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Heather Huston

Artworks

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

15th Space Print Biennial Seoul

Here is the link for the 15th Space Print Biennial Seoul. If you look under purchase prizes, you will see my name and my print. (note: click on the 15 to go to the current year's exhibition).  
Posted by Heather Huston at 5:00 PM
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Biography

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Heather Huston
I am an artist and instructor at ACAD living in Calgary, Alberta. I received my MFA from the University of Alberta in 2006. I have shown nationally and internationally; recent exhibitions include the Biennale Internationale d'Estampe Contemporaine de Trois-Rivieres and the V Splitgraphic: International Graphic Art Biennial 2011 (Croatia). My work is the collection of several major institutions including the Alberta Foundation for the Arts and the Fogg Art Museum at Harvard University. My work is based on miniatures, the everyday and trying to find interesting structures in cookie-cutter neighborhoods.
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Blog Archive

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      • 15th Space Print Biennial Seoul
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Artist Statement

I have had a longstanding interest in the mundane and finding ways to re-represent it to the viewer in a way that articulates the sense of strangeness that occurs when the familiar is seen out of context. I am interested in the miniature and its inherent reading as a nostalgic and idyllic structure for the eye to consume. If we look to the miniature for the ideal, we find instead in my work a peculiar reflection of everyday living. They are outside the cute, exaggeratedly symbolic domain of the dollhouse and instead exist in a reality where the physical becomes psychological. They open up questions about the ability for interiors and objects to retain the emotional residue of our actions.

I am drawn to the flux of buildings in states of construction, demolition and restoration and in creating ones of my own that are at once caught in the transitory state of becoming or dissolving. The organized chaos of what we, especially as Calgarians, see as construction is halted and gently brought into contact with that of the natural world, a reminder of what is lost as we gain space and property.