Sarindar Dhaliwal

Sarindar Dhaliwal
Born Sarindar Dhaliwal
1953
Punjab, India
Nationality Canadian
Education Falmouth School of Art, York University

Sarindar Dhaliwal (born 1953) is a Toronto based multi-media artist. She was born in the Punjab, and grew up in Southall, London.[1] She received a BA in Fine Art at Falmouth University, Cornwall (1978), then moved to Canada where she still lives. She gained a MA from York University, Toronto in 2003.

Dhaliwal has exhibited her work at many major Canadian public galleries, including The Edmonton Art Gallery (Alberta) and the Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Ontario. She is represented in the Centre for Contemporary Canadian Art.[2]An exhibition of her work, 'Record Keeping', toured the UK in 2004, showing at John Hansard Gallery (Southampton), Oriel Mostyn Gallery (Wales), Canada House Gallery (London), and the Agnes Etherington Art Centre (Ontario). Her work is in collections including Canada Council Art Bank and the Walter Phillips Gallery at The Banff Centre for the Arts.

Her work is narrative based, exploring issues of cultural identity, and includes installation, printmaking, collage, painting and video projection.

Dhaliwal's most recent solo shows were in 2013 at 'A Space Gallery', an artist-led space in Toronto;[3] Galerie Deste in Montreal (2010) and the Robert Langen Art Gallery in Waterloo (2012). In 2011 she participated in exhibitions in Stony Plain, Alberta, the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria and the Reach, Abbotsford both in British Columbia and at the Vadehra Art Gallery in Delhi, India. Sarindar Dhaliwal was the 2012 recipient of the Canada Council International Residency at Artspace, Sydney, Australia.

Life

Sarindar Dhaliwal was born in 1953, in the Punjab region of India, and moved with her family to London, England at the age of three. At the age fifteen, she was moved again to an area near Carleton Place, Ontario. Finding it challenging to adapt to small town life, she worked to be able to buy a trip back to London, where she stayed for a year. When Dhaliwal returned to Kingston, Ontario, she took courses in weaving and batik, while sharing living space with art students from Queen's University.[4]

References

External links

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