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EPS South East Division 104 Youville Drive
Edmonton, Alberta
66 Street & 23 Avenue
Edmonton, Alberta
Milled Wood
Destiny Swiderski // 2015 // spruce blocks // Mill Woods Seniors & Multicultural Centre
Destiny Swiderski
Destiny Swiderski (b. 1981, Winnipeg, Manitoba) is a Métis Canadian artist who currently lives and works in Coombs, British Columbia. She is known for site-specific installation art that utilizes everyday materials that follow a precise algorithm.
Destiny Swiderski grew up north of Winnipeg in Selkirk, Manitoba. Her studies began at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg in 2002. Swiderski received her Bachelors of Environmental Design in Architecture in 2007. Her studies in Architecture led her to create architectural installations at the Ontario College of Art and Design in Toronto, ON. She has worked for Architecture and Urban Design firms in the west and is currently self-employed as she is embracing her career as a Public Artist.
Swiderski’s work uses everyday manufactured materials such as drinking straws, casino dice, and pieces of milled wood to create large scale sculptures that have a three dimensional quality. Her work involves using repetition of one material to explore its new characteristics when applied to an image. Her process is extracted from the landscape to the deep-rooted history that resides in that particular place. Capturing experience is the essence of all of her artworks.
Destiny’s experience working in Architecture has allowed her to be exposed to numerous clients, cultures, and places around Canada. Her extensive knowledge of materials and construction methods allow her to manage, consult, and construct large pieces of art for others to enjoy and interact with. These ideas all stream into how public art can be a vehicle for placemaking.
Destiny Swiderski // 2015 // spruce blocks // Mill Woods Seniors & Multicultural Centre
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A Pattern Language
Karen Ho Fatt Lee // 2020 // Aluminum // Grey Nuns LRT Stop
Karen Ho Fatt Lee
Karen Ho Fatt Lee is a Canadian visual artist and designer working in two and three dimensional media. She is a graduate of the University of Manitoba.
Lee has several colourful functional and artistic public art pieces within various jurisdictions in Alberta. Her public art practice refines and transforms common objects and iconography to best reflect a site’s context and unique dynamics.
She lives in the beautiful foothills of the Rocky Mountains, which provide an endless source of inspiration.
Karen Ho Fatt Lee // 2020 // Aluminum // Grey Nuns LRT Stop
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If the Drumming Stops
Peter Morin, Tania Willard & Cheryl L’Hirondelle // 2020 // Ceramic Frit on Tempered Glass // Mill Woods Stop
Peter Morin, Tania Willard & Cheryl L’Hirondelle
Tania Willard, Secwepemc Nation and settler heritage, works within the shifting ideas around contemporary and traditional, often working with bodies of knowledge and skills that are conceptually linked to her interest in intersections between Aboriginal and other cultures. Willard’s curatorial work includes the touring exhibition, Beat Nation: Art Hip Hop and Aboriginal Culture (2012−2014), co-curated with Kathleen Ritter. In 2016 Willard received the Award for Curatorial Excellence in Contemporary Art from the Hanatyshyn Foundation as well as a City of Vancouver Book Award for the catalogue for the exhibition Unceded Territories: Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun. Willard’s ongoing collaborative project BUSH gallery, is a conceptual land-based gallery grounded in Indigenous knowledges. Willard is an Assistant Professor at UBC Okanagan in Syilx territories and her current research intersects with land-based art practices.
Peter Morin is a Tahltan Nation artist, curator, and writer. In his artistic practice and curatorial work, Morin’s practice-based research investigates the impact zones that occur when Indigenous cultural-based practices and western settler colonialism collide. This work is shaped by Tahltan Nation epistemological production and often takes on the form of performance interventions. In addition to his object making and performance-based practice, Morin has curated exhibitions at the Museum of Anthropology, Western Front, Bill Reid Gallery, and Burnaby Art Gallery. In 2014, Peter was long-listed for the Sobey Art Prize. Morin is an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Art at Ontario College of Art and Design University.
Cheryl L’Hirondelle (Cree/Halfbreed*; German/Polish) is an interdisciplinary artist, singer/songwriter and critical thinker whose family roots are from Papaschase First Nation, amiskwaciy wâskahikan (Edmonton, AB) and Kikino Métis Settlement, AB. Her work critically investigates and articulates a dynamism of nêhiyawin (Cree worldview) in contemporary time-place with a practice that incorporates Indigenous language(s), audio, video, virtual reality, the olfactory, sewn objects, music and audience/user participation to create immersive environments towards ‘radical inclusion.’ As a songwriter, L’Hirondelle’s focus is on both sharing nêhiyawêwin (Cree language) and Indigenous and contemporary song-forms and personal narrative songwriting as methodologies toward ‘sonic survivance.’ She has exhibited and performed widely, both nationally and internationally. L’Hirondelle is the recipient of two imagineNATIVE New Media Awards (2005, 2006), and two Canadian Aboriginal Music Awards (2006, 2007). Cheryl is also the CEO of Miyoh Music Inc., an Indigenous niche music publishing company and record label.
