Gershon iskowitz biography of barack
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Robert Nelson Markle, Canadian artist, writer, educator and musician, was born in Hamilton, Ontario in 1936 and died in Holstein, Ontario in 1990. He began his studies at the Ontario College of Art (OCA) in 1954, but was expelled before graduation. While at OCA, he met Marlene Shuster, a fellow lärjunge, whom he married in 1958. The focus of Markle’s work from his early days was the female nude, particularly burlesque dancers, and Marlene became his primary model and muse. In 1962 Markle had his first group exhibition at The Isaacs Gallery in Toronto, becoming one of the “Isaacs Group” of artists. In 1965, Markle paintings shown in the exhibition Eros ’65 at the Dorothy Cameron galleri were seized on a charge of obscenity, drawing considerable media attention. In the mid-1960s Markle began to write for magazines such as the Toronto Telegram Showcase, Maclean’s, and Toronto Life, publishing widely on topics as diverse as striptease, hockey, childhood Christmases, and Gordon Lightfoot.
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First Nations artist Faye HeavyShield wins $75K Gershon Iskowitz Prize at AGO
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This article was published 16/03/2022 (1074 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
TORONTO – First Nations artist Faye HeavyShield is the winner of the $75,000 Gershon Iskowitz Prize at the Art Gallery of Ontario.
HeavyShield, a member of the Blackfoot Confederacy from the Kainai (Blood) Nation in southern Alberta, is set to have a solo exhibition at the Toronto gallery as part of the prize.
Presented by the Gershon Iskowitz Foundation in partnership with the AGO, the annual award recognizes an artist who has made outstanding contribution to Canadian visual arts.
HeavyShield takes inspiration from her ancestors’ traditional ways of life to inform her minimalist artworks that explore themes of family, home and connection to the land.
In her more than three-decade career, HeavyShield has been featured in galle
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Shuvinai Ashoona wins the 2018 Gershon Iskowitz Prize
TORONTO (January 24, 2019)— The Gershon Iskowitz Foundation in partnership with the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) is pleased to announce that Shuvinai Ashoona is the recipient of the 2018 GERSHON ISKOWITZ PRIZE AT THE AGO. The award, which is presented annually to an artist who has made an outstanding contribution to the visual arts in Canada, includes a $50,000 cash prize and a solo exhibition at the AGO within two years.
Celebrated for her large-scale drawings, enigmatic subject matter, and collaborative work with contemporary artists, Shuvinai Ashoona is a third-generation Inuit artist living in Kinngait, Nunavut. The dramatic changes in the North—the shift from life on the land to settled communities and access to popular culture—are reflected in her art, which challenges stereotypical notions of Inuit art. Increasingly, her constantly evolving work is included in national and international biennales and exhibitions such a