“Beyond the Words” Swedish Artist Carl Kohler Exhibit (April 1 - August 31, 2010)

“Beyond the Words” Swedish Artist Carl Kohler Exhibit (April 1 – August 31, 2010)

joseph_beuys2“Beyond the Words”Swedish Artist Carl Kohler – 1919-2006

 

The aficionados of classical art often underestimate the creations of artists who endeavour to challenge themselves to the new heights of creativity. The opinion of many classicists is that abstracted art has only a minor standing in art history. They maintain that abstract or even non-objective art holds little value especially if the work of art cannot be readily identified. Many believe that it is only possible to develop one’s art through step by step study and that without a methodical approach success as an artist is not possible.

The reaction is mainly psychological in that if one is not able to readily identify a subject that we are not depicting them as realistic. However, with the abstractionist their pursuit often goes far beyond the optical into a deeper level of psyche often involving spiritual aspects of human existence which has fascinated humankind for centuries: their joys, fears, sufferings, triumphs and failures. The principle objective of such creative artists is to connect deeper with the soul of the subject.

Today, worldwide, we are witnessing an invigorating resurgence toward this attitude to art and in particular to the discipline of portraiture. Portraiture in Canada was formed on the foundations of classical European art however, as a relatively young nation, the movement wasn’t established in Canada until the height of (the then innovative scientific art form) photography; again where the human form was depicted as the closest thing to meeting the individual themselves. This is still largely how Canadians describe what a proper portrait is.

To such artists belongs the late Carl Kohler (1919-2006) a Neo-Modernist/Abstract Swedish artist whose art grew from his own unique practices based on his own personal experiences and interests. Kohler’s expressive energy for life can be felt to this very day in his art and his versatility as a painter, sculptor and designer of which in each of these fields he was a master. However, of all of the varied arts he endeavoured to experiment and practice in he devoted his attention to the challenging discipline of portraiture. He was not merely satisfied to create an image as others wanted to see it.  He strived to maintain independence in thinking, conveying a freshness of individuality and often surprise!

Kohler wanted to create his own personality into his art by infusing it with the personality of his subjects – some he knew, most of them he did not. He created new forms to convey the energy and force of the importance and the impact these subjects had on his life whether they be poet, writer or musician. More often than not he created portraits that tempt the general public to penetrate themselves into the works and untangle the many meanings hidden within, bringing about a new or even renewed awareness of the authors themselves.

Kohler’s knowledge of writers was immense and he was compelled to document his interpretations of each subject in his own unique and intelligent way. He left us with the vibrant and sometimes haunting images of the likes of Simone de Beauvoir, James Joyce, and Carol Joyce Oats to name a few – literary icons imbedded in the annals of time through the eyes of a celebrated Swedish artist who had the vision to remind us all that these legends of the ‘word’ are still relevant in the 21st century.

“Beyond the Words” Swedish Artist Carl Kohler Exhibit will be displayed in the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre Gallery between April 1 and August 31, 2010.  For more information, please visit: www.carlkohler.com

Introduction by: Christian Corbet

Robson Reading Series Welcomes Lee Henderson at Vancouver Island Public Library

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On April 1, 2010, 7-8pm author Lee Henderson will be reading in Courtenay, British Columbia’s Vancouver Island Public Library.  Sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre’s Robson Reading Series, Lee will be reading from ‘The Man Game‘.

On a recent Vancouver Sunday afternoon, a young man stumbles upon a secret sport invented more than a century before, at the birth of his city. Thus begins The Man Game, Lee Henderson’s epic tale of loved requited and not, that crosses the contemporary and historical in an extravagant, anarchistic retelling of the early days of a pioneer town on the edge of the known world.

If you are in the Courtenay area, we look forward to having you a part of this reading.   For more information, please contact Allan Cho, Program Services Librarian at allan.cho@ubc.ca or 604.827.4366.

RBSC's Alice in Wonderland collection featured on CBC TV

UBC Library’s exceptional Alice in Wonderland collection, housed in Rare Books and Special Collections, is featured on CBC TV news.

The reporter, Bob Nixon, features some thoughts and a video clip of the story here.

