Absorbed, drawing to mark out a secluded life amongst strangers, segregated by dispossession, I allow arduous thought to transform, become tenuous acts of creation.
Fright wakens and slinks into weedy grounds where positive acts strive to flourish. Black and white lines enable my transition into new understanding. Drawn from some unacknowledged terrain where I am past worrying, the drawings reshape tolerance and capture my curious nature, where buoyancy supports insight and breathes delight.
Here's some drawings I made this year...
Pages
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- CV with Exhibitions & Residencies - Debora Alanna
- SCULPTURE ~ Debora Alanna
- Work in Progress
- Paintings & Drawings
- REVIEWS about Debora Alanna
- VIDEOS about Debora Alanna
- RESIDENCIES - In Progress
- Blog WRITING Collection - In Progress
- Poetry
- Photography & Poetry with Photography (Photopoetics)
- 2014 - Reviews by Debora Alanna
- 2013 - Reviews by Debora Alanna
- 2012 Reviews by Debora Alanna
- 2011 - Reviews by Debora Alanna
- 2010 - Reviews by Debora Alanna
- Selected Reviews from the 90s
Sunday, October 23, 2011
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
“ In search of the absurd “ by Philip Willey
“ In search of the absurd “ by Philip Willey
Here's the bit about me at the end of the article by Philip Willey on Exhibit-v...
"It’s been a good year for the Xchanges balcony. Back in May Helen Rogak, Betty Meyers, and Cheryl McBride transformed it with tar paper and paint. Later Christine Clarke’s vultures flew down from Deep Cove. It’s a conceptually challenging space and now it’s Deborah Alanna’s turn to tackle it. She has hung out some laundry. Clothes dipped in plaster of Paris to be precise. It’s about being frank, letting it all hang out, exposure. And by some curious piece of synchronicity she has been watching a film about the Franklin Expedition and the poor souls who died of exposure in the Arctic.
So there we stood in the parking lot behind the Dairy Queen looking up at a balcony. LED lights in the frigid laundry stared back at us like a row of eyes. A very strange experience. Debora Alanna never disappoints." ~ Watch Video ~
Thank you, Philip!
Here's a slide show of this work and more...
Here's the bit about me at the end of the article by Philip Willey on Exhibit-v...
"It’s been a good year for the Xchanges balcony. Back in May Helen Rogak, Betty Meyers, and Cheryl McBride transformed it with tar paper and paint. Later Christine Clarke’s vultures flew down from Deep Cove. It’s a conceptually challenging space and now it’s Deborah Alanna’s turn to tackle it. She has hung out some laundry. Clothes dipped in plaster of Paris to be precise. It’s about being frank, letting it all hang out, exposure. And by some curious piece of synchronicity she has been watching a film about the Franklin Expedition and the poor souls who died of exposure in the Arctic.
So there we stood in the parking lot behind the Dairy Queen looking up at a balcony. LED lights in the frigid laundry stared back at us like a row of eyes. A very strange experience. Debora Alanna never disappoints." ~ Watch Video ~
Thank you, Philip!
Here's a slide show of this work and more...
Labels:
"Victoria BC",
AGGV,
Balcony Gallery,
Brad Pasutti,
Christine Clark,
Exhibit-V,
Haren Vakil,
Horst G. Loewel,
Philip Willey,
Review,
Sarah Houghton,
Sculpture,
Steve Chmilar,
Xchanges Gallery
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Monday, October 17, 2011
Hanging Out the Laundry - Installation
I think there is more than laundry, there is 'Mistress Quickly', laundress and so much else. (Merry Wives of Windsor/Shakespeare) And the stream of streams, the Balcony proved to move thoughts: "This stream had been the good angel of my thoughts all the day, keeping them ever moving and ever fresh, cleansing and burnishing them, quite an open-air laundry of the mind." (The Quest of the Golden Girl/Gallienne)
Will stares of clothed apparitions last the month? How transitory are our hopes and fears, that they need to be wrung out more frequently than our clothes? Laundry is a comfort, if it does nothing but allow time to pass thoughtfully in the open air.
Evening...
Daylight...
Will stares of clothed apparitions last the month? How transitory are our hopes and fears, that they need to be wrung out more frequently than our clothes? Laundry is a comfort, if it does nothing but allow time to pass thoughtfully in the open air.
Evening...
Daylight...
