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Mitchell Wiebe: VampSites

Mitchell Wiebe, Donkey Holds the Line (detail), 2002, acrylic and oil on canvas. Courtesy of the artist.

VampSites is an exhibition-as-temporary-occupation. Combining making and showing, employing a surreal personal lexicon and mythology of colours and textures, motifs and narratives, Mitchell Wiebe imports the chaos and theatre of his studio into the well-lit, rational architecture of the art museum. The artist then adopts a distinctive persona who emerges from the same fictive world inhabited by his array of fantastical animalesque characters.

Wiebe openly embraces an artificial and attention-grabbing mode of address; he loves the cheap attraction of the fun house, the appeal to regressive fantasy, exuberance with a touch of poison. Optical effects coincide with subcultural references, spatial illusion reverberating with the visceral swoop and swish of paint; Wiebe plays with the procedures and boundaries of painting, and with the ebb and flow of its credibility. To vamp is to build a rhythmic ground for improvisation; it also means to seduce in the night, to draw us into an alternate life.

Installation view of Mitchell Wiebe: VampSites Installation view of Mitchell Wiebe: VampSites
Installation view, Mitchell Wiebe’s VampSites, 2019. MacKenzie Art Gallery. Photo by Don Hall.
Installation view, Mitchell Wiebe’s VampSites Installation view, Mitchell Wiebe’s VampSites
Installation view, Mitchell Wiebe’s VampSites, 2019. MacKenzie Art Gallery. Photo by Don Hall.
Installation view, Mitchell Wiebe’s VampSites Installation view, Mitchell Wiebe’s VampSites
Installation view, Mitchell Wiebe’s VampSites, 2019. MacKenzie Art Gallery. Photo by Don Hall.
Mitchell Wiebe, “Donkey Holds the Line”, 2002. Mitchell Wiebe, “Donkey Holds the Line”, 2002.
Mitchell Wiebe, “Donkey Holds the Line”, 2002. Acrylic and oil on canvas. Courtesy of the artist.

About the Artist

Mitchell Wiebe lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia, where he practices painting, music, installation and performance. The climate of this village allows for time to stretch and bend while the windy coast stirs the air. Wiebe’s time spent growing up in Regina, SK, influenced an early appreciation of a local whimsical approach to art, and ceramics in particular. Often populated by strange characters, Wiebe’s paintings echo social scenarios in a bombastic, pointed and playful manner. Collaborations with artists such as Ray Fenwick, Graeme Patterson and Craig Leonard inevitably get distilled back at the studio, where large canvases carry blobs and impressions of the rich experiences. Wiebe’s paintings can be found in collections throughout Canada, the USA, Germany and Venice, Italy. He received his MFA from NSCAD University in Halifax, and his BFA from ECUAD in Vancouver.

Curated by Pan Wendt. Organized and circulated by Confederation Centre for the Arts, Charlottetown, PEI.

With generous support from

Maud Lewis, Three Black Cats, 1960s. Private collection.

MAUD LEWIS

Image of Léopold Foulem sitting with solid yellow background

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