EDUCATION AND RESIDENCIES
2006 -09 - Harbourfront Centre Craft Studio, Artist Residency, Textile Studio
2006 - Ontario College of Art and Design, Material Art and Design Program
1999 - Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, Foundation Studies Program
1997 - George Brown College, Assaulted Women’s + Children’s Counselor + Advocate Program
AWARDS AND SCHOLARSHIPS
2013 - Craft Project Creation and Development Grant, Ontario Arts Council
2012 - Exhibition Assistance Grant, Ontario Arts Council
2009 - Untapped Artist Award, The Artist Project
2008 - Helen Frances Gregor Scholarship, Ontario Crafts Council
- OCC Scholarship, Ontario Crafts Council
2007 - Best of Show, Toronto Outdoor Art Exhibition
- Best Decorative Arts Award (tied with David Thai), TOAE
2006 - Fibre Award – Honorable Mention, David Kaye Gallery, TOAE
- Friends of Fibre Award, Ontario College of Art and Design
- Ellen Adams Scholarship, Ontario College of Art and Design
2004 - D. Kristjanson/Purchase Award, Ontario College of Art and Design
PREVIOUS EXHIBITIONS
2013 - Silence Doesn't Paint the Depth of Quiet in That Room, Studio Huddle, Toronto
2010 - Art of Craft, Museum of Vancouver, British Columbia
2009 - Unity & Diversity, Cheongju International Craft Biennale, South Korea
2008 - Fibreworks 08, Cambridge Galleries, Cambridge
- Mores Revealed, Uncommon Objects, Harbourfront Centre, Toronto
- Toronto Outdoor Art Exhibition, Nathan Phillips Square
- Update, York Quay Gallery, Harbourfront Centre, Toronto
(remounted at Gallery 990 OCC, Toronto ON)
- Best of 2007, First Canadian Place Gallery, Toronto
2007 - Shadowbox Silent Auction, Textile Museum of Canada, Toronto
- New Artists, The Guild Shop, Toronto
- Toronto Outdoor Art Exhibition, Nathan Phillips Square
- Last Night I Dreamt I Was..., (collaboration with Suzanne Carlsen), Harbourfront Centre
- Small Talk, OCAD and travelling
- Five, Group Show, Durham Art Gallery, Town of Durham
- Best of 2006, First Canadian Place Gallery, Toronto
2006 - Shadowbox Silent Auction, Textile Museum of Canada, Toronto
- Toronto Alternative Art Fair International, Gladstone Hotel, Toronto
- NEXT, Uncommon Objects, Harbourfront Centre, Toronto
- Queen West Arts Crawl, Toronto
- Toronto Outdoor Art Exhibition, Nathan Phillips Square
- Out of the Madness, Group Show, Gladstone Hotel, Toronto
- Annual Student Exhibition, OCAD, Toronto
2004 - Social Somatic, Group Show, OCAD Gallery, Toronto
2003 - The Sew Sew Group Show, Textile Museum of Canada, Toronto
LECTURES and WORKSHOPS
2009 - Fragile Embroidery Workshop, CICB, Cheongju, South Korea
2009 - Visiting Artist Lecture Series, Ontario College of Art and Design
- Artist Talk, Ontario Craft Council
2008 - Viva Voce, Harbourfront Centre
RELATED EXPERIENCE
2008 - Artist Educator, Luminato Festival
- Textile Instructor, Harbourfront Centre Craft Studio
2007 - Teacher, Craft Education Workshops, Harbourfront Centre
2003 - Art Teacher, Toronto Parks and Recreation
About Me
- kate jackson
- Kate Jackson is a visual artist based in Canada. She recently finished a 3 year artist residency at Harbourfront Centre in Toronto. Her work has been shown at numerous galleries across Canada and internationally and is part of many private collections. Jackson has received awards for her work including The Artist Project Untapped Award 2009, The Helen Frances Gregor Scholarship -2008, OCC Scholarship-2008, and Toronto Outdoor Art Exhibition Best in Show - 2007. Jackson studied at the Ontario College of Art and Design in the Material Art and Design Program (1999-2006) and also the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (1999). She lived and worked at The Banff Centre from 2009 to 2011 and now calls Toronto her home city.
Sunday, January 17, 2010
early work - my soldiers
During my final year in the Material Art and Design program at OCAD (ontario college of art and design) I made a series of work titled: My Soldiers. I was concerned with my actions as a consumer and how my lifestyle contributed to war-making and military actions around the world. I was also influenced by Gulliver's Travels and the symbolism of size.
The following quilts are approx. 8 feet long. I used bleach to draw the main figure and machine embroidery to stitch the swirling soldiers into the quilts.
