間眅埶AV

About 間眅埶AV Galleries

間眅埶AV Galleries

間眅埶AV's art galleries are dynamic centres for the presentation and interrogation of art practices and ideas. There are two distinct galleries:  on the Burnaby campus (established 1970) and  at the Goldcorp Centre for the Arts in Vancouver (established 2010). 間眅埶AV Galleries stewards the  that includes, in its holdings of over 5,800 works, significant regional and national art works spanning the last century.

間眅埶AV is known for its commitment to academic freedom, interdisciplinary research, and innovative pedagogy, and it has created opportunities for important local and international artists to exhibit, teach, study, and produce work. Within this context, 間眅埶AV Galleries encourage conceptual and experimental programs that explore ways in which contemporary art is socially and politically engaged. 

Situated in Vancouver and Burnaby, 間眅埶AV Galleries occupies the unceded territories of x妢m庛kwym, Skwxw繳7mesh, Sl穩lwta优, and k妢ik妢m Nations. Acknowledging that the activities of 間眅埶AV Galleries unfold on colonized Indigenous territories is both a recognition that settler colonialism is an ongoing structure and a commitment to support the capacity of art to unsettle these conditions.

Undertaken by 間眅埶AV Galleries curatorial staff, programming includes exhibitions, publications, symposia, conversations, screenings, performances, and other events. Collaborating with 間眅埶AVs School for the Contemporary Arts, Audain Gallery hosts exhibitions with Audain Visual Artists in Residence Program as well as BFA and MFA student exhibitions. 間眅埶AV Galleries engage the general public and the art community as well as the 間眅埶AV community. All galleries are free of charge.

間眅埶AV Burnaby, Academic Quadrangle 3004, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby BC

Installation view of Ann Beam and Carl Beam: Spaces for Reading, 2019. Photo: Blaine Campbell.

間眅埶AV Gallery presents contemporary work within a local, national, and international context. The gallery's programming addresses the specific intellectual conditions of 間眅埶AV and the Lower Mainland in relationship to global contexts, as well as the regions history of conceptual, social, and cultural practices. Located on Burnaby Mountain, 間眅埶AV Gallerys audience includes students, faculty, staff, and the general public.

Since 2017, 間眅埶AV Gallery has focused on research, collections, publications, projects, and talks. Rather than presenting continuous exhibitions, it operates as a research centre for art and ideas that connect to 間眅埶AV Galleries' many activities.

間眅埶AV Gallery was established as a public art gallery in 1970. In the preceding years, visual arts programming was coordinated by artist Iain Baxter, who was a Resident in the Centre for Communications and the Arts until the early 1970s. Under Baxters guidance, Ian Wallace exhibited early monochromes, N.E. Thing Co. Ltd. undertook multiple projects, and Seth Siegelaub curated a campus wide project entitled Catalogue for an Exhibition that included the work of Josepth Kosuth, Sol Lewitt, Lawrence Weiner, and others. Since that time, 間眅埶AV Gallery has presented work by artists as diverse as Raymond Boisjoly, Andreas Bunte, R.B. Kitaj, Lyse Lemiuex, Liz Magor, Julie Mehretu, Samuel Roy-Bois, Allan Sekula, and Charlene Vickers.

Audain Gallery

間眅埶AV Goldcorp Centre for the Arts, 149 West Hastings Street, Vancouver BC

Installation view of Relations of Responsibility, 2019. Photo: Blaine Campbell.

Audain Gallery opened in 2010 and is named after patron Michael Audain. The gallery is located in downtown Vancouver in the Goldcorp Centre for the Arts, along with 間眅埶AVs School for the Contemporary Arts. The gallery advances the aesthetic and discursive production and presentation of contemporary art through a responsive program of exhibitions that support engaged pedagogy. Focusing on the ways in which contemporary art is socially formed and formative, the gallery initiates local, national and international projects, including exhibitions by visiting international artists through the Audain Visual Artists in Residence Program, such as Marjetica Potr, YOUNG-HAE CHANG HEAVY INDUSTRIES, Raqs Media Collective, Claire Fontaine, Walid Raad, and Hito Steyerl. Other exhibitions have included the work of Dana Claxton, Ursula Mayer, Nep Sidhu, Martine Syms, and Althea Thauberger. Audain Gallery also hosts 間眅埶AV SCA Visual Arts student exhibitions. Events such as artists talks, public discussions, and screenings are organized parallel to the gallerys exhibitions, cultivating the cultural context and conversation around visual art. Audain Gallery offers a critical space for engagement with the diverse and timely ideas of contemporary art in a dynamic and shifting manner.