*different historical and contemporary terms for being a ‘mixed-blood’ person are: Métis, Halfbreed, o‑tipeyimisiwak, askiy ohci iyiniwak and apihtawikosisanak
Peter Morin, Tania Willard & Cheryl L’Hirondelle // 2020 // Ceramic Frit on Tempered Glass // Mill Woods Stop
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Encompass
Allen Ball // 2005 // Oil and digital print on canvas // EPS South East Division
Allen Ball
Allen Ball was born in London and received a First Class B. A. (Honours) Degree in Fine Art – Painting, with a Commendation in Printmaking, from Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts in 1984, and an MVA in Painting, from the University of Alberta (supported by a Commonwealth Scholarship) in 1990.
Allen Ball is currently Associate Professor, Painting, and Associate Chair of Undergraduate Studies in the Department of Art and Design at the University of Alberta.
Over the past 20 years, his work has been grounded primarily in the practice of painting, interrogating the limits of its forms and extending the language of painting into an expanded field of inquiry. Recent projects include: “The Wordless Book and other sounds” (2010), a series of paintings that interrogates the associative power of colour through Baptist preacher Charles Haddon Spurgeon’s nonverbal evangelical device the Wordless Book; “The German Autumn in Minor Spaces” (2008), a photographic and screen-based collaboration with Dr. Kimberly Mair (Department of Sociology, University of Lethbridge), pertaining to the ideological struggles of the Red Army Faction or Baader-Meinhof Gang; and, “Spectacle in a State of Exception” (2007), a multi-media project stemming from research conducted as an embedded official Canadian War Artist with Canadian Forces Operation Calumet in the Sinai Peninsula.
Allen Ball // 2005 // Oil and digital print on canvas // EPS South East Division
EPS South East Division
104 Youville Drive
Edmonton,
Alberta
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Phantasien
Realities:United // 2014 // Glass|Mirror // Mill Woods Library - 2610 Hewes Way
Realities:United
In 2000 the brothers Tim Edler and Jan Edler founded realities:united (realU), a studio for art, architecture and technology. realities:united develops and supports architectural solutions, usually incorporating new media and information technologies. The office provides consulting, planning, and research, also undertaking projects for clients such as museums, businesses, and other architectural firms.
One major focus of realities:united is architecture’s outward communicative capacity. Another is the quality of the user experience inside spaces, which in function and appearance is essentially augmented and changed by additional layers carrying information, media content and communication. Some of the studio’s projects resemble classical architectural work, but venture regularly into art, design, or technology research. Most projects are intended to serve as a catalyst in a given situation, and are therefore strongly determined by identifying, transforming, amplifying, and combining various existing potentials. In that sense the approach centres on taking advantage of available opportunities, rather than specific skills, procedures, or tasks. Although the majority of the projects incorporate new technologies or experimental approaches in one way or the other, the work always aims to affect actuality, not virtuality.
Strategic initiative and a high proportion of communication and mediation in work processes mark
many of the firm’s innovative projects. This approach creates the bridge between utopian ideas, abstract conceptions and realizations and has been recognized internationally. Currently realities:united is working on new projects in Europe, Asia and the USA.
Realities:United // 2014 // Glass|Mirror // Mill Woods Library - 2610 Hewes Way
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Landscape Series 1
Erin Ross // 2014 // Acrylic on Dibond // Millwoods Park
Erin Ross
Erin Ross is a full-time artist most known for her distinct and colorful landscape paintings. While she explores other genres (florals and fires mostly) landscape has been the foundation of her career and success. Originally from Edmonton, Alberta, she currently lives and works in Vancouver, British Columbia.
Erin holds a BFA from the University of Alberta and participated in a self lead painting residency in Cape Town, SA between 2016 – 2017. Her work sits in multiple private and public collections and has been represented in commercial and contemporary Galleries since 2008. Along with representation, she has over 25 years of varied industry experience; jurying and selecting Public Art pieces (as well as creating public art), sitting on governance and fundraising boards for artist run centres and Galleries, creative consulting for private and commercial clients, as well as receiving an Urban Design Award of excellence for her LivingBridge Project. She confidently tackles any scale project in both private and public spaces.
Erin Ross // 2014 // Acrylic on Dibond // Millwoods Park
66 Street & 23 Avenue
Edmonton,
Alberta
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