
Tim Moore has come full circle.
One of the first professional
exhibitions where the Swift Current-based artist showed his work was
the annual Prince Albert Winter Festival Art Show and Sale. Now, he’s
that same exhibition’s guest curator.
The 44th annual exhibition,
which is estimated to have pieces from 136 artists, is showing at the
Mann Art Gallery from Feb. 7 to Mar. 21.
Tuesday was Moore’s first of two days
of curation. Artwork of all sorts was scattered across the gallery’s
main and project galleries, as well as in the education studio.
“You can’t get into a situation like
this with 136 artists and not have this massive variety,” said
Moore.
“You’ve got everything from tapestry fibre, felting, mixed media sculpture. You’ve got paintings of all sorts, everything from oil to encaustic, acrylic. You’ve got drawings, a wooden sculpture.”

Moore is a founding member of the
Indigenous Peoples’ Artist Collective (IPAC).
He grew up in the city’s West Flat
before moving away to B.C. for about four years. This, he feels, is a
way of reintroducing himself into Prince Albert’s arts community.
He and his wife have a cabin in Round
Lake, which is about half an hour northwest of Prince Albert, but
reside in Swift Current where they both work at the gallery.
Moore said he’s been familiar with the
Winter Festival Arts Show & Sale for about 20 years.
“If you’ve been kind of keeping tabs
on this exhibition long enough, you will notice…there was a
cohesive group of artists, so you got familiar with everybody,” he
explained.
“I’m not familiar with all of the
work anymore. There’s a few that I can still pinpoint,” Moore
added.
“There’s definitely new blood coming into the exhibition these days.”

Moore considers himself a mixed media
or interdisciplinary artist. Not only does he draw and paint, but he
does a lot of collages and mixed media sculptures.
In 2015, his show A Day at the Races
toured to Prince Albert’s Mann Art Gallery.
Moore said because there’s so many
artists in the Winter Festival Art Show & Sale, curating is more
of a challenge.
“Sometimes you get things set and you
think that’s going to work. About an hour later, everything has
changed,” he said.
“It’s very different than say, you’re
curating an exhibition with just one artist, so you will have 30 or
40 works that usually will run in some kind of a theme.”
He said he likes to start with a work
that grounds the room, pointing to a large tapestry on the floor that
had yet to be hung up.
Surrounding the tapestry were pieces of
a similar, colourful tone.
“I tried to choose everything along
it that would work with it and help to set it off and the others
off,” said Moore.
When asked to pinpoint a piece that stands out to him, Moore walked towards one by Michel Boutin. The work, which Moore didn’t yet have a title for, is a bull skull crushed between two boards. A red piece of fabric drapes around the horns.

From what he knows, the piece was used
in performance art.
“I guess the performance had a lot to
do (with)—it’s a vice, and he crushed, continually crushed skulls,”
said Moore.
“I just like the ruggedness of this
and kind of the steel, wood and everything. Often art, everybody
thinks it has to be beautiful,” he said.
“Art can look like a lot of different
things. As long as it has a certain message and a certain presence,
so this is a good example of that.”
Another work is by Kylee Blackburn, who
used film emulsion to create a camera.
“I really quite like the use of material, the design is very simple. It’s not overly done,” said Moore about her piece.

Artists from all over the province have
pieces in the show. All Saskatchewan residents are eligible to submit
work as long as they’re members of the Mann Art Gallery.
The Prince Albert Winter Festival Art
Show & Sale opening gala reception takes place on Feb 7 at 7 p.m.
Admission for participating artists is free, for gallery members is
$10 and for the general public is $15.
The Guest Curator’s Talk & Tour is
on Feb. 8 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.