Friday, October 14, 2011
Saturday, October 01, 2011
Friday, September 30, 2011
Hanging Out the Laundry
"Hanging Out the Laundry"
|
Sunday, August 28, 2011
Manifest - A group of sculptures by Debora Alanna - 2011
Here's a group of sculptures I made... (Paraffin and jewler's wax on dental plaster)
Saturday, July 30, 2011
Syngja
Here are some of my videos of Syngja, solo recordings of talented Tyr Jami, known as the cellist, composer and singer of The Winks performing the in Vancouver BC on December 2010 are accompanied by stunning visuals created in situ by Jasa Baka.
Tyr Jami and Jasa Baka are artists that live and work in Montreal PQ.
Tyr is returning to the West Coast in August to play in Vancouver, Salt Spring Island, Pender Island and Victoria on Vancouver Island, British Columbia:
August 4th: North Pender Island
August 5th: Victoria, BC @ the Red Door with Freak Heat Waves
http://freakheatwaves.bandcamp.com/
August 10th: Saltspring Island: noon hour Music and Munch concert series
August 11th: Vancouver @ The Red Gate
August 12th: Vancouver @ Thors Palace with Aaron Read, Andy Dixon, Garland and Yarn
https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=253367694678239
Syngja will play in Vancouver and Victoria
http://www.myspace.com/syngja
Pender and Saltspring Islands I will play with Graeme Wilkinson (piano)
Arvo Pärt: Spiegel im Spiegel
Giovanni Battista Pergolesi: Sinfonia in F
Sylvia Rickard: Song for the Earth
Dmitri Shostakovich:Sonata in D minor Op. 40
Icelandic Folksongs
George Gershwin
Tyr Jami and Jasa Baka are artists that live and work in Montreal PQ.
Tyr is returning to the West Coast in August to play in Vancouver, Salt Spring Island, Pender Island and Victoria on Vancouver Island, British Columbia:
August 4th: North Pender Island
August 5th: Victoria, BC @ the Red Door with Freak Heat Waves
http://freakheatwaves.bandcamp.com/
August 10th: Saltspring Island: noon hour Music and Munch concert series
August 11th: Vancouver @ The Red Gate
August 12th: Vancouver @ Thors Palace with Aaron Read, Andy Dixon, Garland and Yarn
https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=253367694678239
Syngja will play in Vancouver and Victoria
http://www.myspace.com/syngja
Pender and Saltspring Islands I will play with Graeme Wilkinson (piano)
Arvo Pärt: Spiegel im Spiegel
Giovanni Battista Pergolesi: Sinfonia in F
Sylvia Rickard: Song for the Earth
Dmitri Shostakovich:Sonata in D minor Op. 40
Icelandic Folksongs
George Gershwin
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Video of Mary and Moses Sculpture Garden
Here's the Mary and Moses Sculpture Garden video by Exhibit-v You can see my work at 9:15 (at the nine minutes and 15 seconds mark).
Mary and Moses Sculpture Garden show presented sculpture by the following artists:
Christine Clark, Debora Alanna, Elyse Portal, John Luna
Marlene Jess, Michael Jess, Todd Lambeth, Troi Donnelly
Tyler Hodgins, Sarah Stein, Wendy Welch.
Mary and Moses Sculpture Garden show presented sculpture by the following artists:
Christine Clark, Debora Alanna, Elyse Portal, John Luna
Marlene Jess, Michael Jess, Todd Lambeth, Troi Donnelly
Tyler Hodgins, Sarah Stein, Wendy Welch.
"An afternoon at Deep Cove" by Philip Willey
"An afternoon at Deep Cove" by Philip Willey
Philip Willey wrote an entertaining piece on the sculpture show I participated in:
The Mary and Moses Sculpture Garden Show
July 22,23 & 24, 2011
Moses Pt. Rd., North Saanich
Victoria, BC Canada
Philip Willey wrote an entertaining piece on the sculpture show I participated in:
The Mary and Moses Sculpture Garden Show
July 22,23 & 24, 2011
Moses Pt. Rd., North Saanich
Victoria, BC Canada
Sunday, July 24, 2011
Mary and Moses Sculpture Garden
White on Black - Yin (Photo by Christine Clark) |
White on Black - Yang (Photo by Christine Clark) |
The Mary & Moses Sculpture Garden Show
Christine Clark,artist writer, curator of the Balcony Gallery invited a group of artists install sculpture on 4 acres of forest lined with Deep Cove ocean expanse. The garden belonged to Mary and Moses Martin (from England), and their sons kindly consented to share the magical gardens with artists this weekend at the "Mary and Moses Sculpture Garden" show.