Immediately following school I was a participant at the 2006 Toronto Outdoor Art Exhibition. I made some smaller work to display along with my thesis work. I had become so saddened by the reasoning behind my work that I began to dream of a world using soldiers and weaponry as tools of love. I wanted soldiers to love and make love. I wanted their guns to blow bubbles, grow flowers and give out love. I became obsessed with the idea
For the following year I was very much in love with flourescents and bright colours. I made this work to show at Harbourfront Centre. It was meant to be a smaller version of my 7 feet tall soldiers. These guys are only about 12 inches tall.
I wanted to see how dedicated I could be to the repetition of machine embroidery. The following work is 36" x 36" and is entirely machine embroidered. I had been watching the Beatles Yellow Submarine and was enthralled with the use of flat colour filling in a black outline. I wanted to try and use that in my work.
Eventually I grew completely disenchanted with my dream and began to realize that soldiers in war had a better chance of dying than filling the world with peace and love. I went on to create my Eyelet Casualties Series.
The following quilts are approx. 8 feet long. I used bleach to draw the main figure and machine embroidery to stitch the swirling soldiers into the quilts.
During my final show at school, along with the quilts, I showed 2 stuffed soldiers which were almost 7 feet tall. They were meant to resemble both pillows and punching bags. The drawings of the soldiers were done with machine embroidery. (i do machine embroidery with a standard sewing machine and push the fabric by hand to guide the stitching where i want it to go.)
Immediately following school I was a participant at the 2006 Toronto Outdoor Art Exhibition. I made some smaller work to display along with my thesis work. I had become so saddened by the reasoning behind my work that I began to dream of a world using soldiers and weaponry as tools of love. I wanted soldiers to love and make love. I wanted their guns to blow bubbles, grow flowers and give out love. I became obsessed with the idea
For the following year I was very much in love with flourescents and bright colours. I made this work to show at Harbourfront Centre. It was meant to be a smaller version of my 7 feet tall soldiers. These guys are only about 12 inches tall.
I wanted to see how dedicated I could be to the repetition of machine embroidery. The following work is 36" x 36" and is entirely machine embroidered. I had been watching the Beatles Yellow Submarine and was enthralled with the use of flat colour filling in a black outline. I wanted to try and use that in my work.
Eventually I grew completely disenchanted with my dream and began to realize that soldiers in war had a better chance of dying than filling the world with peace and love. I went on to create my Eyelet Casualties Series.
Letters Series
More often than not my work focuses on the intimacy and emotions felt during both quiet moments and powerful events. This series titled: Letters, pays tribute to the romance and joy of the posted letter. The drawing was executed using both hand and machine embroidery. While I was making this work I drew my friends and studio mates. This work means much more to me now that I live far away from most of the people I love. It is always so exciting to receive a letter from them in the mail. (hint hint to all my friends out there!)
These "envelopes" are made with vintage hankies and linens.
last night i dreamt i was...
A few years ago I had the great pleasure of collaborating on a show with Suzanne Carlsen Suzanne is an amazing artist from Toronto and a super friend of mine. Titled: Last night I dreamt I was… the show focused on the icons and archetypes of our favourite fantasy occupations. The show was installed in the vitrines along the studio corridor at Harbourfront Centre. Viewers had to peek through the windows to see the work inside. Here are a few of the occupations we dreamt about:
Last night I dreamt I was...
... an astronaut
... a ballerina
... a scuba diver
Last night I dreamt I was...
... a private detective
... a circus performer ... an astronaut
... a ballerina
... a scuba diver
Friday, January 15, 2010
Eyelet Casualties Series
I am affected by images of dying soldiers and the violence of war.
Eyelet cloth, an inherently feminine cloth is used as both a canvas and a drawn line to convey images of war that are both sobering and whimsical.
Images of soldier life and death are on fabrics which evoke feelings of femininity, softness, safety, warmth, beauty, and domesticity - the embroidery and applique- execution is clean, tight and made with precision ensuring that feelings of love and devotion are inherent within each stitch. Materials: eyelet cloth, machine embroidery, hand embroidery
The actual size of the following work is 10"x10"
The following work is 5"x5"
The following work is 20" x 20"
Title: Snow
Sixe of Work: 30"x30"
Title: Cogs
I also made some smaller work for the Toronto Outdoor Art Exhibition in 2008.
I won't treat my tears like tissue
Tears and snot are worthy of a handkerchief. Having spent a great deal of time crying recently and not having a hankie to catch the tears, I watched my emotions get taken out with the trash. Tears should be embraced, calmed, sweetened, and soothed. They should fall into something beautiful.
materials: tissue, thread, card stock, plastic.
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