The Creative Process: well-being through art

McMaster Museum of Art Announces New Mentees for the BIPOC Curatorial Mentorship Program

Opening Reception Invitation: Movers and Makers and self/same/other

Presenting the 2020 SUMMA Award Winners

George Wallace exhibition mounted at National Gallery of Ireland

Hiba Abdallah’s neon sculpture lights up McMaster

Hands-On Art Programmes for McMaster Community

Supporting artists and diversifying McMaster’s art collection

Step into our Artist Garden

McMaster’s art collection inspires Westdale Art Battle starting May 4

New! #WestdaleArtBattle2020 RULES and inspiration 

INTRODUCTION FROM THE ART BATTLE ORGANIZER

Hi, my name is Mirielle Pearson, and I am currently a Grade 12 student enrolled in the French Immersion and Arts and Culture Specialist High Skills Major (SHSM) program at Westdale Secondary School. What I love the most about the SHSM program are the opportunities and experiences it provides, particularly those that connect the classroom experience with the art community. I have a growing interest in art history, curatorial practices, the exploration of new media and hands-on interactive environments. Because of this, I was excited to accept a Co-operative Learning placement at the McMaster Museum of Art.

This placement provides me with practical exposure to the real work environment of a museum curator, and opportunities to experience the real-world role of museums within communities. Next year I will be attending NSCAD University in Nova Scotia where I will continue my art education.

In 2019, the McMaster Museum of Art facilitated an Art Battle at Westdale Secondary School to encourage young artists to remain engaged and aware of the museum during its physical closure during renovations.

This year McMaster Museum of Art would like to expand upon this, inviting all students and budding artists from the community to participate in the Art Battle!  I’ve chosen four works from the McMaster Museum of Art collection to inspire your creations. You’ll have about a week to create your own piece based on one of these artworks.

On Monday, May 4, a link to a page of Art Battle rules and images of the four artworks will be posted at the top of this page.

Stay tuned, the Art Battle begins May 4!

Thank you from your local arts organizations

The arts are a means for connection and self-expression; they have always been essential sources of entertainment, communication, education, and comfort. We are deeply grateful to all of you who continue to encourage and support our artists and organizations, particularly as we all continue to face days and months of uncertainty and change.

We all remain committed to supporting and presenting music, art, dance, theatre, media art, craft, and literary works, during these difficult times. Visit us online to take gallery tours, see and hear performances, watch films, participate in workshops, or listen to a story!

We also owe an enormous measure of gratitude to all our front-line workers. Thank you for all your hard work.

Be safe, stay healthy, and we’ll see you soon.

From your local arts organizations…

local arts organizations logos

MMA from Home

Artist Talk / In Conversation: Deanna Bowen and Professor Selina Mudavanhu

Exhibition addresses animals in the Anthropocene

Celebrating 10 years of The Art of Seeing

Douglas Davidson receives OAAG Award for volunteer work at the museum

Talk by Art Collector Dr. Kenneth Montague

Talk & Tour of Peripheral Vision(s) with Rhéanne Chartrand

Westdale Secondary School Art Battle show

New curator puts a new spin on McMaster’s Levy collection

Notes from our architecture tours

Interview with senior curator Pamela Edmonds

News from the Schools

Pamela Edmonds is appointed Senior Curator

Interview with Museum’s Director and Chief Curator Carol Podedworny

Museum receives major Terra grant for Indigenous/American Art project

Winterfest Art Activities at Mac February 9

Talk by Artist Angela Grossmann and Curator Lynn Ruscheinsky

McMaster’s Levy Collection at Kelowna Art Gallery

Public Lecture: Napoleon’s Maps and the Conduct of War

McMaster University Library presents:

PUBLIC LECTURE

L.R. Wilson Hall (Concert Hall), McMaster University
June 13, 2018 at 6:00 PM
Open to the public, RSVP to reserve a seat.

Napoleon’s Maps and the Conduct of War

Frederick C. Schneid, High Point University

One of Napoleon’s first appointments was as an officer in the Bureau Topographique, responsible for war planning and mapping theaters of war.  The development of strategy necessitated proper intelligence gathering, and mapping was perhaps one of its most import tasks.  Indeed, Napoleon later demanded up to date maps to determine the deployment and operations of his armies after he became ruler of France.  The lecture will explore the relationship between Napoleon, maps and military campaigning in the 18th and early 19th centuries.  Included will be a discussion of maps held in the Clifford Map Collection, one of which was presented to Napoleon in recognition of his victory in Italy in 1800.

Frederick Schneid and Gord Beck, McMaster University Library Speakers June 13Frederick C. Schneid is Herman and Louise Smith Professor of History and Chair of the Department of History at High Point University in North Carolina.  He received his PhD from Purdue University, where he studied under eminent military historian Gunther E. Rothenberg.  Professor Schneid’s research specialty is French and Italian military history from the French Revolution to the Wars of Italian Unification.  He is the author and editor of sixteen books, and numerous book chapters and articles. Among his publications are European Armies of the French Revolution, The French-Piedmontese Campaign of 1859, The Second War of Italian Unification, Napoleon’s Conquest of Europe: The War of the Third Coalition and Napoleon’s Italian Campaigns, 1805-1815. He is currently working on a manuscript on Napoleon’s first Italian campaign and writing two chapters for the forthcoming Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars.

