press release

The Vancouver Art Gallery is thrilled to present Carol Sawyer: The Natalie Brettschneider Archive (October 28, 2017–February 4, 2018).

Through photographs, letters, paintings, video and other materials, the exhibition explores the persona of Natalie Brettschneider, a vibrant, fictional artist conceived by Vancouver-based artist Carol Sawyer.

The catalyst for Natalie Brettschneider came about through Sawyer’s research into practices of female artists working in the early decades of the 20th century in Europe and British Columbia, women whose practices were often under-represented in institutional collections and largely excluded from art history.

Since the early 1990s, Sawyer has been developing the character of Natalie Brettschneider by assuming the role of the artist and producing and documenting imaginative performance works that reference artworks from the 1930s to the 1980s. In addition, Sawyer has meticulously researched the lives and works of other artists who were active during this time and deftly interwoven Brettschneider’s biography with theirs through fabricated letters and documentation.

“I hope that by bringing the activities of Brettschneider and her contemporaries to the public, I will inspire the viewer’s curiosity and interest in the work of women artists, and encourage them to contemplate the ways in which history is a kind of construction that reflects the narrative conventions, critical framework and assumptions of the cultural context in which it is written,” says Carol Sawyer.

Carol Sawyer: The Natalie Brettschneider Archive features works from the Vancouver Art Gallery’s permanent collection alongside artworks and archival materials borrowed from regional and national galleries, archives and private lenders.

The exhibition is organized by Bruce Grenville, Senior Curator, at the Vancouver Art Gallery in collaboration with the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, the Art Gallery of Windsor and Carleton University Art Gallery.

About Carol Sawyer
Carol Sawyer is an artist and singer who works with photography, video, installation and improvised music. In 1982 she received an Honours Diploma in Photography from Emily Carr College of Art + Design (now University), and in 1998 she earned her Master of Fine Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies from the School for Contemporary Arts at Simon Fraser University in 1998. An accomplished vocalist, she performs regularly with her ensemble ion Zoo and in other ad hoc improvising ensembles. A resident of Vancouver, she is represented by Republic Gallery.

Solo exhibitions include I attempt from love’s sickness to fly, in vain (Republic Gallery, Vancouver, 2017); The Natalie Brettschneider Archive (Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, 2016); Some Documents from the Life of Natalie Brettschneider (Carleton University Art Gallery, Ottawa, 2016); Shadow Puppet (Republic Gallery, Vancouver, 2015); Wood Work (video installation, Public Art Commission, City of Vancouver, 2011-2012); Some Documents from the Life of Natalie Brettschneider (Republic Gallery, 2011); Proscenium (Republic Gallery, 2009); Natalie Brettschneider in British Columbia (Kelowna Art Gallery, 2009); and Trace Ingredients, part of Memory Palace: 3 Artists in the Library (Vancouver Public Library, 2008). Sawyer’s recent group exhibitions include Silva: Booming Grounds (Nanaimo Art Gallery, 2015); Through a Window: Visual Art and SFU 1965-2015 (SFU Galleries, Burnaby, 2015); Scenes of Selves, Occasions for Ruses (Surrey Art Gallery, 2012); Again and Again and Again: SerialFormats and Repetitive Actions (Vancouver Art Gallery, 2012).

Recent performances include Shadow Cast (part of What the Hand Heard: An Evening of Object Manipulation, Animism and Music, Merge Collective, Vancouver, 2015); six songs based on six plays in development (commissioned for Playwrights Theatre Centre, Vancouver, 2013); and an appearance with Vancouver Improvisers Orchestra (Presentation House Studio, North Vancouver, 2013).

Carol Sawyer’s work is in the collections of the Canada Council Art Bank, Ottawa; City of Vancouver; Microsoft Corporation, Seattle; The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; Simon Fraser University, Burnaby; Vancouver Art Gallery; and the Vancouver Public Library.