A Prairie Vernacular: Folk & Contemporary Art Narratives of Life On the Canadian Prairies
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Red Deer Museum + Art Gallery 4525 47A Avenue, Red Deer, Alberta T4N 6Z6

A Prairie Vernacular: Folk & Contemporary Art Narratives of Life On the Canadian Prairies, 2021
Image credit (top) L-R: Kenneth HouseGo, Casual Distress, Harvester, 1985, Collection of the Alberta Foundation for the Arts. Ann Harbuz, Inside Views of Whitkow, 1980. Jude Griebel, Grandmother, 2012. William Panko, Happy Cabbages, n.d., Collection of the Alberta Foundation for the Arts. Jane Zednik, Bull, 1980. Amalie Atkins, Scenes from a Secret World, 2010.
A Prairie Vernacular: Folk & Contemporary Art Narratives of Life On the Canadian Prairies
Vernacular art is largely defined as a genre of art made by individuals untrained in the visual arts, who may not even identify themselves as artists. Artists represented in the exhibition include historic and contemporary untrained or self-taught artists, as well as academically trained artists whose works speak to the vernacular, the locality and history of the Prairie.
These representations of the vernacular not only adopt the materials, methods and/or motivations of a folk aesthetic, but speak to shared contexts and subject matter, either reflecting on memories and histories of life on the prairies or presenting visual narratives rife with humour, fantasy, myth, politics, religion, and the prairie gothic. The relationship on the Prairies between folk or vernacular art and contemporary art that engages in the vernacular has been complex and, perhaps, somewhat symbiotic, stemming from a shared interest in Prairie experience, culture, environment and sensibilities as compelling sources for artistic practice.
Curated by Jennifer McRorie & Joanne Marion; organized and toured by Moose Jaw Museum & Art Gallery in partnership with the Esplanade and is funded by the Government of Canada and Department of Canadian Heritage.
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