Followed by:

Gentleman, Soldier, Scholar and Spy: The Napoleonic Era Maps of
the Honourable Robert Clifford (1767-1817)

Gord Beck, McMaster University

Robert Clifford was the third son of the 4th Lord Clifford of Chudleigh. While serving as an officer in Dillon’s Regiment under Louis XVI of France, he was trained in the most advanced methods of military science and cartography of the age. His knowledge of the inner workings of the French military, coupled with the maps of fortifications he smuggled out of France while narrowly avoiding the guillotine, proved to be of immeasurable value to his English countrymen. His advice was sought by General John Graves Simcoe for the defense of England against a French invasion, and on the formation of a new military college at Sandhurst. Learn the story behind the man, his maps, and how they came to McMaster.

Gord Beck is McMaster University Library’s Map Specialist, and the curator of the Robert Clifford Map Exhibit on view at the McMaster Museum of Art from May 26 through September 1, 2018. He developed his expertise in military cartography over his 20-year period working in the Lloyd Reeds Map Collection, receiving the President’s Award for Outstanding Service in 2014. Gord is a recognized expert in the field of WWI trench maps and aerial photos, and has appeared frequently in the media and as a guest speaker on that topic. He has recently completed two projects with Canadian Geographic involving the creation of a ‘Giant Floor Map of Vimy Ridge,’ and a documentary about mapping and aerial photography in WWI narrated by Dan Aykroyd and entitled, ‘Drawn to Victory.’

Gentleman, Soldier, Scholar & Spy: The Napoleonic era maps of Robert Clifford

New Exhibit Explores Life of Bertrand Russell

Ernest Daetwyler creates new work for MMA Artist Garden

FLUX: Graduating Art Student Exhibition April 5-28, 2018

Published: McMaster Museum of Art Collection Books

Art Student Organizes McMaster Art Drop

Artist & Curator’s Talk: Susan Schelle and Ana Barajas, March 7

You’re invited…

Artist & Curator’s Talk

by Susan Schelle, Artist, and Ana Barajas, Curator
McMaster Museum of Art
Wednesday, March 7, 12:30 – 1:20 pm

Presented as a complement to the exhibition Susan Schelle: Selected Works on view in the Museum’s entrance level Sherman Gallery until March 24, 2018

Admission is Free and all are welcome.

ABOUT THE ARTIST

Susan Schelle was born in Hamilton, Ontario, and currently lives and works in Toronto. She was an Associate Professor Emeritus in Visual Studies, J.H. Daniels Faculty, University of Toronto. She has completed a number of public art commissions, notably salmon run at The Rogers Centre Toronto, passage at York University Toronto, and laws of nature at Court House Square Park, Toronto. She has shown both nationally and internationally including The Cenci Gallery, Rome, Italy and The Freedman Gallery Albright College, Reading, Pennsylvania. Her work resides in the collections of Air Canada, The Art Gallery of Ontario, The Art Gallery of Hamilton, McMaster Museum of Art, The Winnipeg Art Gallery, The Vancouver Art Gallery, and The National Gallery of Canada. In addition to her own work, Schelle has collaborated with Mark Gomes on several public commissions, most recently jetstream at Terminal One, Pearson International Airport, Toronto.

ABOUT THE CURATOR

Born in Mexico City, Mexico, Ana Barajas holds a BFA from OCAD University in Sculpture/Installation. She received a MVA, Curatorial and a MA, Modern Art History from the University of Toronto. As the Director of YYZ Artists’ Outlet, a non-profit artist-run centre, Barajas has managed more than one-hundred exhibitions to date. Independent curatorial projects include It takes everyone to know no one in 2011 at the Justina M. Barnicke Gallery, Art Museum, University of Toronto, The 19th Holeat Cuchifritos Gallery+Project Space, NY in 2014 and the group exhibition Disappearing Act at the Thames Art Gallery, Chatham-Kent in 2017.

McMaster Museum of Art
Alvin A. Lee Building
McMaster University
1280 Main St W
Hamilton, ON L8S 4L6
905.525.9140 x.23241

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Admission is Free
Museum Hours: Tue/Wed/Fri 11am-5pm, Thu 11-7, Sat 12-5
museum@mcmaster.ca
http://museum.mcmaster.ca

New Acquisitions by 17th century artist Elisabetta Sirani

Inviting McMaster Alumni to Vancouver Art Gallery

EVENT: NIIPA Artists’ Roundtable – February 8

Susan Schelle Exhibition Opens January 2018

Video Series features Art from Levy Collection & Bequest

A Cultivating Journey: The Herman H. Levy Legacy

New Exhibition: Struck by Likening

Coyote School – the story behind the title

Jeremy Dutcher: Indigenous Operatic Tenor to Perform at McMaster

Ann Kipling and Takao Tanabe Exhibition

Slow Art Day at the Museum is April 8

Tour and Bookmaking Activity April 1. Registration Open

Public Performance & Talk by German Artist Mischa Kuball: Sept 28