James Culleton: Vanished Days
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Prairie Fusion Arts & Entertainment 11 2 St NE, Portage la Prairie, Manitoba R1N 1R8
James Culleton, "Vanished Days," 2020
Prairie Fusion Arts & Entertainment has made the difficult decision to close our facility to the public in regards to the COVID-19 pandemic effectively immediately. We will re-evaluate the situation and recommended procedures set by our officials on April 14.
Our events, rentals, classes and workshops will continue to be postponed and we are working with booking organizations to bring our patrons updated information on our performances. This includes the final show in our 2019-2020 season, “Those Guys”.
Please note that we will be checking messages and e-mail, and if you have any concerns please contact us at 204-239-6029 or prairiefusioned@gmail.com
Thank you for your continued support of Prairie Fusion Arts & Entertainment.
The opening reception and artist talk is Thursday, February 27 at 7 p.m.
James Culleton is a Canadian contemporary multi-media artist and designer based in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He specializes in drawing, sculpture, and furniture design. His work has been exhibited throughout Manitoba, across Canada and into the United States. In 2016 Culleton partnered with the North Dakota Museum of Art to publish a book called McCanna House, a collection of drawings, paintings, songs and photographs that describe a magical place called McCanna House. Like in his other books Contouring Quebec and Lyrical Lines James Culleton uses blind contour drawing to describe his experiences. The setting is a turn of the century home located deep in the red river valley where Culleton explores the local history and unearths stories about family and farming beginning in the 1890s. In 2011 Culleton published a book called Lyrical Lines, delivering a visual who’s who of Canada’s roots music scene in some of Winnipeg’s most venerable music venues. The book highlights drawings he did of live performances he saw all over the Winnipeg, including the study drawings used to create the sculptures installed as part of the facade of the West End Cultural Centre. In 2005 he received a grant from the Conseil des arts et des lettres du Quebec to produce a collection of drawings where he used a GPS and blind contour drawing to rediscover his French roots while living in Quebec. From that collection of drawings he self published a bilingual book outlining the project called Contouring Quebec. Culleton currently teaches art at the Winnipeg Art Gallery and the Forum Art Centre