Welcome to the Faculty of Fine Arts

EURYDICE

February 16 - 25, 2012, By Sarah Ruhl
Directed by MFA Candidate, Jeffrey Pufahl

Looking for a dynamic creative community where curiosity and exploration are the cornerstones of the learning environment? The University of Victoria’s Faculty of Fine Arts offers just that, through our five departments: History in Art, School of Music, Theatre, Visual Arts and Writing. Through the Dean's Office, we also offer interdisciplinary courses ranging in topic from cultural issues to technology—anchored by our Studios for Integrated Media.

Whatever your creative discipline, prepare to be engaged by peers and professors alike at UVic’s Faculty of Fine Arts.

Upcoming!

Feb 21-22 – Visiting writer: Sheila Heti

Sheila Heti

Tuesday, February 21, 7:30 p.m.
Open Space, 510 Fort Street
By donation

Wednesday, February 22, 3:00 p.m.
MacLaurin Building, Rm. D107
Free

Back in 2008, writer Sheila Heti tapped into the American zeitgeist by creating The Metaphysical Poll, a headline-making blog that collected actual sleeping dreams people were having about then-presidential candidates Hilary Clinton and Barack Obama. But that’s only one of the many quirky DIY projects that keep this Toronto-based author of five books busy. Learn what’s true and what’s just popular when Sheila Heti appears at the latest round of the “Open Word: Readings and Ideas”

Perhaps best known for her novel Ticknor and the book of “conversational philosophy” The Chairs Are Where the People Go, Heti also made her mark by creating Toronto’s popular Trampoline Hall lecture series, where people lecture on topics outside their areas of expertise—which has been running monthly since its 2001 inception, and has sold out every time. An editor, playwright and artistic collaborator, Heti is currently writer-in-residence at the University of Western Ontario. Following her Open Space reading on Feb. 21, Heti will do a live interview with UVic writing prof, Lee Henderson.

Feb 22 - Visiting artist: Daniel Barrow




Toilet (2006)

Daniel Barrow

Wednesday February 22, 8pm, Visual Arts Building Room A 162

Montreal-based artist Daniel Barrow uses obsolete technologies to present written,  pictorial, and cinematic narratives centering on the practices of drawing and collecting. Since 1993, he has created and adapted comic book narratives to “manual” forms of  animation by projecting, layering, and manipulating drawings on an overhead projector. 

Over the span of many years working as an image-maker and live performer, Barrow has developed a personal language in which video alternately coalesces with drawings on an overhead projector, with a live performer, as well as with gallery viewers. All of Barrow’s work aims to collide popular imagery from the cultural and digital past with emotional, usually melancholic, content. Barrow has performed and exhibited widely in galleries and festivals throughout Canada and abroad. Barrow is the 2007 winner of The Canada Council’s Victor Martyn Lynch-Staunton award, the 2008 winner of the Images Festival’s Images Prize and the Sobey Art Award 2010. Barrow is represented by Jessica Bradley Art + Projects, Toronto.

Feb 29 - Visiting artist: Lee Henderson

Wednesday February 29, 8pm, Visual Arts Building, Room A 162

Prior to joining UVic's Department of Writing last year, Lee Henderson lived in Vancouver, where he made a living writing on the visual arts, publishing fiction and teaching creative writing at UBC. He has also lead writing workshops for the Summer Literary Seminar in Montreal as well as at the Banff Centre for the Arts, and with U of T's online writing program.

Lee was raised on the prairies in Saskatoon and Calgary but settled out west shortly after high school. Before making books and stories, Lee made cookies, hamburgers, invoices, ad copy, and once, long ago, made the animation for artist Tony Oursler's video for Sonic Youth's song 'Tunic;' and once, even longer ago than that, played in a John Cage 'happening' at the Banff Centre. Lee has published two award-winning books with Penguin Canada — the story collection The Broken Record Technique and the novel The Man Game, which won the BC Book Prize and the Vancouver Book Prize in 2009. His essay on language extinction and corporate English was published in the anthology Finding the Words, edited by Jared Bland. Lee's fiction and art writing is regularly published in The Walrus and Border Crossings magazine, and other short stories have appeared in numerous magazines and journals. He has curated exhibitions of contemporary art and experimental music.

