Raymond Henry St. Arnaud

Raymond Henry St. Arnaud (born June 24, 1942 in Edmonton, Alberta) is a Canadian photographer.

Raymond St. Arnaud, "Flower 7412", 2009, inkjet mounted to acrylic[1]

Work

St. Arnaud would often take on jobs for a few months at a time, then leave and use the money he had earned to pursue his next photography project. At one point in his life, he left his job to take a series of landscape photos – fifteen of which ended up in Canada's National Gallery.[2]

When he moved to Victoria, British Columbia, he started working for Camosun College[3] on a temporary basis and stayed for 20 years.

In December 2010, he was included in the PrintedArt collection[4] and has since then been one of its most prolific artists.

Exhibitions and publications

Notable solo exhibitions

  • Outside the Box solo exhibitions in Reno, NV and Dublin, OH[5]
  • Helen Smith Gallery in Auburn Washington[6]
  • Southern Light Gallery in Amarillo[7]
  • 3-day sale on GILT.com[8]

Group exhibitions

  • SigGraph 2003[9]
  • metaLphor at Art Institute of California, San Diego. Two simultaneous exhibitions from September 1 to October 1, 2011[10]
  • Theater of the Mind 2002[11]
  • Eye Appeal[12]
  • Homage[13]
  • Beecher Center Digital Art Competition 2001[14]
  • Art Incognito[15]
  • ASCI Digital 2002[16]

Books

  • Secrets from the museums of Paris
  • Random Walks
  • Sortie ... the Running Man
  • 27 after 25
  • As Seen On TV
  • Outside the Box
  • Reflections: The Pre-Millennium Landscapes
  • Visit to a Surrey Townhouse
  • The Forced March
  • The Dysfunctional Photographer
  • The Amdahl Graphics
  • Solo Artist's First Flight
  • Island Illustrators
  • Frank Gurney ... engraver
  • Evenlyn de R. McMann: Biographical Index of Artists in Canada (University of Toronto)[17]

Other publications

  • The Island Illustrator Society...25th anniversary...68 studio visits[18]
  • Digital Art Guild[19]
  • Opus Framing & Art[20]
  • New Trail (University of Alberta)[21]
  • Will the Real Alberta Please Stand Up (in New Trail)[22]
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References

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