Author: honest_agency

  • University of Manitoba Student Scholarship Award

    Martha Street Studio is offering a Student Scholarship Award to one student working in print media at the University of Manitoba. The Student Scholarship Award includes two free months of studio rental (July and August) and a one-year membership. To apply, please submit a short bio, a short proposal describing your process, preferred medium and your plans for the two months of studio access, along with five images (maximum) of your work.

    Email your proposal to gallery@printmakers.mb.ca by Friday, May 11th Applicants will be notified as to the success of their proposal by the end of May. 

  • Martha Street Studio & Centre [3] Residency Exchange Artist Talks: Sept. 22 + Nov. 10

    images left to right: 
    Hide & Seek by Laine Groeneweg, mezzotint, 2016 | GARGOYLE (work in progress), Scar Tissue Series by Susan Aydan Abbott, digital photograph of silicone and foam sculpture cast, 2017

     

    Martha Street Studio has teamed up with Centre[3] for Print and Media Arts in Hamilton, Ontario, on a Residency Exchange program. Laine Groeneweg and Susan Aydan Abbott are the inaugural recipients of the residency. Join us at Martha Street Studio on September 22nd from 7-8pm for an artist talk with Groeneweg, and on October 6th from 7-8pm  November 10th from 7-8 pm for an artist talk with Abbott.

    Both events are free and open to the public.

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    Laine Groeneweg is a printmaker currently living in Hamilton, Canada. He received his BFA from York University in 2004 and subsequently trained at Fondazione Il Bisonte Per Lo Studio Dell’Arte Grafica in Florence, Italy with a focus on intaglio printmaking.  

    In 2012 Laine opened Smokestack in Hamilton, Ontario – a studio that focuses on limited edition printing and the production of print-based artist projects. It is through this studio that he makes his own work as well as that for others.  Laine also continues to work as a collaborative printer at Toronto's Open Studio and Centre[3].

    Laine is most widely recognized for his work in mezzotint. His prints explore the possibilities of a traditional technique in the wake of more contemporary production methods. Often characterized by themes of dream and play, his whimsical imagery blurs the line between reality and fiction.

    Laine's prints have been shown both Nationally and Internationally and are held in the permanent collections of the Ekaterinburg Museum of Fine Arts (Ekaterinburg, Russia), Art Gallery of New South Wales (Sydney, Australia), and in the archives at Fondazione Il Bisonte Per Lo Studio Dell’Arte Grafica (Florence,Italy).

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    Susan Aydan Abbott is a recipient of Martha Street Studio and Centre[3]'s Residency Exchange. She was recently in residence at Centre[3], working on a project using printmaking and other media to explore Century Manor (formely the Hamilton Asylum for the Insane) in tandem with her own personal history with mental illness.

    Booby Hatch (Wo)manifesto: A Feminine Perspective of Century Manor (Hamilton Asylum for the Insane) will explore the asylum's dark past in tangent with Abbott's own personal history of mental illness. The artist's intent is to bring darkness to light by confronting how unresolved trauma lingers, smouldering in the shadows, permeating the soil, landscape, and structure of both the asylum and herself. At the same time, the artist questions whether there has been a significant change in the way mental illness is perceived and treated in contemporary society. 

    Abbott was born in Port Arthur, Ontario, in 1962. She works primarily in the medium of painting but has expanded her practice to include printmaking, sculpture, video, and large-scale installation. She attended the University of Manitoba, Fine Arts program. She has had solo shows and has been in many group shows in Winnipeg. Abbott is a person with lived experience who shares her life story through her work as a trained speaker for the Canadian Mental Health Association and the United Way. She serves on both the ArtsAccessAbility Network Manitoba board and the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority mental health advisory board.

    CW for this talk: rape, trauma, addiction

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    These events are free and everyone is welcome! Martha Street Studio is located at 11 Martha St. and is an accessible space with an elevator and two washrooms. ASL interpretation is available upon request. Please email askmartha@printmakers.mb.ca or call us at 204-779-6253 at least 48 hours before the event if you are interested in attending and require ASL interpretation.

