Althea Thauberger
Althea Thauberger is a Canadian visual artist.
Biography
Althea Thauberger was born in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan in 1970. She is currently based in Vancouver. Thauberger obtained her Bachelor of Fine Arts in Photography at Concordia University in 2000 and went on to complete her Master of Fine Arts at the University of Victoria in 2002. In 2003, Thauberger was awarded a Vancouver Arts Development Award and was a regional finalist for the Sobey Art Award.[1] Her internationally produced and exhibited work typically involves interactions with a group or community that result in performances, films, videos, audio recordings and books, and involve sometimes provocative reflections of social, political, institutional and aesthetic power relations. Her work has been presented at the 17th Biennale of Sydney; National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa; The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh; Guangzhou Triennial, China; Manifesta 7, Trento, Italy; Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery, Vancouver; Vancouver Art Gallery; BAK, Utrecht; Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin; Kunstverein Wolfsburg, Germany; Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, Halifax; Singapore History Museum; Presentation House Gallery, Vancouver; Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst, Antwerp; Berkeley Art Museum; Insite, San Diego/Tijuana; White Columns, New York; Seattle Art Museum and the 2012 Liverpool Biennial.[2] Thauberger will participate in the 2014 Biennale de Montréal.[3]
Critical response
"Thauberger’s […] interest is in revealing […] boundaries, especially as they come to define different social groups. […] Thauberger seems to have a preoccupation with using the entire apparatus of art to examine the extremely complex relationship that people now have with the realm of direct experience."
–Rosemary Heather. "The Witness: Althea Thauberger's All Too-Real Video Art." Canadian Art. Spring 2007. pp46–49.[4]
"[...] works by Althea Thauberger contain social and political allegories with an almost purist and vivid visuality. This is one of the post-conceptual characteristics of contemporary art practices in Vancouver, of which Jeff Wall or Stan Douglas are also representative. What is distinctive, however, is that Thauberger’s practice involves an intensive collaborative working process with a group or community that usually results in a musical or choreographic performance and its video, photographic, and/or audio presentation. The performances of specific groups shown in Thauberger’s works have a dramatic, theatrical quality, accentuated by (un)natural settings. In spite of the eccentric formal charms of these performances, they nonetheless have an alienating effect. Viewers often remain puzzled about the contradictory display of vulnerability and empowerment in the performances. Being “together” in a quasi-collective form can be both liberating and constraining, and here the individual is confronted with the political possibilities of togetherness as well as by its limitations."
–Binna Choi. “Althea Thauberger: Alone Again (In the Likeness of Life).” Exhibition publication. Utrecht: BAK basis voor aktuele kunst. 2007.[5]
References
- ↑ Vancouver Art Gallery. "Althea Thauberger" (PDF). Retrieved 17 September 2011.
- ↑ Art Gallery of Ontario. "2011 Grange Prize".
- ↑ Canadian Art online. "Biennale de Montréal Artists Announced". Retrieved 7 May 2014.
- ↑ http://www.canadianart.ca/art/features/2007/03/15/455/
- ↑ "BAK". Archived from the original on January 19, 2012. Retrieved May 25, 2013.
- McLaughlin, Bryne. "Althea Thauberger: Faraways" canadianart online (March 2012) http://www.canadianart.ca/online/features/2012/03/01/althea_thauberger/
- Tomic, Milena. "Althea Thauberger: The Power Plant." Art in America, July 2013 http://www.artinamericamagazine.com/reviews/althea-thauberger/
- Twerdy, Saelan. "FrameWork 2/12: Saelan Twerdy on Althea Thauberger". susanhobbs.com (February 20120
External links
- Information on commissioned work for Artspeak, Vancouver
- Canadian Art magazine article by Deborah Campbell
- Artist's website
- on exhibition at Susan Hobbs Gallery
- Althea Thauberger at the 2012 Liverpool Biennial