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Joyce Wieland

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Joyce WielandCanadian, 1931 - 1998

Joyce Wieland, OC (Toronto 1930 – 1998). Wieland was a central figure in Canadian art during the 1960s

and 1970s. Though, she began her career as a painter, her work came to explore a wide range of

materials and media, including film. The 1960s were an incredibly productive time for Wieland, as she

responded to the contemporary artistic trends of Pop art and Conceptual art. Her art was often infused

with humour, even as it engaged with issues of war, gender, ecology, and nationalism.

Internationally, Wieland is best known as an experimental filmmaker whose work challenged and

bridged boundaries among avant-garde film factions of her time. Her works introduced physical

manipulation of the filmstrip that inscribed an explicitly female craft tradition into her films while also

playing with the facticity of photographed images. Wieland's output was small but received considerable

attention in comparison to other female avant-garde filmmakers of her time. As both a gallery artist and

a filmmaker, Wieland was able to cross over between those realms and to garner attention and support

in both worlds. In the 1980s, Joyce Wieland focused again on painting, though her representations of

natural environments became less identifiably Canadian. With their intense colours and near

psychedelic effects, Wieland’s later landscapes seem almost outside of time and place. In 1956, Wieland

married filmmaker Michael Snow, whom she had met through her job at an animation studio. They

remained married for over twenty years until their divorce in 1976. In 1962, Wieland and Snow moved

to New York where they lived until 1971. After she moved back to Toronto in 1971, Wieland maintained

a studio practice there until her death on June 27, 1998 from Alzheimer's disease. We have one minor

work in the collection, almost 400 in other Canadian collections.

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