CV:
Group Art Exhibitions
[Indeterminate Limits at The U Of M School of Art Collections Gallery] — Feb - March, 2023
Other Selected Art Exhibitions, Markets & Events
[Harvest Moon Music Festival]
[Clearwater, MB]
[Sept, 2022]
[GentleFest Music Festival]
[Teulon, MB]
[Aug, 2022]
[Alleyways Market]
[Exchange District, Winnipeg]
[July, 2022]
[Handle with Care - Artfest]
[CFR United Church, Winnipeg, MB] [May, 2022]
[Collections For Reflection Art Exhibition]
[Online]
[March, 2021]
[First Friday’s In The Exchange]
[WpgArts Studio, Winnipeg, MB] [March, 2020]
[Various Art Markets & Events]
[Winnipeg, MB]
[2020 - ongoing]Artistic Resume— Jesse Dyck
2
Private Collections
[Numerous private collections — 40+ Sales]
[Manitoba]
[2020 - 2023]
Commissions
Bryan Fournier, Winnipeg, Manitoba, CA
[Feb - April, 2023]
Personal photograph hand-altered with mixed media, 11”x14”
Professional membership/affiliations
[Platform Centre for Photographic + Digital Arts]
[March, 2023 to current]
Indeterminate Limits Art Exhibition
University of Manitoba School of Art — Collections Gallery
February 10 to March 24, 2023
— This exhibition will feature 12 of my art pieces! The original photographs that I hand-altered in a variety of ways! —
— All pieces in exhibition are available for sale as prints —
— Featuring work by Madelyn Gowler, Keeley Hatfner, Aralia Maxwell, Rhayne Vermette, and Jesse Dyck —
— Curated by Scotland Cook, Young Canada Works Curatorial Assistant —
About the exhibition
Indeterminate Limits brings together five artists from the Canadian prairies whose iterative practices blur the lines between figurative and abstract art. Featuring video, photography, painting, mixed media and craft, the exhibition involves artworks from diverse selection of mediums which are created with similar modes of production. Indeterminate Limits considers labour and creation as one and the same; the works come together through intuitive processes and experimental techniques. Each artist has developed personal and specific visual language that reflects their lived experiences while working within traditions of abstraction that often deemphasize the personal or political.
In math, an indeterminate limit occurs when a set of functions approaches a limit and advances infinitely, never meeting it. Some examples of this would be zero divided by zero, or one to the power of infinity. Even as the expression approaches its limit, changes occur as it inches closer to that value. The same can be said for these artists, working in the spaces between figurative and abstract art. As they overlay marks and media, using figurative works as raw materials in their pieces, they approach the aesthetic infinity of the non-representational. Their artworks also point to a future that is undetermined and without limits. They ask the question: in a world full of possibilities, why do we continue to go down the same paths that we have been traversing for so long? Why don’t we push towards an undetermined and more empathetic future?
More info available here: https://umanitoba.ca/art/indeterminate-limits