Marlene Creates: Places, Paths, and Pauses
May 21 - August 25, 2019
This retrospective presents the work of Newfoundland-based environmental artist and poet Marlene Creates, offering a comprehensive and immersive experience of nearly four decades of her unique activities.
Internationally known for her work in photography, mixed media assemblages and (more recently) prizewinning videos and poetry, Creates explores the complex and layered relationships between people and the natural world they inhabit.
Although her work has taken her across the country and around the world, her projects since the mid-1980s have focused mainly on Canadian lands and peoples.
The natural environment and the land itself have long been central to Canadian art, but Creates‘ work holds a unique place within the landscape genre. From her earliest ephemeral gestures in the land to her immersion in the boreal forest that surrounds her home in Newfoundland, Creates’ projects have explored the idea of place—not simply as a geographical location but as a process that involves memory, multiple narratives, physical imprinting, ecology and language.
Central to her practice is her use of photography, as a documentary medium and means to call into question the status of art and the art object. In Creates’ work, photography as a present reality (not simply a past record) can also link the viewer performatively with the processes of the natural world.
An illustrated catalogue published in English and French editions by Goose Lane Editions accompanies the exhibition. The catalogue includes essays by Robert Macfarlane, Joan Schwartz, Andrea Kunard and Susan Gibson Garvey. Additional texts include a poem and commentary by poet Don Mckay and Marlene Creates’ reflections on her work.
Curated by
Susan Gibson Garvey and Andrea Kunard
Artists in the exhibition
Marlene Creates
Credits
Organized by the Beaverbrook Art Gallery in partnership with the Dalhousie Art Gallery, with generous support from the Museums Assistance Program of Canadian Heritage and from the Canada Council for the Arts.