Past Resident
2015: Canada Council for the Arts

Jo-Anne Balcaen

 Jo-Anne Balcaen’s practice looks at how objects gain emotional, psychological or financial capital through their association with important institutions or artists. Her recent work draws on her experience working as an exhibition coordinator to reveal the relationship between artist and audience, authorship and mythology and the meaning of success. Text and narrative are often used to shape the viewer’s desire to ‘read into things’. For Inventory, a recent work, Balcaen used didactic text and display strategies to enhance an object’s perceived value. Tools and materials from an art gallery’s preparatory room were presented with an accompanying wall label that fused the disparate jargons of museum didactic panels and mail-order tool catalogues to provide a behind-the-scenes, personal account of the materials’ association with well-known artists who presented their work at the gallery, thereby inverting the subordinate role they played in relation to ‘esteemed’ artworks. Balcaen is an artist working in video, audio, installation and print. Her art practice-often using wry humor-extends across a variety of media bringing together references to popular culture, music, fandom, and more recently, arts administration.

Jo-Anne Balcaen (born 1971, Montreal, Canada) has exhibited her work in festivals and galleries throughout Canada, the United States and Europe, including solo exhibitions at Truck, Calgary; Ace Art Inc., Winnipeg; eyelevel gallery, Halifax; Centre Clark, La Centrale Galerie Power House and Galerie B-312, Montreal. She has received provincial and national arts grants and has attended residencies at the Banff Centre.

Randi Grov Berger

Randi Grov Berger is founding director and curator at Entrée, a non-profit exhibition space in Bergen, Norway. Since 2009 she has worked with numerous international artists in developing solo and group exhibitions, presenting projects in public space and collaborating with other arts institutions and curators. Grov Berger coordinated the Norwegian Pavilion ‘Without Walls’ for Performa 13 where she served as a curatorial fellow in 2013. She presented her project Flag New York City, an ongoing public art project involving sixty (and counting) international artists who each created flags for public flagpoles. In addition, she has presented Object To Be Destroyed, a performance with artist Pedro Gómez-Egaña at the Abrons Art Center. This fall at ISCP she brings Entrée (New York), a satellite with highlights from her programming for next year.

Randi Grov Berger (born 1982, Stord, Norway) is curator and founding director of Entrée. She currently also works for Printed Matter Inc. on the NY Art Book Fair at MoMA PS1. Her education includes Curatorial Studies from Bergen Academy of Art and Design in Norway and Art in Public Realm from Konstfack University College of Arts, Crafts and Design in Stockholm, Sweden.

Susanne Thiemann

Susanne Thiemann “cocoons” are alive. The artist and basket weaver from Munich turns frayed material into images; she interweaves chairs like intimate beings and weaves rubbery pillows that are so crumpled that they appear to be amorphous beings. Textile techniques have long since achieved independence in art as subtle yet strong forms of expression that play ironically and critically with feminine connotations. In her work, Susanne Thiemann brings the perfection of traditional crafts to the radical freedom of purpose of art. The sculptures of Susanne Thiemann are composed of thin monochrome plastic hoses, colored electric wires and thick strips of shredded car tires. She selects pieces of lost property and remaining stocks of mass-produced, hardly decomposing products; the materials that trigger many connotations because they belong to our everyday life and use.

Susanne Thiemann, born 1955, passed the Master Craftsman Examination of Basketry in 1986. While attending the International Summer Academy of Fine Arts Salzburg, Austria she studied contemporary sculpture with New York-based artists Nancy Davidson and Frida Baranek. Her work has been exhibited internationally.