Joyce Wieland

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Joyce Wieland (June 30, 1931June 27, 1998) was a Canadian experimental filmmaker and mixed media artist.

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[edit] Life

Wieland was born in Toronto in 1931 and she first studied art at Toronto's Central Tech School. After a trip to Europe she began a job as a film animator and through this met her husband, fellow Canadian artist Michael Snow. She had her first solo show at the Isaacs Gallery in Toronto in 1960, which at the time meant she was also the only female artist represented by a contemporary Canadian commercial gallery.

[edit] Work

'Barren Ground Caribou, a fabric installation by Joyce Weiland at the Spadina TTC terminal in Toronto.
'Barren Ground Caribou, a fabric installation by Joyce Weiland at the Spadina TTC terminal in Toronto.

In 1963 Wieland and Snow moved to New York where they lived for ten years. She attracted critical recognition of her work but she was also once assaulted and nearly raped by a mugger. This experience soured her and Snow to New York and they soon returned to Toronto.

Wieland later divorced Snow and kept a low profile until her death in 1998 from Alzheimer's disease. She was made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1982.

[edit] Films by Joyce Wieland

  • Water Sark (1965)
  • Rat Life and Diet in North America (1968)
  • Dripping Water (1969) (co-directed with Michael Snow)
  • Cat Food (1969)
  • Reason Over Passion/la raison avant la passion (1969) (a meditation on the Canada of Pierre Trudeau)
  • Solidarity (1973)
  • The far shore (1976)
  • A and B in Ontario (1984) (co-directed with Hollis Frampton)
  • Birds at Sunrise (1986)

[edit] Films about Joyce Wieland

  • Artist on Fire. Joyce Wieland (Canada 1987) directed by Kay Armatage

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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