  • Longtime volunteer Gary Styrchak nominated for WAC Arts Award

    Martha Street Studio is pleased to have nominated Gary Styrchak for the Winnipeg Arts Council's Manitoba Liquor & Lotteries Outstading Volunteer Arts Award for his long history of volunteer service to Martha Street Studio and his many contributions to the Winnipeg arts and culture community.  

    Gary is Martha Street Studio's longest serving board member, having served since the reorganization of MSS in 2001. He has acted as secretary to the board with consistent attendance and is a solid team player and contributor to all matters of the board. It is acknowledged by the former and current membership of MSS that without the sustained effort by Gary and other volunteers, involving countless hours, the current MSS facility would not have been developed or become operational.

    Aside from being a valued board member and volunteer, Gary is an artist, graphic designer, exhibit designer, instructor, and woodcarver who holds a diploma in Fine Arts from the University of Manitoba.

    Winners for the WAC Arts Awards will be announced at the Mayor's Luncheon for the Arts on June 8th, 2017.

  • Remembering Former Winnipeg City Councillor Harvey Smith

    Martha Street Studio wouldn't be the same without former Winnipeg City Councillor Harvey Smith. Smith was a proud supporter of the arts. From advocating for the Manitoba Printmakers Association Inc. in early days, through print workshops organized at the Daniel MacIntyre School Division through to being the driver in our first ever Steamroller Print Festival (as pictured above). We will miss you Harvey!

  • Suzie Smith leaves Martha Street Studio for new opportunity

    Suzie Smith is leaving Martha Street Studio for an exciting position at Plug In ICA, delivering a New Chapter Project throughout the city of Winnipeg. We wish her all the best with this new adventure and wanted to highlight some of her achievements over the most recent 5 plus years that she has served as Professional Programming Coordinator, (previously Suzie spent 3 years as the Coordinator of Education and Outreach and was an instructor and Bingo volunteer throughout).

    Suzie developed former long running Graff residency exchange, and a new Centre [3] residency exchange, she has coordinated and developed exhibition programming in the gallery and graciously played host to visiting and local artists alike. Some of the major exhibitions at Martha Street Studio, under Suzie’s watch, included Seripop, Dominique Petrin, Daniel Barrow and Dylan Miner.  She additionally curated, with Abigail Auld; All In, exploring collectives and print process. Suzie introduced Winnipeg to its first ever Steamroller print festival, the first of which, titled Under Pressure, took place in 2007.  Although we are very sad to see her go, we know that ‘this place’ will see her return time and again.

    Good Luck Suzie Smith!

  • Giving Tuesday

    Many programming activities take place at Martha Street Studio throughout the year taking the form of critical dialogue, professional exhibitions, residencies, mentorships, production and community outreach. These activities, as a whole, create a vibrant and supportive environment where creative energies flow and are tapped into by our membership, the different communities that we serve and the general public.
     
    So far this year Martha Street Studio has delivered 638 hours of teaching time to 969 people in our adult education program and outreach programs combined. Additional project initiatives include Design our Village, an initiative of past program participant Justin L’Arrivée and Making Our Mark II, in partnership with Arts and Disability Network Manitoba. We have also added new professional print equipment this year, such as: a hot plate, portable press and exposure unit.
     
    Martha Street Studio is a registered charity and we ask for your individual donations to help support our operations through our mission and mandate: to maintain the heritage of excellence in printmaking while advancing artists in innovation through technique, education and community engagement.

     

    Donations can be made in person, by mail, over the phone at (204) 779-6253 or through canadahelps.org under Manitoba Printmakers Association.

  • New Residency Program!

    Deadline for Applications: November 15th, 2016
    Residency Duration: Two Weeks
    Residency will take place in 2017

    Martha Street Studio is teaming up with Centre[3] print studio in Hamilton, Ontario, on a residency exchange program. Martha Street Studio will select one artist to attend two-weeks of complimentary studio time at Centre[3] between January 1st  and December 31st, 2017. In addition, the selected artist will receive a $600 artist fee, a $400 stipend, $200 in materials credit and up to three hours of technical assistance. Artists must be able to work independently in their chosen medium.

