Gary Lee-Nova Survey Show Opens at the BAG

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The exhibition spotlights the artist's interdisciplinary excellence over nearly a half-century.
A new survey exhibition of works by seminal West Coast visual artist Gary Lee-Nova is now showing at the Burnaby Art Gallery (BAG).
presents works from a period spanning more than 40 years. And according to BAG curator Jennifer Cane, they speak as incisively now about contemporary human experience as they did decades ago.
鈥淭he exhibition allows a glimpse of Lee-Nova鈥檚 extensive research of various systems,鈥 Jennifer said in a statement. 鈥淗e has been looking at patterns within colour, measurement and language for more than 50 years. There are important comments on the double-edged swords we are presented with through technologies, within these works. The works speak well within this particular period of time.鈥
Though perhaps best known for his hard-edge abstract paintings, the BAG鈥檚 wide-ranging exhibition showcases Gary鈥檚 interdisciplinary inclinations. Large-scale paintings are accompanied by sculpture, lithographic prints based on paper collages, silkscreen prints and digital collage.

Many of the works also offer a compelling glimpse into a formative moment of regional art history. An important figure to the 鈥淲est Coast Scene鈥 during the 1960s and 鈥70s (a period art historian and UBC professor Scott Watson has as Vancouver鈥檚 second 鈥渞enaissance鈥), Gary was closely linked with other legendary Vancouver artists including Michael Morris and Vincent Trasov.
Alongside Michael and Vincent, Gary co-founded 鈥 an 鈥渋nternational correspondence art network that saw the exchange of thousands of inventive images, ideas and ephemera, much of it through the post,鈥 Border Crossings magazine. Gary鈥檚 use of the spectrum motif (visible in many of the paintings and prints in Oblique Trajectories) would spur the ambitious , according to the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery, which is now home to the .
Working under the pseudonym Artimus Rat or Art Rat, Gary collaborated with the New York Corres Sponge Dance School of Vancouver. But his participation in scenes and disciplines outside what could strictly be called 鈥渧isual art鈥 didn鈥檛 end there; Gary was also active at the Sound Gallery, a 鈥減lace for poets, artists and dancers to collaborate,鈥 artist Gregg Simpson, and a hub for the Vancouver avant-garde scene at the time. Gary was likewise involved with the Intermedia Society, an organization focused on building bridges between art and technology. (Upon its foundation, Intermedia鈥檚 first head of the Board was renowned painter and 色库TV community member Jack Shadbolt).
A filmmaker since the mid-sixties, Gary released Steel Mushrooms in 1968, which you can watch in its entirety via the .

He has exhibited extensively throughout his career, at galleries, museums and events including the Vancouver Art Gallery, Bau-Xi Gallery (Toronto), University of Saskatchewan, the Western Front, the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery, the Burnaby Art Gallery, the National Gallery of Canada, the Demarco Gallery (Edinburgh) and the Paris Biennale. His work is included in collections such as the National Gallery of Canada, Canada Council Art Bank, the Institute of Contemporary Art (London), and the Vancouver Art Gallery.
At least one of the works in Oblique Trajectories comes full circle with the current exhibition; the sculpture Out to Metric was originally created in 1975 for an exhibition at the Burnaby Art Gallery.
鈥淢ade from more than 1400 wooden yardsticks, it was built as Canada switched from the Imperial to the metric system,鈥 the BAG writes. 鈥淭he work replicates the corner of a room, giving the feel of an architect鈥檚 cut-away drawing.鈥
Bridging the mediums of sculpture and installation, the work also reflects Gary鈥檚 decades-long exploration of the theme of measurement. (This motif, the BAG notes, extends not only throughout Gary鈥檚 historical work, but reaches into the present via his recent digital works on paper).

Gary is also a longtime member of the Emily Carr community, having attended what was then called the Vancouver School of Art in the early 1960s. He also taught at 色库TV in various iterations for more than 30 years. In 2018, following his retirement from teaching, Gary was named Professor Emeritus.
Though his professorial days are behind him, Gary continues to work as an artist, 鈥渃reating single projects that often take years to execute,鈥 according to the BAG.
is showing now through April 18, by advance appointment. Book your visit now by calling the BAG at 604-297-4422.