翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Robert Boyd (director)
・ Robert Boyd (paediatrician)
・ Robert Boyd (physicist)
・ Robert Boyd (stenographer)
・ Robert Boyd (university principal)
・ Robert Boyd (writer)
・ Robert Boyd Brazier
・ Robert Boyd Publications
・ Robert Boyd, 1st Lord Boyd
・ Robert Boyd, 4th Lord Boyd
・ Robert Boyd, 5th Lord Boyd
・ Robert Boyd, 7th Lord Boyd
・ Robert Boyd, 8th Lord Boyd
・ Robert Boyed Mitchell
・ Robert Boyer
Robert Boyer (artist)
・ Robert Boyer (chemist)
・ Robert Boyers
・ Robert Boyle
・ Robert Boyle (disambiguation)
・ Robert Boyle Lecture
・ Robert Boyle Prize for Analytical Science
・ Robert Boyle-Walsingham
・ Robert Boylestad
・ Robert Braber
・ Robert Brachtenbach
・ Robert Brackenbury
・ Robert Brackman
・ Robert Bradbrook
・ Robert Bradbury


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Robert Boyer (artist) : ウィキペディア英語版
Robert Boyer (artist)
Robert "Bob" Boyer (July 20, 1948 – August 30, 2004) was a Canadian visual artist and university professor of aboriginal heritage. He was a Métis Cree artist known for his politically charged abstract paintings.
==Life and work==
Boyer grew up in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan and earned a BEd from the Regina Campus of the University of Saskatchewan in 1971.〔Jacoby-Smith, Jennifer. ("The Painterly Life of Bob Boyer." ) ''University of Saskatchewan: Green and White.'' (retrieved 21 Nov 2009)〕 He joined the Saskatchewan arts community in 1973 and worked on community programming at the Norman MacKenzie Art Gallery in Regina until the mid-1970s. He was then a professor of Indian Fine Arts at the Saskatchewan Indian Federated College ("SIFC") (now First Nations University of Canada), a federated college of the University of Saskatchewan, Regina Campus, later the University of Regina, until 1997.〔("Bob Boyer." ) ''Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan.'' (retrieved 21 Nov 2009)〕 During his time at the SIFC, Boyer acted as the Head of the Department of Indian Fine Arts.
Boyer's early paintings use material such as acrylics, paper, and canvas. The earliest paintings are realistic, but he soon embarked on an effort to incorporate an abstract style in his work. One of the earliest results of this is "Horses Can Fly, Too," a representation of a horse-figure streaking through the sky. Boyer is well known for his large-scale geometric paintings on felt blankets that he produced primarily in the late 1980s and early 1990s. This began after a trip to China and Japan.〔Newlands, 56〕 He said, "There were paintings on silk or cloth and gradually this whole thing about art not having to be made on stretched canvas really began to get through to me."〔 Boyer used oil paints applied thickly, using rough brush strokes in many of these works. The geometric designs on the blanket paintings come from the tradition motifs of Siouan and Cree groups in Western Canada. Boyer tended to use traditional colour combinations in early blanket paintings, but some later examples are painted in pastels.
At first Boyer painted about the wrong Europeans have done to Aboriginal peoples, but he later switched to things about the Aboriginal culture and the meaning of life. Boyer called all of this 'Blanket Statements'.
Many of the pieces from the Boyer's 'Blanket Period' are in the permanent collections of major galleries such the National Gallery of Canada and the Norman MacKenzie Gallery. Paintings bear unique and enigmatic titles that came to Boyer at poignant moments such as after sweat lodge ceremonies.
Boyer's influences from aboriginal art traditions are obvious, but he was also influenced by local Saskatchewan artists such as Ted Godwin and Art McKay of the ''Regina Five'', and to a lesser extent Joe Fafard. As a university professor and elder, Boyer mentored many young aboriginal and non-aboriginal artists.
Boyer died in 2004 while powwow dancing.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Robert Boyer (artist)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.