Residential School Survivor Society Fundraiser


Proceeds of sales will be donated to the Indian Residential School Survivor Society.

IRSSS provides essential services to Residential School Survivors, their families, and those dealing with Intergenerational traumas. These impacts affect every family and every community across B.C. and Canada.

For more information please visit https://www.irsss.ca

Work is available to purchase June 30th - July 4th online.

To purchase work please contact gilliannhaigh@gmail.com. Work will available for pickup at 1610 Pandora Street on Wednesday July 7th and July 9th from 5-8pm.



 

Zoe Cire is a visual artist born and raised on Treaty 6 territory of central Alberta, currently residing as a guest on unceded Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh territories. Cire is an amalgam of Cree, Métis descent through her maternal side and mixed European paternally. Cire’s works talk with the culture that raised her, her kookum’s Cree lineage of Beaver Lake Cree Nation and mushoom’s Métis lineage. These conversations are expressed through forms of painting, beading and textile work. With a focus on the terrains of material association, Cire’spractice speaks with language and memory, where it can be found, and what it says when it reaches.

Twirling Unto

SOLD $500.00

oil and beadwork on canvas
20" x 24"

Orange Floral Earrings

SOLD $85.00

11/0 czech seed beads, sterling silver findings, buffalo hide


Carlyn Yandle

@carlynyandle

 

Carlyn Yandle’s art practice interweaves a childhood steeped in West Coast counter-culture, a range of skills in traditional craft methods and her previous profession as an award-winning newspaper journalist. She finds inspiration by literally playing with ideas, often using culturally-embedded found materials and regularly sharing this creative process through writing. She splits her time between an off-grid studio of her own design on Lasqueti Island and her hometown of Vancouver, B.C.

Home Sweet Home

$400.00

acrylic/embroidery on panel.
24" x 24"


Taryn Sheppard

@taransheppard

 

Taryn Sheppard (she/her) is an artist currently based in Vancouver on the unceded territories of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh Nations, originally from the Province of Newfoundland/ Ktaqmkuk and Labrador. Taryn's work explores the notion of meaning within architecture from psychological and technological perspectives, through a variety of mediums. Many of her works are investigations on architecture, space and infrastructure, the human experience of space and the changing effects of technology on the relationship between people and architecture. Drawing on her background as an architect specializing in digital fabrication, her process involves oil painting from 3d models and renderings as well as experimental robotic drawing and clay printing.

Day for Night I & II

$450.00 each, Number One SOLD

oil on panel
16" x 20"


Shawna Kiesman

@shawnakiesman

 

Shawna Kiesman was born in Prince Rupert, BC and was raised in Victoria, BC. Her mother is Tsimshian/Nisga’a and her father is Haida/German. Shawna graduated from Freda Diesing School of Northwest Coast Arts (First Nations Fine Art Diploma). Kiesman continued her education at Emily Carr University of Art + Design to gain her Bachelor of Fine Arts and further develop her artistic skills.

Since graduating, Shawna received a grant from First Peoples' Cultural Council, as well as attended the RBC Audain Museum Emerging Artist Program, Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity, and Bonnie McComb Kreye Studio residencies. Shawna is currently part of the Frame Sovereignty Collective as an invited Artist to create a personal project utilizing training and technologies.

Deep Roots

$25

digital print
8" x 10"

Matriarch

$25

digital print
8" x 10"

Front Bentwood Box

$25

digital print
8" x 10"


Maggee Day

@maggeeday

 

Maggee Day is a visual artist working predominantly in the medium of oil paint. She studied at OCAD University in Toronto, ON where she received her BFA (2016), and completed her MFA at Emily Carr University in Vancouver, BC (2020). Day’s work challenges traditional conventions of representational painting by exploring new ways to utilize tools in our contemporary painting world. She combines traditional painting techniques, rendering approaches from the digital realm, and loose vandalizing brushstrokes to create complex paintings that oscillate between illusionism and autonomous abstraction. Day has exhibited across Canada and was awarded the 2018 Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation Grant in painting. Day lives and works in Vancouver, on the unceded land of the Coast Salish peoples.

