Carol Wainio

Carol Wainio (born 1955) is a Canadian painter. Her work, known for its visual complexity and monochrome color palette, has been exhibited in major art galleries in Canada, the U.S., Europe and China.[1] She has won multiple awards, including the Governor General's Award in Visual & Media Arts.[2]

Carol Wainio
Born1955 (age 6465)
NationalityCanadian
EducationNova Scotia College of Art and Design, University of Toronto, Concordia University
Known forPainting
AwardsGeorge Gilmour Award (1985), Royal Canadian Academy of Arts Academician award (2004), Governor General's Awards in Visual and Media Arts (2014)

Life

Born in Sarnia, Ontario, Wainio is the daughter of Finnish immigrants,[3] she grew up in Kitchener-Waterloo, Ontario. Wainio studied at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design and at the University of Toronto and later completed a Master of Fine Arts at Concordia University in Montreal, Quebec.[4] She lives in Ottawa and is an adjunct professor in visual arts at the University of Ottawa.

Painting career

Wainio's Season's End (2012) on display at the Kitchener-Waterloo Art Gallery as part of the 2016 exhibition Stilled Lives: Works from the Permanent Collection.

Her paintings often reference a variety of sources from fairy tales, medieval manuscripts to the 2008 financial collapse.[5] Wainio's canvases have been described by art critic Emily Falvey as "fairy-tale landscapes littered with the detritus of contemporary consumerism."[6] Her body of work has been compared to such works by American painter Jules Olitski. "The appeal her paintings had came from the same activity of looking that generated their strangeness."[7]

Wainio's first solo exhibition took place at the Yarlow/Salzman Gallery, in Toronto, Ontario in 1982. In 1990, her paintings were displayed in the "Aperto" exhibit at the Venice Biennale, in Venice, Italy. In 2010, Wainio's work was featured in a travelling exhibition, Carol Wainio: The Book, curated by Diana Nemiroff and organized and circulated by Carleton University Art Gallery. This exhibition displays Wainio's interest in the evolution of fairy-tales, the art of the copyist, industrialization, and the narrative power of images.[8] It was on display at Carleton University Art Gallery (2010), the Varley Art Gallery (2011), the Kelowna Art Gallery (2013), the Dunlop Art Gallery (2013), the McIntosh Gallery (2013), and the Galerie de l'UQAM (2014).

Wainio's large-scale canvases have also been exhibited in more than 40 museums and galleries, including the National Gallery of Canada, the Shanghai Art Museum in China and the Stedelijk Museum in the Netherlands. Her work can also be found in the permanent collections of the National Gallery of Canada, the Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal and the Art Gallery of Ontario, among other institutions.[5]

Awards

In 2004, Wainio became one of the few women elected to the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. Along with other eight Canadian artists, she received the Governor General's Award in Visual and Media Arts in 2014 for her outstanding achievements in contemporary visual and media arts.[9]

Exhibitions

Solo[10]

S.L. Simpson Gallery, Toronto, 1991

Galerie Chantal Boulanger, Montréal, 1990

Galerie d'art du Centre Culturel de l'Université de Sherbrooke, 1989

"Imagining the past/Remembering the Future", S.L. Simpson Gallery, Toronto, 1985

Concordia University Art Gallery, Montréal, 1983

Yarlow/Salzman Gallery, Toronto, 1982

Eye Level Gallery, Halifax, 1980

Collective [10]

"Asperto", Venice Biennale, 1990

"Les Temps Chauds", Musée d'art contemporain, Montréal, 1988

"Songs of Experience", National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, 1986

"Appearing", Mount Saint Vincent University Art Gallery, Halifax, 1983

gollark: Or the UK, really.
gollark: But we have to reopen *anyway* pretty soon, and I'm not sure the US actually has a long term plan.
gollark: How's it meant to save lives, though, outside of just stopping hospital floods?
gollark: I think lockdowns make sense as a way to get a bit more time to implement a long-term solution. Guess what's not really happening?
gollark: I think in practice most countries will have to at least partly unlockdown soonish.

References

  1. "Carol Wainio". Paul Petro Contemporary Art. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  2. General, The Office of the Secretary to the Governor. "The Governor General of Canada". Retrieved 2018-03-08.
  3. CanadaCouncil (2014-03-04), Carol Wainio, 2014 Canada Council laureate – a film by Julie Perron, retrieved 2016-03-08
  4. "Carol Wainio Receives 2014 Governor General's Award for Media and Visual Arts". Trepanier Baer. Archived from the original on 2015-04-02. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  5. "Carol Wainio - Canadian Art". Canadian Art. Retrieved 2016-03-08.
  6. "Artist: Carol Wainio". Trepanier Baer Gallery. Archived from the original on 24 June 2015. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  7. Enright, Robert (2003). "The Very Rich Hours of Carol Wainio". Border Crossings 22 no 1.
  8. Beecher, Donald; Innes, Randy (2010). Carol Wainio: The Book. Ottawa: Carleton University Press. pp. 9–11. ISBN 978-0770905408.
  9. "Governor-General's Awards honour eight esteemed Canadian artists". Retrieved 2018-03-08.
  10. Carol Wainio. Vancouver: Contemporary Art Gallery Vancouver. 1991. p. 45. ISBN 0920751318.
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