EDMONTON, AB.- The Art Gallery of Alberta presents Alberta Mistresses of the Modern: 1935-1975, March 10 June 3, 2012.
Focusing on the work of ten women artists, all born by the end of 1918, the exhibition Alberta Mistresses of the Modern: 1935-1975 shines new light on the establishment of modernism in the province. Working largely in Edmonton and Calgary, the work of these artists reveals the important role that women played in the development of modernism, particularly early forms of abstraction, in Alberta.
Of the ten-member Calgary Group, whose 53 oil paintings were featured in an exhibition at the Vancouver Art Gallery in 1948, four of the artists were women, including: Marion Nicoll, Janet Mitchell and Dorothy Willis. Of that group, only Marion Nicoll is still well recognized today for her commitment to modernism. The exhibition Alberta Mistresses of the Modern demonstrates, however, that there were many more women artists in this pioneering generation who contributed to Albertas cultural roots and the formation of a vibrant visual arts community in the province, and who were decidedly modern.
While they were largely painters (oil, watercolour & later acrylic) and/or printmakers (linocuts, woodcuts, etching, silkscreen & clay prints), the exhibition also includes some sculpture, ceramics and mosaics. Guest-curated for the AGA by Mary-Beth Laviolette Alberta Mistresses of the Modern features over 80 works on loan from more than 15 different private and public collections, including: the Art Gallery of Alberta, the Glenbow Museum, the Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies, the Nickle Arts Museum and the Alberta Foundation for the Arts.
Alberta Mistresses of the Modern is guest-curated by Mary-Beth Laviolette