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LIFE LIT UP

Saturday, September 01, 2018 - Tuesday, August 31, 2021

One role of visual art is to facilitate an awareness of the world around us. Whether focusing on the mundane, the magnificent, the tragic or the triumphant, many artists seek to present 'the world' - and their personal reflections regarding it - to the viewer.

Until the mid 1800s, this role was primarily the domain of drawing and painting. The advent of photography introduced a new and challenging player to this field. While photography tested painting, it also questioned itself and a philosophical debate concerning its use quickly developed amongst its practitioners. Many photographers believed that photography should aspire to the artistic and alleged that if their works was to be taken seriously, photography had to compete with painting and adopt its methodologies.

Two painterly techniques which influenced the art of photography are those of chiaroscuro and tenebrism. Developed in the seventeenth century chiaroscuro is a modelling device while tenebrism is a dark-light compositional technique. While chiaroscuro creates volume, tenebrism is used for purely dramatic effect, providing focus to a scene or object and emotionally elevating what is portrayed.

The exhibition Life Lit Up, featuring works from the Collection of the Alberta Foundation for the Arts, explores the influence of chiaroscuro and tenebrism on photographers from Alberta. Through their works these artists expose the wonder and beauty of the ordinary.

Life Lit Up was curated by Shane Golby, Manager/Curator, Art Gallery of Alberta, Region 2 of the AFA Travelling Exhibition Program (TREX).