Lee Henderson


Lee Henderson

Lee Henderson

Lee Henderson’s highly anticipated first novel The Man Game (Penguin Canada, 2008) was published to rave reviews in the National Post, Quill & Quire and CBC Radio and went on to win the 2009 Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize and the City of Vancouver Book Award. Lee’s debut short story collection The Broken Record Technique (Penguin Canada, 2002) won the 2003 Danuta Gleed Literary Award. He is a contributing editor to the arts magazines Border Crossings in Canada and Contemporary in the UK. He has published fiction and art criticism in numerous periodicals and co-organized “Father Zosima Presents”, a monthly night of sound performances in Vancouver.

On a recent Vancouver Sunday afternoon, a young man stumbles upon a secret sport invented more than a century before, at the birth of his city. Thus begins The Man Game, Lee Henderson’s epic tale of loved requited and not, that crosses the contemporary and historical in an extravagant, anarchistic retelling of the early days of a pioneer town on the edge of the known world.

Lee Henderson read at the Lillooet Room of the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre on March 25th, 2010.

Jack Zipes' Utopian Tendencies of Oddly Modern Fairy Tales Webcast

Jack Zipes is one of the world’s leading authorities on fairy tales, writing about and translating them. An internationally renowned scholar and author of more than 50 books on many subjects, he has through his writings transformed research on fairy tales, particularly with respect to how they function in the socialization of readers. Jack Zipes is Professor Emeritus of German and Comparative Literature at the University of Minnesota.

Though most people consider fairy tales fascinating relics of the past, they have actually undergone numerous transformations and remain oddly modern even in the twenty-first century. Using some key psychological and philosophical categories from Sigmund Freud and Ernst Bloch, Professor Zipes will discuss why fairy tales remain so important in our lives, and why writers and artists continue to elaborate and re-create utopian and carnivalesque motifs from the tales to re-shape perspectives on possibilities for changing the world.

Sponsored by Green College and the supporting units for the M.A. in Children’s Literature Program (MACL): the School of Library Archival and Information Studies, the Department of English, the Creative Writing Program in the Faculty of Arts, and the Department of Language and Literacy Education in the Faculty of Education. Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre. To view webcast, please click here.

Celebrate UBC Authors Presents Dr. Neil Safier at IKBLC

Prior to 1735, South America was largely terra incognita to many Europeans. But that year, the Paris Academy of Sciences sent a joint French and Spanish mission to the Spanish American province of Quito (in present-day Ecuador) to study the curvature of the Earth at the Equator—an expedition that would put South America on the map and in the minds of Europeans for centuries to come. Equipped with quadrants and telescopes, the mission’s participants  referred to the transfer of scientific knowledge from Europe to the Andes as a “sacred fire” passing mysteriously through European astronomical instruments to curious observers in South America.
By looking at the social and material traces of this expedition, Measuring the New World examines the transatlantic flow of knowledge in reverse—from West to East. Through ephemeral monuments and geographical maps, from the Andes to the Amazon River, the book explores how the social and cultural worlds of South America contributed to the production of European scientific knowledge during the Enlightenment. Neil Safier uses the notebooks of traveling philosophers, including Charles-Marie de La Condamine and others, as well as maps and specimens from the expedition, to place this particular scientific endeavor in the larger context of early modern print culture and the emerging intellectual category of scientist as author.   Come join us as Professor of History, Neil Safier presents from his book, Measuring the New World: Enlightenment Science and South America.
Time: April 6, 2010
Place: Lillooet Room (Rm 301) at Irving K. Barber Learning Centre
information: ikblc-events@interchange.ubc.ca or 604.827.4366

Robson Reading @ IKBLC Presents Lee Henderson, March 25, 2010

The Man Game Lee Henderson’s highly anticipated first novel The Man Game (Penguin Canada, 2008) was published to rave reviews in the National Post, Quill & Quire and CBC Radio and went on to win the 2009 Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize and the City of Vancouver Book Award. Lee’s debut short story collection The Broken Record Technique (Penguin Canada, 2002) won the 2003 Danuta Gleed Literary Award. He is a contributing editor to the arts magazines Border Crossings in Canada and Contemporary in the UK. He has published fiction and art criticism in numerous periodicals and co-organized “Father Zosima Presents”, a monthly night of sound performances in Vancouver.

Event takes place at the Lillooet Room, Irving K Barber Learning Centre, March 25, 2010 – 2-3pm

First Nations donation/exhibition featured in UBC Reports

An exhibition of First Nations portraits, on display during March 2010 at the Learning Centre Gallery, is featured in the latest edition of UBC Reports. B.C. artist Patricia Richardson Logie recently donated the portrait collection to UBC Library.

You can view the article here.