Impel with Puffs. Jazvac's work are predominantly made from plastic. She explores the design, dissemination and environmental afterlife of advertisements. Wood's photographs document the elusive subject of air pollution in our environment.
Diaz Contemporary is pleased to present Impel with Puffs, a new project comprised of two
solo exhibitions: one by sculptor Kelly Jazvac, and the second by senior Canadian
photographer, Kelly Wood. Although distinct, both solo exhibitions were developed as a
dialogue between the artists. As such, they share the same name. Jazvac has exhibited
with Diaz Contemporary since 2007 and this will be Wood’s first solo exhibition with the
gallery.
Kelly Jazvac’s new exhibition explores the design, dissemination and environmental afterlife
of advertisements. Interested in advertisements’ status as simultaneous sign, image and
object, Jazvac re-works the components and strategies of this form of visual seduction to
ask questions about its operation, consequence and relationship to other fast-changing
objects in the world.
Jazvac’s works in Impel with Puffs are predominantly made from
plastic. The materials of her new sculptural installations, objects and collages are sourced
directly from advertising materials, found imagery and short-lived consumer goods.
Kelly Wood's new photographs document the elusive subject of air pollution in our
environment. Ephemeral and diffuse, air pollution has a paradoxical visual presence in our
atmosphere: the closer one gets to it, the more it disappears; or, it cannot be seen at all.
Wood's photographs of air pollution were all captured in the Ontario region between the
years 2006-2012. These works continue Wood’s ongoing research on visible and invisible
pollution.
Kelly Jazvac is based in London, ON where she teaches sculpture at Western University.
She has exhibited nationally and internationally, including recent projects at Louis B. James
in New York, Museum London, i8 Gallery in Reykjavik, Iceland, Nuit Blanche in Toronto, and
Blackwood Gallery in Mississauga. She has upcoming solo exhibitions at Louis B. James and
Oakville Galleries in the fall of 2013. Her work can be found in many notable private
collections. She considers Kelly Wood’s Continuous Garbage Project (1998-2003) to be an
important influence on her own practice.
Kelly Wood is an established photographer and artist whose research focuses on subjects
that relate to the environmental impact of waste accumulation, waste economies, and all
forms of pollution. Solo exhibitions include: the Western Front in Vancouver, the Power
Plant, Morris and Helen Belkin Gallery, and Catriona Jeffries Gallery.
She has also exhibited
at the Akademie der Künste in Berlin, the Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography in
Ottawa, the Art Gallery of Ontario, the Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal, the Vancouver
Art Gallery, the Museum Van Hedendaagse Künste Antwerpen in Antwerp, Fotoinstituut in
Rotterdam and Artspace in Sydney. Her work appears in numerous collections including:
Museum London, McIntosh Gallery at Western University, Vancouver Art Gallery, Art Gallery
of Ontario, Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography, Museum of Contemporary
Canadian Art and the Canada Council Art Bank. Wood is based between Vancouver and
London, ON.
Opening Saturday 23 February from 3 to 6
Diaz Contemporary
100 Niagara Street, Toronto
Hours: Tuesday - Saturday, 11 to 6, or by appointment
Free Admission