    The selected artist will arrange with Centre[3] the timing of the residency. Artists are responsible for organizing their own transportation and accommodation. If you require more information please contact gallery.printmakers@mymts.net.

    To apply please submit

    • 10 images (1024 x 768 pixels, 72 dpi)
    • a current CV
    • a short project proposal (1 page maximum) of work to be completed while at Centre [3].

    Please send submissions to gallery.printmakers@mymts.net with the subject 'Residency Exchange 2017'.

    All applicants must have a valid MSS membership. ($35/$20 per year)

      "Centre[3] for Print and Media Arts is an artist-run centre dedicated to promoting print and media arts in contemporary artistic discourse. As a production, exhibition, education centre and animator of community arts, Centre[3] supports both traditional and experimental print media and media art practices. The centre encourages research and innovation and provides forums for discussion and examination of critical and theoretical issues. Centre[3] supports artists in the development of their professional endeavours and acts as a resource centre for the visual and media arts community." –http://centre3.com

  • Workshop: Coding a Woodcut

    In connection with their exhibition Monument: Coding a Woodcut opening, October 28th, artists Beth Howe (Vancouver) and Clive McCarthy (San Francisco) will present a workshop at the FABlab this October. The artists will take viewers though their artistic process of exploring the possibilities that come from fusing algorithms and machine tooling with woodcut printing.  Participants will get to create their own coded woodblock print in the workshop. Registration is required. Space is limited. Sign up now!
     
    Beth Howe’s practice investigates the built environment and how architecture affects and reflects the way we perceive and understand landscape. Her work involves printmaking, drawing, artist’s books and multiples and she currently serves as Associate Professor in Print Media at Emily Carr University of Art and Design in Vancouver, BC.
    Clive McCarthy was born in Upton Park, London and following his graduation from University of Salford, he worked in the semiconductor industry. His engineering work ranged from working in a wafer fab clean room to managing a chip and software development organization with 200 employees. His artwork invariably uses computers and he is based in San Francisco, CA. Beth and Clive have collaborated on combining code and relief printing since 2010.  





  • New folio of prints by Denis Lessard

    h_éros by Denis Lessard
    Folio of three screen printed images in folder, edition of ten
    printed by Andrew Lodwick
    Image size: 12 x 9 inches on 21 x 15 inch paper
    $750
     
    Each print presents a pairing of images in two vibrant colours : historical artworks in printmaking by Crispijn van de Passe and Cornelis Cornelisz van Haarlem, superimposed with figures from vintage and current advertising.
    As suggested in the project’s title, the idea is to put forward the homoreoticism in the mythological or advertising hero figure. The project was triggered especially by my discovery of the very sexy works by 16th century Dutch printmaker and painter, Cornelis Cornelisz van Haarlem. As well, h_éros is a continuation of my earlier printmaking projects such as L’Air/Maillol and La cuisine, which I have developed in the 1990s (printed by Peter Braune at New Leaf Editions in Vancouver) and Tendresses in the early 2000s (printed by Francine Turcotte at Atelier Presse Papier in Trois-Rivières).




















  • Annual Call for Submissions: Main Gallery

    Deadline for Submissions: September 1st, 2016
    Martha Street Studio exhibits a wide range of print-based work from traditional to contemporary, including work that pushes the limits of what is considered printmaking. CARFAC fees are paid for selected exhibitions.
    If you wish to submit an application to exhibit your work, or are a curator with a proposal for a show, please email your submissions to gallery.printmakers@mymts.net with the subject line ‘Gallery Submission 2016’
    If you are unable to send your submission by email you can mail it to-
    Martha Street Studio c/o Gallery Programming, 11 Martha Street, Winnipeg, MB, R3B 1A2.
    Items to include in your submission
    Project proposal (1 page)
    CV (max 2 pages)
    Up to 12 jpeg images (1024 pixels x 1024 pixels maximum size per image)
    Corresponding image list including title, medium/description and date
    Optional:  Additional support material such as essays or reviews (max 2 items)
    All text must be saved as a PDF, images seperate.
     
    To see more images of past exhibtions look in the Exhibitions Archive in the column on the right.