PARTICIPATE IN OUR CHILDREN'S TRAVELLING ART SHOW

UNDER THE RAIN:  

TRAVELLING CHILDREN'S ART SHOW

Come join us for this exciting opportunity to participate in our travelling Art Show to celebrate 

CULTURAL HOTSPOT EAST!

 
The exhibition will be Opening at the Framing Dames and then starting its tour of many exhibition spaces in Scarborough, including Scarborough General Hospital's Artist Walk.

How it works:  
Children will attend a scheduled painting party, which includes refreshments, music, while the create their own masterpiece.  The paintings will then be framed to be included in the exhibition.

The cost is $85.00 which includes:
1.  The painting party! 
2. A framed 16 x 20 piece of their artwork to be included in the travelling show "UNDER THE RAIN"!

Register for your spot today!

UNDER THE RAIN PAINTING PARTIES:


MARCH 29, 2014:  1:30 TO 3:00
APRIL 26, 2014:  1:30 TO 3:00
Not only will your child get a beautifully framed piece of their artwork, but your child will also get to participate in a travelling art show and 
help us celebrate:

CULTURAL HOTSPOT EAST!


Call to reserve:  416 287 2025



Thursday, February 13, 2014

FRAMING DAMES Exhibition Framing: Erika Defreitas' Exhibition "FACE VALUE"

Erica very happy with her framed work!
















Framing Dames is extremely privileged to have framed 10 pieces for Erica Defeitas' up coming exhibition  "FACE VALUE"!  



pic
photo credit: I Am Not Tragically Colored (after Zora Neale Hurston) detail, by Erika DeFreitas, 2013-2014, photo credit: Daniel Ehrenworth

FACE VALUE at Gallery 1313
Opening Reception: Thursday, February 20, 7-9pm
Exhibition Run: February 19 – March 2, 2014

ARTISTS: Jordan Clarke, Erika DeFreitas, Olivia McGilchrist

CURATOR: Heidi McKenzie
The exhibition Face Value explores the complexities of mixed-race identity described by theorist Diana Taylor as "the double-coded neither/nor subjectivity." The three artists featured in the exhibition engage in self-portraiture to narrate their experiences of being mixed race women of Caribbean / European descent. In the artists' work, the mask is the focal point of self-reflexive inquiry − one that embodies, interrogates, and performs mixed-race in order to destabilize racialized stereotypes. The artists' use of masks – both literally and metaphorically – challenges society's ideas of who these women might be, at face value.

Jordan Clarke's self-portraits span a three-year process in which she produces paintings that represent herself in relation to her understanding of how others perceive the way she looks. Her use of masks both affirms her own sense of identity and challenges the way others see her as neither black nor white, but 'something in between.'

Erika DeFreitas uses language to subvert racial categorization. Her series of nine self-portraits enunciate the American anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston's phrase "I am not tragically colored." DeFreitas distorts these words by pressing her mouth against a plexiglass barrier. The resulting gestures symbolize a struggle between language and its embodiment, racial preconceptions and self-determination.

Olivia McGilchrist's photography and video installation focus on her sense of identity as a white woman born in Jamaica who has recently discovered that her family has African ancestry. Embedding herself in the Jamaican landscape to evoke the ghosts of this unknown ancestry, McGilchrist questions her complicity in the ongoing inequities of her native country.

Gallery 1313
1313 Queen Street West (at Brock)
Wednesdays – Sundays 1pm – 6pm
416-536-6778
www.gallery1313.org