Mar 6 — Guest Lecture: Monique Mojica

 Monique Mojica

Tuesday, March 6, 7pm
Room C122 of UVic's David Strong Building
Free and open to the public

“Scoring the Body Through Guna Aesthetic Principles: Indigenous Dramatic Arts in Theory, Process and Practice”

Acclaimed Toronto-based Guna and Rappahannock actor and playwright Monique Mojica offers a free public lecture focussing on the five-year process of creating the play Chocolate Woman Dreams the Milky Way, a headliner at the 2012 Talking Stick Festival in Vancouver. Dedicated to theatrical practice as healing, as reclamation of historical/cultural memory, and as an act of resistance, Mojica practices a creative process that privileges Indigenous Knowledges, cultural aesthetics and performance principles.

An acclaimed stage and film actor (nominated for best supporting actress by Native Americans in the Arts for her role in Smoke Signals), Mojica is the former artist director of Native Earth Performing Arts, Canada’s most prominent aboriginal theatre company, and a co-founder of Toronto's Turtle Gals Performance Ensemble. She has taught at McMaster University and at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fé, was the editor of a special issue of Canadian Theatre Review on Native Theatre and was seen as Caesar in Death of a Chief, Native Earth’s adaptation of Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar.

This is a rare opportunity to hear one of Canada's most noted aboriginal performance voices.

Mar 21 - Visiting artist: Allan McCollum


40 Plaster Surrogates

Allan McCollum

Wednesday March 21st, 8pm, Visual Arts Building Room A 162

Allan McCollum has spent over 40 years exploring how objects achieve public and personal meaning in a world constituted in mass production. His first solo exhibition was in 1970, and his first New York showing was in an exhibition at the Sidney Janis Gallery in 1972. In 1975, his work was included in the Whitney Biennial, and he moved to New York City that same year. In the late '70s he became known for his series, Surrogate Paintings.

McCollum has had over 100 solo exhibitions, including international retrospectives in France, Germany, England, Sweden, Spain and The Netherlands. He has produced numerous public art projects in the United States and Europe, and his works are held in over 70 art museum collections worldwide, including the Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Guggenheim, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art. McCollum lives and works in New York City.

Guest Lecture: Monique Mojica
Tuesday, March 6, 7pm
Room C122 of UVic's David Strong Building
Free and open to the public

“Scoring the Body Through Guna Aesthetic Principles: Indigenous Dramatic Arts in Theory, Process and Practice”

Acclaimed Toronto-based Guna and Rappahannock actor and playwright Monique Mojica offers a free public lecture focussing on the five-year process of creating the play Chocolate Woman Dreams the Milky Way, a headliner at the 2012 Talking Stick Festival in Vancouver. Dedicated to theatrical practice as healing, as reclamation of historical/cultural memory, and as an act of resistance, Mojica practices a creative process that privileges Indigenous Knowledges, cultural aesthetics and performance principles.

An acclaimed stage and film actor (nominated for best supporting actress by Native Americans in the Arts for her role in Smoke Signals), Mojica is the former artist director of Native Earth Performing Arts, Canada’s most prominent aboriginal theatre company, and a co-founder of Toronto's Turtle Gals Performance Ensemble. She has taught at McMaster University and at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fé, was the editor of a special issue of Canadian Theatre Review on Native Theatre and was seen as Caesar in Death of a Chief, Native Earth’s adaptation of Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar.

This is a rare opportunity to hear one of Canada's most noted aboriginal performance voices.

Job Postings

Job Postings

The University of Victoria is an equity employer and encourages applications from women, persons with disabilities, visible minorities, Aboriginal Peoples, people of all sexual orientations and genders, and others who may contribute to the further diversification of the University.

All qualified candidates are encouraged to apply; however, in accordance with Canadian Immigration requirements, Canadians and permanent residents will be given priority.

  • Summer Job - BC Legislative Tour Guide Program 2012

Fine Arts

History in Art

School of Music

Theatre Department

Writing Department

Visual Arts Department

Course lists

UVic Calendar

Visual Arts (ART) Undergraduate | Graduate
Creative Writing (En'owkin Centre) (CW) Undergraduate
Fine Arts (FA) Undergraduate
History in Art (HA) Undergraduate | Graduate
Music (MUS) Undergraduate | Graduate
Theatre (THEA) Undergraduate | Graduate
Writing (WRIT) Undergraduate | Graduate

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