Risa Horowitz (born 1970) is a Canadian visual and media artist. Her works have been exhibited across Canada and internationally.[1] Her work has been shown at Canada House in London, England, and is included in its permanent collection.[2][3] She is currently a professor at the University of Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada.
Risa Horowitz | |
---|---|
Born | 1970 |
Education | York University, University of Saskatchewan |
Known for | Visual and media artist |
Awards | K.M. Hunter Artist Award |
Education
editHorowitz received her Bachelor of Fine Arts in Interdisciplinary Fine Arts Studies in 1995 at York University, and completed her masters in Visual Arts in 2000 at the University of Saskatchewan. In 2012 she completed her PhD in Visual Arts at York University.[4][5]
Career
editShe has lived and worked in seven different Canadian provinces[6] and has taught critical issues for studio artists, photography, and digital imaging at York University and Grenfell Campus. She is currently a professor of Visual Arts in the Department of Visual Arts at the University of Regina, in Saskatchewan.[7]
As an academic, Horowitz is interested in practice-based scholarship and the boundaries between expert and amateur, hobby and work, and leisure and productivity.[8]
In 2011, she co-founded the Working Group for Studio Art Practice and Research for the University Art Association of Canada with Annie Martin.
Works
editSince 2019, Horowitz has participated in several two-person and group exhibitions including A New Light: Canadian Women Artists at the Canadian Embassy in Washington D.C., and Seeing Stars at the Stanley & Audrey Burton Gallery in Leeds. [9]
I Set Out To Track The Sun (2018)
editI Set Out to Track the Sun, is a body of photographic work centred on the midnight sun. This work was presented from November 2018 to January 2019 at Gallery Svalbard in Longyearbyen, Norway.[10]
Landscapes and Silence (2016)
editLandscapes and Silence featuring Horowitz’s work Starfields and Fields (2016), was realized with the collaborative support of Edgar Pinto and exhibition co-curator Tanya Abraham of the Kashi Art Gallery and the Art Outreach Society (TAOS) in Kochi, Kerala.[citation needed]
Imaging Saturn (2016)
editImaging Saturn (2016) is a multimedia installation that focuses on Saturn, its orbit, and the paths of the sun and surrounding stars. Incorporating aspects of participatory science and data visualization, the exhibit combines astronomy and astrophotography with mapping of the ecliptic, background stars, and Saturn,[11] a mechanized orbiter (developed with Ray Peterson), kinetic sculptures, and video. It reflects an interest in Saturn going back to 2010.[6][12] In that year, Horowitz had a transcendent experience while observing Saturn through a telescope for the first time. This led to the launch of the Imaging Saturn project, which involves tracking Saturn's movements for the entire period of its 29 year orbit from 2011 to 2040. This work was continued at least until 2016, although Horowitz also acknowledged that in practice she might not continue the project for the entire 29 years.[13]
Blurry Canada (2011)
editDuring a road trip across Canada in 2010, Horowitz recorded 175 hours of continuous video and 20,000 images. Seventy-five chromogenic prints, and all 175 hours of video in a 13-day loop, were exhibited in her show Blurry Canada at Dunlop Sherwood Village Gallery in Regina in 2011.[14][15] The exhibit was shown at the Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba in 2012.[16]
Trio (2008)
editTrio is a multichannel video installation that shows Horowitz' efforts to learn to play Franz Schubert's Piano Trio No. 2, a trio for piano, cello and violin.[17] Trio was presented at the Experimental Art Foundation in Adelaide, Australia, in 2008.[18]
Trees of Canada (2007)
editFor Trees of Canada Horowitz drew upon Canada's 2004 National Forest Inventory as an inspiration for examining indigenous and naturalized trees.[1] Her resulting series of acrylic paintings was exhibited in 2007 at the Profiles Gallery, St. Albert, Alberta, and in 2008 at MKG127 Gallery, Toronto, Ontario.[1] Twenty pieces from Trees of Canada (2007) were acquired by Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade for the permanent collection of Canada House in London, England.[2][3] Horowitz attended the unveiling, at which Queen Elizabeth II was present.[8]
twitch (2003)
edittwitch (2003) is a group exhibition curated by Risa Horowitz. It began as a two person exhibit which was orchestrated by the selection committee for regular programming at Ace Art inc. This hybrid collaboration consisted of five artists; David Rokeby’s Very Nervous System; Garnet Hertz’s Experiments in Galvanism; Nicholas Stedman’s The Blanket Project; Kevin Yates’ Untitled (Dying Bull) and other works; and Erika Lincoln’s Scale[19].
