VANCOUVER, BC.- Key acquisitions of historical and contemporary art expanded the
Vancouver Art Gallerys permanent collection by 156 works in 2011, with 113 works received through private donation. Works by artists Robert Davidson, Gathie Falk, Rodney Graham, Angela Grossman, Lawren Harris, Brian Jungen, Ken Lum, Liz Magor, Takao Tanabe, John Vanderpant, Frederick Varley and Ian Wallace, among many others, have been added to the Gallerys collection, enhancing its status as the most significant public art collection in Western Canada . The Gallerys permanent collection now numbers 10, 262 works of art.
The Vancouver Art Gallery s permanent collection is the core of our program and its sustained growth is essential, said Gallery director Kathleen Bartels , We are grateful for the generosity of our many donors of art and, with their support, we will continue to build this important legacy for this city and province.
Following a successful mid-career survey exhibition at the Gallery in 2011, several important works by Ken Lum were added to the Gallerys collection of this internationally renowned BC artist. These include Mirror Maze with 12 Signs of Depression, an ambitious installation first produced for Documenta 11 in 2002, as well as two video works that document Lums early performances Entertainment for Surrey and Walk Piece, both from 1978.
With funds from Arts Partners in Creative Development, the Gallery was pleased to commission two new photo-based works by Ian Wallace, At the Crosswalk VII and VIII, which will be presented in a forthcoming career retrospective of Wallaces work.
Through the generosity of Michael Audain and the Audain Foundation, the Gallery is now home to several significant First Nations works, including an argillite model totem pole dating back to the 1860s now on view in Shore, Forest and Beyond: Art from the Audain Collection, Fire Rangers Lookout by Frederick Varley and Etienne Zacks Inner Works. The Audain Emerging Artist Fund enabled the Gallery to acquire works by award-winning Vancouver artists Jeremy Hof, Isabelle Pauwels, and Jeremy Shaw.
The contemporary collection was also expanded in 2011 by corporations and individuals. BMO Financial Group donated a significant new lightbox by renowned Vancouver artist Rodney Graham. Artists Model Posing for The Old Bugler, Among the Fallen, Battle of Beaune-Roland, 1870 in the Studio of an Unknown Military Painter, 1885 adds to the Gallerys significant collection of work by this artist. In honour of Kathleen Bartels 10th anniversary as director of the Gallery, Dr. Rodrigo Restrepo donated a major canvas by noted contemporary Canadian artist Kent Monkman, and Claudia Beck and Andrew Gruft celebrated the occasion with the gift of Scott McFarlands Reshoeing, Ferrier James Findel with Assistant on Southlands. The estate of Letia Richardson added a number of works to the permanent collection, including Gathie Falks Cement with Poppies #5.
The Gallery also received generous donations from several contemporary artists. Among the gifts in 2011:
Five photographs by artist Reece Terris from his Interior Views series;
Twelve unique photographs by William Vazan from the 1960s and 70s;
Michael Dreberts To Cumshewa, which was created for and presented in the 2010 exhibition Everything Everyday;
Four new works by Lawrence Weiner, adding to the Gallerys archive of posters by this acclaimed New York artist.
Funds from the Canada Council for the Arts Acquisition Assistance Program enabled the Gallery to acquire The Old Future by Elizabeth McIntosh.
The Gallery continues to receive support from the Anne Eliza Winn Trust for the expansion of its Group of Seven collection. In 2011, funds from the Winn Trust provided for the acquisition of Lawren Harris work titled Sketch Painted in Santa Fe for the Gallerys collection. The artist was influential in the development of the Vancouver Art Gallery .
Photography is increasingly recognized as a major strength of the collection. In the past year, the Gallery was pleased to be able to acquire 10 photographs by early 20th century photographer John Vanderpant. Purchased with the assistance of the Jean Macmillan Southam Art Acquisition Endowment Fund, these photographs add to the Gallerys already significant holding of Vanderpants work, which now numbers more than 100 photographs, by far the largest collection of his work in the world. The collection also benefitted from Aaron Milrads donation of six photographs by esteemed American photographer Larry Fink.
Other notable works were contributed by Monty Cooper, Peter Macnair and Jay Stewart, and Carol Jutte, among many other generous donors.