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Opening reception for Monica McGarry’s ‘Not quite sure about the glitter though’

KAMLOOPS – Monica McGarry’s work uses pop culture, kitsch and humour to challenge how people perceive and engage with images in the world around them. Her choice of materials recalls a childhood fascination with glossy and shiny objects.

As we mature into adulthood, a fascination with eye-catching materials remains, though perhaps our desire to interact with them lessens. McGarry delves into how this perception changes as we get older and how we can be drawn back into an investigation of our surroundings, beyond appearances.

Glitter, often a staple of children’s art projects, is used as the central medium in McGarry’s large scale painting inviting viewers to take in the shimmering surface more closely, while the text and interrogative titles of both the work and the exhibition wrestle with the seduction of this material, highlighting this uneasy relationship between criticality and the experience of wonder as we age.

McGarry's sculptural installation, Fluttering Iridescent Ribbon, references American conceptual artist Joseph Kosuth’s approach to representation in works such as his One and Three Chairs (1965). Kosuth presented three incarnations of a chair including an actual chair, a photograph of a chair and a text panel with a description of a chair. McGarry treats the fluttering iridescent ribbon similarly, provoking the viewer to consider how meaning is constructed.

McGarry’s installation playfully addresses notions of beauty and seduction and the underlying question: What is art? Together, the works in the exhibition reflect on how we assign meaning to objects and how we relate to images in the context of art making and viewing at a time when we are constantly bombarded by visual information.

THE CUBE

Sept. 17 to Oct. 29, 2016

Opening Reception: Saturday, Sept. 24, 6:30 to 8:00 pm

Curated by Craig Willms, Assistant Curator, Kamloops Art Gallery

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Kim Anderson


Originally from a northern B.C. town that boasts a giant fly fishing rod and a population of 3,100, Kim moved to Kamloops in 2011 to attend Thompson Rivers University. Kim is as comfortable behind a camera as she is writing on her laptop. After graduating with a degree in journalism, Kim has been busy with an independent freelance writing project and photography work. Contact Kim at kanderson@infonews.ca with news tips or story ideas.

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