Sight LinesFeaturing Marten Elder, Erin McSavaney, and Renée Van Halm
Marten Elder
Erin McSavaney
Renée Van Halm
October 1, 2024 - January 31, 2025
Equinox Gallery is pleased to present Sight Lines, an exhibition that considers ways in which artists re-frame, augment or re-imagine architectural space in their compositions. Through varied approaches to the built environment, the works presented here offer new ways of seeing the world by recalibrating visual sensitivities to colour, form and light.
This is an off-site exhibition located at The Pacific Gallery in the Fairmont Pacific Rim.
Location of this exhibition: Fairmont Pacific Rim
1038 Canada Place
Vancouver BC fairmontpacificrim.com
Erin McSavaney
1982 Palisades
2024
Acrylic on canvas
36" x 48"
Renée Van Halm
White Facade
2009
Acrylic on linen
63" x 47"
Renée Van Halm
Blind
2009
Acrylic on canvas
63" x 47"
Renée Van Halm
On Top of Everything
2024
Acrylic on canvas
48" x 60"
Marten Elder
non-objective color 8
2013
Archival pigment print on fiber-based paper
40" x 30"
Erin McSavaney
Afternoon, September
2023
Acrylic on canvas
24" x 18"
Erin McSavaney
Evening, September
2023
Acrylic on canvas
24" x 18"
Marten Elder
Burgen Steps. Exposed at 23 focus points and rendered in 5 color spaces
2019/2023
Pigment print on fibre-based paper
40" x 30"
Featured Artists
Marten Elder
Marten Elder
Marten Elder’s photographs offer a reconsideration of the way that images are captured in light of digital and technological developments. Through careful interpretation of the raw data, Elder produces photographs that disrupt spatial hierarchy and that are intensely vibrant in their tonal range. The colours may seem synthetic at first, but they all exist in the world in the same relative relationship to one another, and it is this representation of the world that is of great interest to Elder.
Erin McSavaney focus’ on spaces of everyday life and demonstrates how under close examination our perception of reality can be changed. Inspired by the practices of the 1960s Photorealist painters, McSavaney’s paintings are drawn from observations of his subjective urban landscape. McSavaney begins by walking or biking through urban spaces and carefully documents various interactions between nature and architecture. He then renders hyper-realistic spaces in acrylic paint on canvas. From afar, these paintings appear as a photograph or film still; but upon close inspection subtle details bring attention to the physical object of painting itself.
Renée Van Halm has been a significant figure in Canadian art for over forty years, both as a practicing artist and as an arts educator. In the early part of her career, Van Halm was interested in creating forms that were hybrids of many media, not purely painting, sculpture, or architecture. The evolution of her subject and medium has led her to consider the many forms of visual presentation in our culture. Van Halm draws her images from a variety of sources: mainstream fashion, architecture and decor magazines, and more recently the work of 1920s Bauhaus artists and weavers, in considering the ways in which architectural space governs contemporary human experience.