St Albert Community EventsGlenrose Rehab Hospital Art Galleries
Event Description:
The Blue Curve Gallery
William Prettie’s exhibit “Reflectivity” begins as paintings of countless layers and reductions and ultimately transforms into an assemblage construction that incorporates found objects and is finished with layers of clear transparent acrylic resin. The liquid resin is then skillfully manipulated to create sculptural qualities. William has a Bachelor of Fine Arts and held an assistantship to acclaimed sculptor Geert Maas. William has been the recipient of several awards and his artwork has been featured across Canada. Please come see his exhibit and marvel at his amazing artwork.
The Mezzanine Gallery
Erik Cheung’s exhibit “Subconscious Art” possess absolute freedom in creation that is beautiful to look at, musical to see and intricate in construction to contemplate. It is a new style that lands in the hollow area between symbolism, design, classicism, art deco, aboriginal art, automatic drawing, abstraction, calligraphy, and Chinese spatial concept. Erik was born in Hong Kong and has achieved a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Canada. He returned to Hong Kong for 17 yrs teaching high school visual arts and being on an art panel. He returned to Canada in 2010 to continue to pursue his art career. Since 2003 he has developed his style of subconscious art...spontaneously doodling that explores the subconscious drive behind the creative process.
Art on the Inside Gallery
Dr. Michael Joyce’s photography exhibit is a collection of diverse imagery that
Stimulates the senses, from a compelling black and white winter cityscape of Edmonton to the intense magnification of the centre of a magnificent flower found in nature that would normally escape notice. The diversity of his work is a joy. Michael is a structural biologist by training and a virologist by trade. His training in x-ray crystallography initiated intensive training in the properties of light and the photography of those phenomena. He has been a practicing photographer for the last 15 years and his photography initially began with an interest in the tension between public and private space that is found in the display of the Fatality signs in Edmonton and the roadside memorials elsewhere. His work is held by several private collections and also in commercial collections. The images he captures are captivating and we welcome you to come enjoy his exhibit
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