Todd Lambeth. Surveyor’s stakes in a grey scale.
Christine Clark. Cabbages (paper and paint)
Debora Alanna. White on black, in the pond.
Elyse Portal. Clay pieces in the trees.
Tyler Hodgins. Tent City in miniature.
Troi Donnelly. Nonsense words and plastic cones.
Wendy Welch. Chairs.
John Luna. String and other things.
Michael Jess. Burial Performance–time capsule.
Monday, July 18, 2011
Review on Exhibit-v - John Luna - Home Show and Sale
Exhibit-v posted my latest review: John Luna's Home Show and Sale
John Luna "is an artist based in Victoria British Columbia. He has exhibited installations of painting and sculpture in connection to poetry, collage, stencils, sculpture and historical artifacts, in Victoria, Kelowna, Calgary, San Diego and San Francisco. John has published catalogue essays and criticism in Victoria, Calgary, Vancouver, Toronto, Winnipeg, Los Angeles and Jakarta, and is an instructor at the Vancouver Island School of Art and the University of Victoria." ~ From John Luna's website: http://johnluna.ca/
Exhibit-v "provides an extensive monthly calendar of openings,ongoing art exhibitions and the most reliable list of art galleries in the community. Video clips of exhibitions and the people attending the events, as well as interviews with artists will enhance exposure for these visual arts events." From the Exhibit-v website: http://www.exhibit-v.ca/
John Luna "is an artist based in Victoria British Columbia. He has exhibited installations of painting and sculpture in connection to poetry, collage, stencils, sculpture and historical artifacts, in Victoria, Kelowna, Calgary, San Diego and San Francisco. John has published catalogue essays and criticism in Victoria, Calgary, Vancouver, Toronto, Winnipeg, Los Angeles and Jakarta, and is an instructor at the Vancouver Island School of Art and the University of Victoria." ~ From John Luna's website: http://johnluna.ca/
Exhibit-v "provides an extensive monthly calendar of openings,ongoing art exhibitions and the most reliable list of art galleries in the community. Video clips of exhibitions and the people attending the events, as well as interviews with artists will enhance exposure for these visual arts events." From the Exhibit-v website: http://www.exhibit-v.ca/
Friday, May 27, 2011
"Outside In" ~ Review by Chritine Clark
Outside In - Ministry of Casual Living ~ Photo by Aubrey Burke - Minister of MOCL |
Outside In - Detail 1 - Ministry of Casual Living ~ Photo by Aubrey Burke - Minister of MOCL |
Outside In - Detail 2 - Ministry of Casual Living ~ Photo by Aubrey Burke - Minister of MOCL |
Outside In - Ministry of Casual Living ~ Photo by Aubrey Burke - Minister of MOCL
"Outside In" ~ Review by Christine Clark
Outside In: Debora Alanna
At the Ministry of Casual Living this week is Debora Alanna‘s in situ work,For those of you who don’t know Debora, she is one of the primary art writers currently gracing the webpages of Exhibit V. Her written work is incredibly learned, incredibly erudite, with reference material drawn from poets to philosophers. Too, she has a fine sensibility, a great seriousness and a (perhaps somewhat) unusual sensitivity to the processes of other artists.
from Buffet, a Review by Debora Alanna
“Ian Rorie built Hunter-Gatherer with plywood, and fastened a trap, labeling it, so we would know what lurked inside, lighting the way to entrapment. Sustenance begins with death of some kind. Whether it is the reaping of grain, produce and gathering of the harvest or hunting the animal to produce the sustenance of the meal, there is the death, transformation and nourishment, ultimately. But is this really what is happening here? As Baudelaire points out in his 123rd poem of Les Fleur du Mal, “Death… Will grow the flowers of their brain!” Death, personified as the hold that cannot be captured, grown and gathered will, when we are faced with this fact, allow ideas to manifest. Artists must let imitation or misrepresentation die or die creatively. Rorie presents the diversionary plotting we must struggle with, and face to overcome trepidation. We must hunt out our nemesis, gather our wits, be aware of contrivance and allow our minds to feed us. Be hungry and you will capture what you need”.
And here we have her first exhibition of work in Victoria since 1973; a draping, swathing, theatrical (the word has been used) sculptural installation viewable both outside and through the windows at MOCL.