twitch invites the viewer to consider the simulated fantasy that technology and interactive media can provide throughout the exhibit. Horowitz describes the exhibit; “twitch is about comfort; thought; pleasure; mystery; learning; joy; fear; pain; the search for meaning; mythology and enabling myths; our place in the universe; loneliness”.[19]
Melitzah (2000–2007)
editMelitzah (2000–2007) is an extensive vocal performance coupled with the Canadian Oxford Dictionary. Horowitz visualized every word in the dictionary with a waveform of her pronunciation of that word and documented her visualization in a set of 138 books and a website.[20] Melitzah was selected for the FILE Electronic Language International Festival, São Paulo Brazil, in 2005.[4]
girl before a mirror (2000)
editgirl before a mirror (2000) is an MFA project completed at the University of Saskatchewan originally exhibited at the Gordon Snelgrove Gallery.[21] It is based loosely on a 1932 painting of the same name by Pablo Picasso. The project is a catalogue of self-portraits.[22][23]
Awards
editHorowitz was the recipient of the K.M. Hunter Artist Award in 2006.[24]
Footnotes
edit- ^ a b c "Trees of Canada". MKG127. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
- ^ a b "Canada House | Arbutus menzeisii / Arbutus". www.canadahousecollection.co.uk. Retrieved 2016-03-11.
- ^ a b "Professor's artwork added to Canada House collection". University of Regina. Retrieved 2016-03-11.
- ^ a b "Risa Horowitz CV". RIsa Horowitz. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
- ^ Horowitz, Risa (2012). Disciplining art practice: work, hobby, and expertise in practice-based scholarship (Blurry Canada, Potager, Scrabble) (Ph.D thesis). York University. OCLC 864657913.
- ^ a b Nifesion, Tobi (February 2, 2016). "Interstellar imaginations come to life". The Manitoban. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
- ^ "Risa Horowitz: Media, Art, and Performance, University of Regina". www.uregina.ca. Retrieved 2016-03-13.
- ^ a b "New afternoon Artist Talks". Artsy Type. Fine Arts – University of Victoria. Retrieved April 13, 2015.
- ^ "Risa Horowitz CV". Retrieved 24 May 2024.
- ^ "Canada Council for the Arts Stats and Stories". Retrieved 24 May 2024.
- ^ "Imaging Saturn (Modeling Views)" (PDF). Risa Horowitz. Retrieved 13 September 2021.
- ^ "Risa Horowitz". ArtSci Salon. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
- ^ "Imaging Saturn". Risa Horowitz. Retrieved 13 September 2021.
- ^ Enright, Robert (2011). "Ms. Roadie". Border Crossings. 30 (117).
- ^ "Dunlop Art Gallery Exhibitions :: Blurry Canada". www.dunlopartgallery.org. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
- ^ Horowitz, Risa; Lebedinskaia, Natalia (2012). Risa Horowitz: Blurry Canada. Brandon, Manitoba: Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba. ISBN 9781927076033.
- ^ Holubizky, Ihor (2008). Practice makes imperfect (I'm perfect). Adelaide: Experimental Art Foundation.
- ^ "Trio / Risa Horowitz". Trove (National Library of Australia). Retrieved 12 March 2016.
- ^ a b Horowitz, Risa (2003). twitch. Ace Art Inc.
- ^ Kasprzak, Michelle (2009-06-29). "Creating Spaces: Net Art in the "Real World"". Archived from the original on June 29, 2009. Retrieved 2016-03-11.
- ^ MacPherson, Colleen (26 August 2000). "Visual arts". Saskatoon Star-Phoenix. Retrieved 16 September 2020.
- ^ Horowitz, Risa (2000). girl before a mirror (MFA). University of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 16 September 2020.
- ^ Horowitz, Risa (2000). girl before a mirror (MFA). University of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 16 September 2020.
- ^ "2006 KM Hunter Charitable Foundation KM Hunter Artist Awards Ontario Arts Council". www.kmhunterfoundation.ca. Retrieved 2016-03-10.