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December 30, 2004

Inspired by Royal Art Lodge

How The Collective creates its art pieces owes a great deal to the processes of the Royal Art Lodge, a Winnipeg-based art collective whose world-class work is worth checking out.

Art Lodge

Adrian Williams, a founding member of the Lodge, gave a detailed account of the group's processes and thinking during a presentation in January 2004 in VA-317, a painting and drawing studio in Concordia University's Visual Arts Building in downtown Montreal.

Williams's visit, which was attended by about 60 art students and faculty was arranged by painter Eleanor Bond, a Studio Arts professor at Concordia. An account of the event was prepared by Collective member Robert Winters for the university's Thursday Report publication. You can read Robert's story and see a photo taken at the event at:

Link to news item

Information about Adrian Williams and his work can be found on the Other Gallery's website, at:

Adrian Williams

The Royal Art Lodge's work is featured in the touring Ask the Dust show, whose last stop, unforunately, is at the
Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, where it runs until Feb. 14, 2005. Here is the page on MOCA's website that describes the show and the Royal Art Lodge:

MOCA's site

MOCA's site describes the Royal Art Lodge's process in this way:

"Since 1996, The Royal Art Lodge has met every Wednesday evening in their studio at a nondescript Winnipeg warehouse. The collaborative process of drawing is unique: One member starts a drawing and then passes it along, giving each member an opportunity to alter, augment, and finally deem the drawing complete."

Ask the Dust, whose show catalogue is a must for anybody who enjoys contemporary art, was previously presented at such high-profile venues as The Power Plant in Toronto and The Drawing Center in New York.

Power Plant

Drawing Center

Excerpts from the Museum of Contemporary Art's description of the show and the Royal Art Lodge include the following:

Royal Art Lodge at MOCA

Royal Art Lodge: Ask the Dust comes to the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles

The Royal Art Lodge: Ask the Dust is the first international touring exhibition from the acclaimed Winnipeg-based artist collective The Royal Art Lodge. Showcasing approximately 300 of their collaborative drawings as well as over 400 solo works in various mediums, the exhibition opens at The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) Pacific Design Center on November 14, 2004, and remains on view through February 14, 2005.

The Royal Art Lodge was created in 1996 by six undergraduate students from the University of Manitoba's art department who began meeting regularly to make drawings together. The group began with Marcel Dzama, Neil Farber, Michael Dumontier, Drue Langlois, Adrian Williams, and Jonathan Pylypchuk and later included Hollie Dzama and Myles Langlois. They called themselves The Royal Art Lodge in a tongue-in-cheek gesture that reflected both their roots in a provincial Canadian city and the slightly hermetic nature of their group. Often referring to themselves as a "Self-Serving Secret Society," they joked that "No one gets in, no one gets out."

Since 1996, The Royal Art Lodge has met every Wednesday evening in their studio at a nondescript Winnipeg warehouse. The collaborative process of drawing is unique: One member starts a drawing and then passes it along, giving each member an opportunity to alter, augment, and finally deem the drawing complete. As each drawing is finished, it is date stamped and archived in one of five suitcases according to the members' opinion of merit. Each suitcase is marked with ranked symbols, such as a rayed sun for the very best drawings, a heart for the second best, a sad rain cloud for the bad drawings, a skull and crossbones for the works to be destroyed, and a sun face with shield for drawings to which the group is personally attached.

Over the past seven years, the group has collaborated on thousands of drawings which reflect the dry wit, quirky sense of humor, diligent exuberance, and youthful optimism of its members. Their influences are many and varied, such as comics, children’s art and book illustrations, film noir, science fiction, vintage pornography, George Burns, Dante, surrealism, and Fluxus art. The core of their production is drawings, but they also produce mixed-media drawings and collages, paintings, stuffed dolls, dioramas, kites, puppets, videos, musical instruments, compact discs, records, and fanzines as well as various masks, costumes, props, and performance sets.

Together and separately, they have begun to achieve worldwide recognition for their accomplished and extensive draftsmanship, incisive and unforgettable characterizations, and a do-it-yourself low-tech aesthetic that all combine to create an art of dynamic energy, whimsical charm, and surprising beauty.

The Royal Art Lodge consists of six members, several of whom are related to one another. Originally, the group included Marcel Dzama, Neil Farber, Michael Dumontier, Drue Langlois, Adrian Williams, and Jonathan Pylypchuk. Later when Pylypchuk and Williams left, Hollie Dzama and Myles Langlois joined as members. The Dzamas and Langloises are siblings and Farber is the Dzamas' uncle.

The members have also developed solo careers, and the exhibition will highlight some of their individual works outside the context of the group, giving a fuller picture of the artists’ particular interests and how their unique visions come to bear on The Royal Art Lodge output. Some of their unique styles include M. Dzama's sexually charged images and hybrid creatures drawn in rootbeer and ink, D. Langlois’s melodramatic dioramas, and Pylypchuk’s rough-hewn yet emotionally tender collages.


The Royal Art Lodge: Ask the Dust is curated by independent curator Joseph R. Wolin and The Power Plant Director Wayne Baerwaldt, and jointly organized by The Drawing Center, New York; The Power Plant, Toronto; De Vleeshal, Middelburg, the Netherlands; and Plug In ICA, Winnipeg. MOCA Assistant Curator Michael Darling is coordinating MOCA’s presentation.

The exhibition was previously on view at The Drawing Center, New York (January 18–March 8, 2003), The Power Plant, Toronto (March 21–May 25, 2003), De Vleeshal, Middelburg, the Netherlands (June 21–August 31, 2003), and the Elaine L. Jacob Gallery, Wayne State University, Detroit (February 13–April 2, 2004). MOCA is the final venue of the tour.