With a budget of $42, much of the material was found or donated. The fabric she used came from another artist’s studio space; homey scraps she liberated and transformed with a coating of grout compound. No longer colourful and flower patterned, the fabric is grey and pebbled, highly suggestive of classical sculpture; fraught with a powerful undercurrent, perhaps sexual, and immediately reminiscient (to me) of Daniel Laskarin‘s now beacon now sea.
now beacon now sea is a steel chair riddled with bullet holes and draped in a silky grey cloth; the very image of violence and romance; the swirling cloth, the explosive scars of penetration (of bullets ripping into steel), a sense of yearning.
Something similar is happening in Debora’s work, Outside In. A yearning, not exactly romantic, but desiring to be so. The materials and the space almost preclude romance. Inside of MOCL, the air smells strongly of mildew and it’s cold, bone chillingly so. The materials are not expensive; the gallery space is not pristine; in fact the work itself is not vaunted. She gets a week to show and barely anyone came to the opening (although the people who did brought wine). The connection to Laskarin (and his precursors) has everything to do with the essential emotion, the central experience of yearning.
The violence , though, in Outside In, is the effect of reality; it’s not a theatrical affectation, an idea to muse over; it’s truly present, possibly within Debora’s life, but certainly within her art making.
Daniel welded his chair in his very tight and bright backyard studio space and he shot the gun (many times over). Perhaps shooting bullets into a steel construction is an invitation to chaos and the unexpected, but essentially he was in control of his process, his materials and in the end, the exhibition space as well, the AGGV, although not directly controlled by Daniel, is certainly a controlled environment. It’s clean, there are bathrooms, and guards. People paid attention to the work. A lot was written.
Debora doesn’t have a studio space. She needs a job. She made the work over the course of two days right at the gallery. She had to bend to the structure of the gallery (the cement walls, the claustrophobic size) and to time.
It’s impossible to think of the violence of poverty, the poverty of materials, and space and attention, without thinking about vulnerability. The delicacy and the fragility of art made of bits and pieces, and installed temporarily is almost heartbreaking. Also the sweetness of faith, in the process, and in the need, in spite of any perceived privation, is almost unbearable to imagine. There is a wonderful quality to the work that speaks of living rather than enduring, and although it’s difficult to contemplate, it is very inspiring. Poverty is brutal; poverty destroys dignity. Poverty is cold and dirty and requires scrambling for the necessary. Debora’s eyes are closed, I think, to poverty.
Outside In is incredibly beautiful, and I wonder, is it poverty that is beautiful? The making of something from next to nothing? The insistence of making in spite of poverty? I don’t know. I don’t think so. I think the spirit of beauty is there, inherent and relentless, regardless of any void.
Another kind of violence, perhaps.
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Monday, May 23, 2011
Outside In
Outside In
Debora Alanna
21 May to 27 May 2011
A sculpture installation.
...Opening: Sunday 22 May - 7:30 pm.
Saturday 21 & Sunday 22 of May will be the construction/installation day.
Come by if you want to see the work in progress, produced 'in situ' at the Ministry of Casual Living.
"The MOCL in my mind is cloaked in intrigue. As is Victoria in general, as it pertains to its art and artists. There are pockets of activity and secretive cliques that share what they do with the public in a limited way. Perhaps all art communities have a kind of mystique.Nnot a native of Victoria, I found this to be particularly true here. I wanted to demonstrate how I felt in relation to the community here. The MOCL is ideal as it allows a site-specific work to show a sculptural depiction of an art myth.
The interior spheres are what is inaccessible, visible from the outside(ers) point of view through the plate-glass window. The swathing of the exterior of MCL allows a sensibility of inclusion with out providing true access.
**************************
Outside In
by Debora Alanna
A cantankerous glow
the outside in
braves plucky eyelid’s weight
over waves of
coarse tears.
Tearing through
times’ wasting, a
quiet introversion.
Look out.
http://exhibit-v.blogspot.com/2011/05/outside-in-at-ministry-philip-willey.html
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Drawing.
For the past few months daily drawing with a black Bic pen in a notebook has been a means to explore what I think and feel. I have not been able to write much, except a few (20 since last spring) art reviews. Making one work for the Deluge Lost LP Cover show, which did not sell - can you guess which one is mine? (Any takers?!) has been my sole sculptural output since Edmonton. I would like to blame the weather, the lack of studio space - monetary concerns. However, there is nothing stopping me, should I want to use found materials and wrap them around a telephone pole, for example, or trench sand into forms or use myself as a sculpture, performing some ritualistic incantation, calling the muses to my rescue.These drawings are my collected dream of work yet to come, and with some internal reconstruction, this may yet happen.