Fragment #2

$350 SOLD

oil on canvas,
14" x 18"


May Ann Villanueva

@studiofundamentals

 

Everyday Mug

$35.00 each

hand thrown ceramic mug


Olivia Di Liberto

@chillivia

 

Sugar Dreams

Olivia Di Liberto is a freelance artist and graphic designer located in Vancouver, BC. Her work focuses on illustration, installation, painting and mural art. She is influenced by the 1960/70s counterculture and uses vibrant illustrative elements, specific colour palettes and intricate line work to convey a feeling of cultural nostalgia. Vintage design and psychedelia is often referenced alongside her inspirations through her love for music, nature and travels.

$350

Acrylic on panel
24” x 30”
2021


Mark George

@mark_george_studios

 

Shade

$100

beeswax, concrete
2.5" × 10"


Monique Motut-Firth

@moniquemmf

 

Monique Motut-Firth is a multidisciplinary visual artist, writer and educator working primarily in paper, paint and textiles.  Her current works investigate the use of collage and photomontage as critical strategies for exploring the role of technical images in knowledge production and cultural representation. The resulting scrap-systems link, layer and weave together disparate image cultures, eras and visual signifiers.

Free Cola Oil

$200

Limited edition of 5
Handcut, mounted & framed
9” x 9”


Jonathan H Alfaro

@jonathan.h.alfaro

 

Ugly Old Man Suit

$450

pastel on paper
”25.5” x 19.5”
2021

Jonathan Alfaro attempts to trace the history of the present and uncover the influences of mark-making. Working through a variety of mediums: drawing, painting, textile, and conversations. The dialogue between material and theory interrogates the intra-actions of his practice.


Laura Clark

@laura_marie_clark

 

Laura Clark is a Visual Artist based in Vancouver, Canada. Clark’s photography, mixed media art, sculptures, and wearable art explores the vulnerability and fragility of the human landscape. Her artistic practice focuses on remnants left behind to reveal the change and transformation that takes place to shape thought, recollections and surroundings. Clark has extensively exhibited in galleries, public spaces and appears in private collections across British Columbia. She is an active and supportive member of the arts and culture community.

Resting With Emotion

$300

2019
Archival Pigment Print
14 x 11 inches
Ed.of 1/8

Laura Clark Art Tee

$50

Locally Designed + Made, 100% cotton
Size Medium

Laura Clark Art Tote

$30 SOLD

Locally Designed + Made, 100% cotton


Jack Kenna

@ken_ay

 

Tomatoes and Lemons

Jack Kenna is an artist working on the unceded territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh nations. Recent Exhibitions include ‘Inside Cat’ at Telephone Gallery in Vancouver and ‘A Clog in the Machine’ at the Alternator Centre for Contemporary Art in Kelowna. He graduated from ECUAD in 2019.

$150 SOLD

pencil crayon on paper
9” x 12”
2021

Sunflowers

$150

pencil crayon on paper
9” x 12”
2021



Nicole Ponsart

@nicoleponsartceramics

 

“As an emerging artist, I’ve begun to shape my artistic identity around the natural wonders of our planet by combining geology with ceramics. Through this combination, I am able to explore through a modern approach, the timeless beauty and endless stories that are derived from the unceeded land we inhabit.”

Picked Up Along the Way

$200.00 SOLD

Cone 04 Terracotta and Cone 6 Ceramic, Various Glazes, Paracord, Copper Wire
Approximately 24" x 5"


Gillian Haigh

@gillian.n.haigh

 

Gillian Haigh is a visual artist based in Vancouver, BC working on the unceded traditional land of xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and Səl̓ílwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations. 

Gillian holds a BFA from Emily Carr University and her work has been featured in exhibitions across Canada including Trapp Projects, Arts Umbrella Splash Action, and The Morris & Helen Belkin Gallery. 

Grounded in painting, Gillian’s practice engages with a larger framework of queer theory and feminist thought which pursues the limits of our understanding and perception.

Study for Noon and Moon and Moon

$350.00

oil on canvas
20" x 16"