Eleanor Bond
Eleanor Bond (born 25 March 1948) is a Canadian artist and art educator. Her work includes painting, printmaking, drawing and sculpture.
Early life
Eleanor Bond was born in Winnipeg to pharmacist Herbert Bond and teacher Mildred MacFarlane. She graduated from the School of Art, University of Manitoba in 1976. A previous undergraduate degree included studies in English, comparative religion and interior design, with a particular interest in the built environment and the interpretation of public space.[1]
Work
In her Work Station[2] and Social Centres[3] bodies of work, Bond explores the impact of technological advances and urban design on living bodies. Bond produces staged, fictive landscapes and built urban environments. The ironic titles and futuristic overtones, cinematic scale and multiple sightlines suggest a vertigo or lifting off, as if her subjects are no longer on familiar territory. In her work, architectural projections suggest possibilities for the future that are uninhabited and in transition, a poignant parody of a world where progress may outlive its proponents.[4] These large-scale, unstretched canvases suggest that the city is an imaginary place. Her landscapes can be interpreted as spaces that exist between illusion and reality, the visceral and the intellect, utopia and dystopia. This in-between space emphasizes a metaphorical overlay of spatial practice to topographical place.[5]
Recent projects include the Mountain of Shame series of paintings and sculptures that mark a shift away from the social and architectural and towards the personal and the figurative. Bond creates an emotional topography in which the vulnerabilities of doubt, age and loss are mapped on the surfaces of various media.[6]
Bond's work has been widely exhibited in Canada and internationally, including solo shows at the Witte de With Center for Contemporary Art in Rotterdam (1988 and 95), the Clocktower in New York (1990), the Winnipeg Art Gallery (1992),[7] Museo de Arte Moderna de Sao Paulo in Brazil (1995), Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal (1998)[8] and Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art in Toronto (2001). Group exhibitions have included shows at The National Gallery of Canada (1989) and the Vancouver Art Gallery (1991) as well as exhibitions at the Museum of Contemporary Art in São Paulo (1987) and Barbican Centre in London (1991). She has been a lecturer, has held studio residencies in Paris, Banff and Canberra, Australia, and has been actively involved in Plug In ICA in Winnipeg since its inception.[9] Bond's solo show Mountain of Shame, curated by Helga Pakasaar, was the inaugural exhibition that opened the new Plug In ICA gallery in 2010[10] and toured to the Illingworth Kerr Gallery at the Alberta College of Art & Design (ACAD) in Calgary in 2011.[11]
Bond is currently an Associate Professor of painting and drawing who works with graduate students at Concordia University. She also maintains an active art studio in the North End, Winnipeg.
References
- ↑ Borsa, Joan. "The Canadian Encyclopedia". Retrieved 8 March 2015.
- ↑ Thompson, Grace (1989). Work Station: Eleanor Bond. Winnipeg, MB, Canada: Gallery 1.1.1, University of Manitoba. p. 46. ISBN 0-921958-00-5.
- ↑ Madill, Shirley (1992). Social Centres: Eleanor Bond. Winnipeg, MB, Canada: The Winnipeg Art Gallery. p. 64. ISBN 0-88915-165-2.
- ↑ "The Canadian Encyclopedia". Retrieved March 2015. Check date values in:
|access-date=
(help) - ↑ Madill, Shirley. "Future Cities and Virtual Cities Project". Retrieved March 2013. Check date values in:
|access-date=
(help) - ↑ Enright, Robert. "The Fine Art of Mucking About: Eleanor Bond". Border Crossings magazine. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
- ↑ Madill, Shirley (1992). Social Centres: Eleanor Bond. Winnipeg, MB, Canada: The Winnipeg Art Gallery. p. 64. ISBN 0-88915-165-2.
- ↑ Marchand, Sandra Grant (1999). Eleanor Bond. Montreal, PQ, Canada: Musee d'art contemporain de Montreal. p. 43. ISBN 2-551-18959-4.
- ↑ "The Canadian Encyclopedia". Retrieved March 2015. Check date values in:
|access-date=
(help) - ↑ Fung, Amy. "Eleanor Bond". Canadian Art. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
- ↑ Sherlock, Diana. "Revealing The Subject". Galleries West. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
External links
- Future Cities of Eleanor Bond
- Eleanor Bond: Quick aging pivoting city
- Art History Archive Eleanor Bond
- Eleanor Bond: "Art and Communities: Re-Imagining Possible Futures" (January 24, 2014), Powell River Voices