For the past few months daily drawing with a black Bic pen in a notebook has been a means to explore what I think and feel. I have not been able to write much, except a few (20 since last spring) art reviews. Making one work for the Deluge Lost LP Cover show, which did not sell - can you guess which one is mine? (Any takers?!) has been my sole sculptural output since Edmonton. I would like to blame the weather, the lack of studio space - monetary concerns. However, there is nothing stopping me, should I want to use found materials and wrap them around a telephone pole, for example, or trench sand into forms or use myself as a sculpture, performing some ritualistic incantation, calling the muses to my rescue.These drawings are my collected dream of work yet to come, and with some internal reconstruction, this may yet happen.
Saturday, January 08, 2011
Considering 3D
Would you like to take my course? Here's the synopsis of 'Considering 3D'... Find this course description and register on the Royal Roads website here:
http://www.royalroads.ca/continuing-studies/CYTAAC2269-Y10.htm
Considering 3D - Basics of Abstract Sculpture - TAAC2269
Date: Sat, Feb 5, 2011
Length: 1 day
Times: 10am - 4pm
Cost: $95 + applicable taxes
Best to Register By: Sat, Jan 22, 2011
Course Description
This hands-on workshop explores basic forms as the essence of abstract sculptural practice. All sculpture begins with the understanding of spheres, tetrahedrons (pyramid) and cubes, which each participant will use as a starting point to build their own abstract sculptures,
A brief introduction will show how basic forms exist in nature, and how sculptors have applied these forms. Using wire frame, wire mesh and plaster bandage, participants will learn how to construct the essence of abstract forms. From that starting point, development of those forms will use repetition, incising of forms, mirroring and more as techniques to expand their personal vision.
Topics:
* Three basic forms as they exist in nature
* Basic construction techniques
* Diversifying basic forms to explore relationship, rhythm and movement
* Exploration of independent vision
Facilitator: Debora Alana graduated from the Ontario College of Art in Experimental Art. Known for her installation work and “Photo-poetics”, she has held solo exhibitions in Kazakhstan, Italy, France, India, and Canada. Recent group shows include SurrealEstate – Mobius, Boston MA, Um Livro Sobre A Morte - Museu Brasileiro da Escultura, Els Colors Del Foc (The Fire of Colour) –- Exposició Collectiva de Davis Museum, Barcelona, Spain; Look - CACGV, Art & Soul, Victoria. Debora has lectured in art institutions and universities in India and Kazakhstan, and art venues in Canada. She writes art criticism for the Exhibit-v blog in Victoria, BC.
http://www.royalroads.ca/continuing-studies/CYTAAC2269-Y10.htm
Considering 3D - Basics of Abstract Sculpture - TAAC2269
Date: Sat, Feb 5, 2011
Length: 1 day
Times: 10am - 4pm
Cost: $95 + applicable taxes
Best to Register By: Sat, Jan 22, 2011
Course Description
This hands-on workshop explores basic forms as the essence of abstract sculptural practice. All sculpture begins with the understanding of spheres, tetrahedrons (pyramid) and cubes, which each participant will use as a starting point to build their own abstract sculptures,
A brief introduction will show how basic forms exist in nature, and how sculptors have applied these forms. Using wire frame, wire mesh and plaster bandage, participants will learn how to construct the essence of abstract forms. From that starting point, development of those forms will use repetition, incising of forms, mirroring and more as techniques to expand their personal vision.
Topics:
* Three basic forms as they exist in nature
* Basic construction techniques
* Diversifying basic forms to explore relationship, rhythm and movement
* Exploration of independent vision
Facilitator: Debora Alana graduated from the Ontario College of Art in Experimental Art. Known for her installation work and “Photo-poetics”, she has held solo exhibitions in Kazakhstan, Italy, France, India, and Canada. Recent group shows include SurrealEstate – Mobius, Boston MA, Um Livro Sobre A Morte - Museu Brasileiro da Escultura, Els Colors Del Foc (The Fire of Colour) –- Exposició Collectiva de Davis Museum, Barcelona, Spain; Look - CACGV, Art & Soul, Victoria. Debora has lectured in art institutions and universities in India and Kazakhstan, and art venues in Canada. She writes art criticism for the Exhibit-v blog in Victoria, BC.
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