughter of the deer. GVB & Sally stood well back of the cleaver action. (Rachel's blog.)

- L.M. 10-02-2007 10:34 am [link] [1 ref] [2 comments]

tino
Martin Reis (aka Tino) as Le Facteur (inspired by Jacques Tati), Nuit Noire, Sept. 29, 2007
Photo: Wendy Lucas

Tino
The personalised telegram I received, much to my surprise when we happend across Le Facteur on a street corner (scan by L.M.)


- sally mckay 10-02-2007 6:15 am [link] [6 refs] [5 comments]


Lisa_5
Lisa Neighbour - WELCOME ALL FLIES 2007 installation for NIGHT SCHOOL at Hart House
during Nuit Blanche


- L.M. 10-02-2007 5:23 am [link] [add a comment]


Hicks_2
Gordon Hicks - LIGHT RAIN TONIGHT 2007 polycarbonate, plumbing, water
20 inches diameter, 3.5 litres per hour


Hicks_1
Gordon Hicks - LIGHT RAIN TONIGHT 2007
installation view on Bloor Street near Lansdowne for Nuit Blanche


Part of Bloor NIGHTLIGHT, during Nuit Blanche, this is one of ten Streetlight Sculptures - a project curated by Orest Tataryn. Other streetlights were by Lois Andison, Matthew Birch, Anne O'Callaghan, Thrush Holmes, Heather Nicol, Jonathan Sabine, Orest Tataryn, Christy Thompson and John Wilcox.

- L.M. 10-02-2007 2:16 am [link] [1 ref] [6 comments]


Sara Milroy reviewed Nuit Blanche
"A thought for next year. True, some of the real delights of the evening were the small things, like the stuffed architectural model of the city of Toronto by the UpBag collective, which we discovered by chance in a hallway at 401 Richmond. (I particularly enjoyed the Mies towers rendered in black corduroy, and the knitted CN Tower.) But the big guns - The Power Plant, the Art Gallery of Ontario, the Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art, the Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art, the Royal Ontario Museum - were all more or less passive (throwing dance parties or staying open late to show your regular programming doesn't count), leaving it to Barbara Fischer at the Justina M. Barnicke Gallery, at Hart House, University of Toronto, to be the only museum director in town to catch the Nuit Blanche fever. Her Night School program was packed with onlookers when we checked in.

What's wrong with these people? We shouldn't really need to apply the heart paddles - they are supposed to be the folks that believe in art, after all - but if heart paddles are indeed required, maybe the city/sponsors of Nuit Blanche or other patrons should consider grants to these leading centres to fund one major one-night-only project either in their gallery space or out in the city. (How about $20,000 each?)"
I agree with the statement "what's wrong with these people?" but I have a problem with her solution of simply pouring more money onto their turf. I know too many artists who put together superlative pieces with very little funding, if any at all, so excuse my peevishness on this point.

- L.M. 10-02-2007 2:15 am [link] [15 comments]