Seeking Peace, Illuminating Peace art exhibition
- When:
-
Friday
Jan 13, 2012-Saturday
Apr 14, 2012 - Where:
- Nanaimo Art Gallery - Nanaimo
- Category:
- Nanaimo - Entertainment
Description
The gallery at 900 Fifth Street will be transformed into a sanctuary for contemplation, and hope from January 13th to April 16th 2012.
Illuminating Peace: Amy Loewan’s exhibition and artist practices center on “creating work as a vehicle for personal transformation and promoting human understanding. I am dedicated to peace building and my career as a visual artist provides me with the avenue to carry out this task.”
Loewan was born at the end of Second World War. During a time when peace was finally declared in Hong Kong, she was named Wai-Ping – Wai, in Chinese, meaning gift, and Ping, meaning peace. While growing up her memories “include my parents caring for orphan cousins and relatives fleeing from war-torn China to British Hong Kong.
After living in Hong King, the U.S. and Australia she immigrated to Canada. In the last decade Loewan has been focused on integrating her multicultural learnings and reaching into the roots of her Chinese heritage by studying ancient symbols and eastern philosophies. By experimenting with the Chinese traditional art materials such and rice paper and ink, the large scale rice paper weaving installation of Illuminating Peace was created.
She states “When viewers are close enough to read this work, they are presented with eight values vital in human relationships: compassion, kindness, respect, understanding, patience, tolerance, gentleness and forgiveness. More than 35 world languages are interwoven into this work.”
Illuminating Peace: Amy Loewan’s exhibition and artist practices center on “creating work as a vehicle for personal transformation and promoting human understanding. I am dedicated to peace building and my career as a visual artist provides me with the avenue to carry out this task.”
Loewan was born at the end of Second World War. During a time when peace was finally declared in Hong Kong, she was named Wai-Ping – Wai, in Chinese, meaning gift, and Ping, meaning peace. While growing up her memories “include my parents caring for orphan cousins and relatives fleeing from war-torn China to British Hong Kong.
After living in Hong King, the U.S. and Australia she immigrated to Canada. In the last decade Loewan has been focused on integrating her multicultural learnings and reaching into the roots of her Chinese heritage by studying ancient symbols and eastern philosophies. By experimenting with the Chinese traditional art materials such and rice paper and ink, the large scale rice paper weaving installation of Illuminating Peace was created.
She states “When viewers are close enough to read this work, they are presented with eight values vital in human relationships: compassion, kindness, respect, understanding, patience, tolerance, gentleness and forgiveness. More than 35 world languages are interwoven into this work.”
Venue - Nanaimo Art Gallery
- Venue:
- Nanaimo Art Gallery - Website
- Street:
- 150 Commercial Street
- ZIP:
- V9R 5G6
- City:
- Nanaimo
- State:
- British Columbia
- Country:
-
Description
Located Two Blocks fromThe Best Werstern Dorchester.
What started out over 30 years ago, as a space to display works by fine arts students at Malaspina College has grown into a Nanaimo cultural institution. The Nanaimo Art Gallery includes two locations: the Campus Gallery is located at Vancouver Island University overlooking the City of Nanaimo, Strait of Georgia and the Coastal Mountains and the Downtown Gallery is located on Commercial Street in the heart of the Arts District in Nanaimo’s revitalised city centre.The mandate of the Nanaimo Art Gallery is to enhance the cultural environment of the Nanaimo/Central Island region through exhibitions and outreach programming that encourages active public involvement with the visual arts. The Gallery’s primary goals are to:
- Encourage the increased awareness of and the development of the role of the visual arts in the life of the community through the presentation of exhibitions and programs that promote visual arts and visual artists.
- Reflect the growing cultural diversity of Nanaimo and increase the accessibility of the Gallery to the local community.
- Provide relevant interpretation, animation and educational programming to the public in the form of artist’s talks, workshops, seminars, panel discussions and educational programs.
The mandate of the Nanaimo Art Gallery is to enhance the cultural environment of the Nanaimo/Central Island region through exhibitions and outreach programming that encourages active public involvement with the visual arts. The Gallery’s primary goals are to:
- Encourage the increased awareness of and the development of the role of the visual arts in the life of the community through the presentation of exhibitions and programs that promote visual arts and visual artists.
- Reflect the growing cultural diversity of Nanaimo and increase the accessibility of the Gallery to the local community.
- Provide relevant interpretation, animation and educational programming to the public in the form of artist’s talks, workshops, seminars, panel discussions and educational programs.
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