December 16, 2004

Media coverage

The Collective raised its profile through its Interactive Wall Project No. 1 at the VAV Gallery's Greater than One show. Concordia University's Thursday Report carried a story in its Dec. 2, 2004, issue about the Interactive Wall and published a photo of an artist putting up a piece of her work on the Wall.

Link

December 12, 2004

Journalist Visits The Collective

When Luisa Santos of The Link appeared in Cafe X, the student cafe at Concordia University's Visual Arts building, she wasn't looking for java, she wanted The Collective. Group member David King happened to be within earshot and soon, Luisa was dropping into one of the collective's Friday morning sessions to see what was going on. Luisa's report can be found at:

Link to news item

While you're visiting The Link's site, you can read other columns Luisa has written about Concordia's arts scene for the paper. Luisa, an art history student who also serves as a copy editor at The Link, might be dropping in on the group again in the new year when she has said she would like to get involved. You can also see Luisa making her mark on one of our drawings at the Nov. 26 session, in the photo gallery section of our site.

December 11, 2004

David King

David's interests include mathematics, chaos, art and noise. Technology and the interface between human and machine are also referenced in his work. David is a third-year Studio Arts student at Concordia University in Montreal, taking mostly painting and drawing. He also sometimes uses Photoshop and Illustrator in his work.

thebeerfish@hotmail.com

December 02, 2004

New Zealand Collective

Something to Look Forward to In case you haven't noticed, drawing's back. Amsterdam's Geert Dekkers capitalizes on its quiet renaissance by using webspace to disseminate art to an unlimited viewership. Nznl.com is a New Zealand-based weblog and 'a drawing a day' has been programmed to generate a new drawing daily at exactly 00:00 CET since May 2002. Dekkers explains that 'The drawings, even if they are not strictly drawings (but web pages or flash movies) are, in essence, plans, and I see them as the most basic form of an artistic idea. Which is of course why most of the content is in some way related to planning some event in the future.' The drawing a day project dovetails out of Dekkers' ongoing preoccupation with the concept of future, the basis for other threads such as 'One Day,' a series that 'takes a wish or desire and throws it forward into some unspecified future.' - Peggy MacKinnon http://www.nznl.com/

POST-IT ART COMPETITION

The Collective has been invited by Concordia's Studio Arts Department to participate in this year's post-it art competition. We have been given a bag with about 1,700 post-it notes of different sizes and colours. See details below.

There are eight individuals or groups participating from Concordia and one of these will be chosen to compete in the final post-it competition.
The prizes are: 1st prize= $5,000 for the winner and $5,000 for his/her school 2nd= $1,000 3rd= $500

Each work has to be made primarily of post-its, and can be wall-mountable 2-D or 3-D floor pieces. They have asked that the work not be multi-media or mobiles, and not exceed 1 x 1 x 1 metre.
If you want to see what past competition participants have done, please visit this website: www.3M.com/CA/postitart
Participants are asked to have their works ready by January 14 at noon.
.
Here's what we have to work with:
1 pad of 690 that have a weird floral design on all sides.
2 pads of 100 yellow rectangular larger post its.
4 pads of 100 plain square post-its of assorted colors.
2 pads of 225 shaped in "tree", "apple" and circle shapes.
All in all, 1740 post-its.

Sonomi Tanaka

Sonomi, a second-year Studio Arts student, describes her interests this way:

Lately I have been interested in graphic novels, both American and Japanese. I can't seem to make a whole comic but I like single frames in a comic that may not have to do with another. That's what I like to do but I don't know if it's my specialty. I find people never cease to interest me, and they tend to be the thing I do the most.

sontan@gmail.com

December 01, 2004

Bea Parsons

Bea Parsons, who is interested in oil painting and meditation, is an Art Education student in the Faculty of Fine Arts at Concordia University in Montreal. Her contributions to The Collective have included suggesting strong themes for drawings and helping determine how our work would be shown on the Interactive Wall project at our first show. Bea also worked on our new logo's design, which can be seen at the top of our home page. When it was time for the next person to work on this key piece at our Nov. 19 session, held in the VAV Gallery in downtown Montreal, we knew Bea's careful work would enhance the design.

bea.parsons@shaw.ca

In the news again

Concordia University's main website featured the Collective's invitation to
participate in our Interactive Wall Project No. 1 as one of the university's
top entertainment events during the week of the show, Nov. 15 to 19, at the
VAV Gallery in downtown Montreal:

http://news.concordia.ca/entertainment/003132.shtml

In the news

Concordia's Thursday Report, which describes itself as the university's
community newspaper, published a story on the Collective in its edition of
Nov. 18, 2004. It can be viewed at:

http://ctr.concordia.ca/2004-05/nov_18/08/

Weekly Meeting

Don't forget: This week's Friday morning meeting is at 9:30 (yes, it's AM!) in room 315.

This will be the last meeting before Christmas.

NEW LOOK FOR SITE

Welcome to the latest version of our site!

In fact, we have re-done the whole thing, using new tools that will allow members to update content.

Not a member yet? Let us know and we will gladly add you to the list.

Check out the links on the right: They point to other parts of our site. Especially worth a visit are the Photos and Our Work galleries.

We're also working on a way to let members of The Collective and visitors to the site work on images in a collaborative fashion.

Have fun, and be sure to check back soon. We have lots more images and photos to post, and we want your feedback as The Collective grows.

You can leave your comments on many entries ... tell us what you think!

Our new Logo

logo.3heads200x200.jpg

Will be integrated into our web site design.