Saturday, January 28, 2012

VAG - Art Auction 2012


< CA + BD
Acrylic and oil paint on canvas, 14" x 24"



I'm honoured to be a part of the VAG's art auction which last year raised nearly $1.2 million in support of exhibitions and educational programs.


Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Thanks to Doug MacLean of Canadian Art Gallery for his comments to the Art Dealers Association of Canada.

"Herringer Kiss Gallery on 11th Avenue brought to town the explosive and experimental paintings of Fiona Ackerman in an exhibition titled “Celebratory Gunfire”. Fiona fits right in with what I call "new school abstraction", for she’s one of the young painters that we can see blooming from coast to coast. It’s exciting work that somehow makes you want to laugh- an odd reaction for a serious pursuit, and triggered by marks, colour, and literal explosions right in front of you."



"XO" Acrylic on canvas, 36" x 132", 2011

Friday, July 8, 2011

Luftveränderung - Berlin

Summertime in Berlin. A breath of fresh air. Opportunity buds, and I wonder if it isn't time for a new beginning.


Saturday, June 18, 2011

The Block Magazine

MARGINAL SPACE, Acrylic and spray paint on canvas. 49" x 63", 2010

In anticipation of this year’s Cheaper Show – a buzzy, decade-old art show highlighting emerging artists and selling their work for $200 a pop – we’re profiling a trifecta of young artists whose work we love. Our first profile in this series is Fiona Ackerman.

Vancouver-based Ackerman’s kaleidoscopic abstracts have us hooked; her landscapes, rich fantasy worlds with unusual colour combos and forays into graffiti, promise to rival even the pristine mountain view from our window. She spills about meeting her art-star dad for the first time, how she makes the choice between army green and, say, neon pink, and drawing inspiration from within.

The Block: How did you become an artist?

Fiona Ackerman: I grew up in Montreal and was always drawing, but when I was 13 I met my father for the first time. He’s a well-known German painter, and I went to a workshop he did in Italy, just a two week painting class, and my eyes were completely blown open. It was the most interesting, fascinating thing I’ve ever seen and I went back the next year. I ended up studying painting and drawing at Concordia, graduated from Emily Carr in 2002, and really never looked back.

TB: When did you know you could make it as an artist?

FA: I am always waiting for that moment! Some months it’s my career and other months it’s my passion – if you know what I mean. Painting is part of my life forever, and everything else in my life organizes itself around it.

TB: What do you do in those times when art is your passion?

FA: For the last five years I’ve worked at Pigeon Park Savings Union in the Downtown Eastside. It’s a bank for people who don’t have bank accounts or often even anywhere to live.

TB: Does your artwork have any social activist influence as a result?

FA: I don’t think so. My work has always been, though not intentionally, very much about painting and about finding my own language as a painter. For me it is a place where I explore my curiosity about painting, about form, and composition, and colour.

I LOVE YOU, Acrylic and spray paint on canvas, 48" x 48", 2010

TB: So where do you find inspiration and subject matter?

FA: Because i have a range, stylistically, the answer is two-part. I have this very abstract work that is driven by colour and by taking little snippets of textures and patterns from daily life that I may not even realize I’m taking in. It’s painting for painting’s sake and building up these imaginary words, very abstractly. Then I have another arena of painting that’s more representational. I’ve done a series of portraits and they are truly about the subject and about representing people I’m interested in and places I find interesting.

TB: Was your painting always abstract or did you start out a realist?

FA: I actually started off more abstractly, but a lot of it happens very simultaneously. Right now I’m working on a body of fairly abstract work at the same time as a series of portraits, so I have these two things happening at the studio. Working back and forth with these two ways of painting, I find that they feed each other. It’s sort of like, as a muscle builder (not that I am one!) you don’t want to exercise so that you lean too far in one direction – I’m exercising both sides of my painting brain in order to be able to wander through both worlds with comfort.

DISTRACTION, Acrylic on canvas, 40" x 30", 2010

TB: Some of your colour combinations are very unexpected; how do you choose colours?

FA: A few years ago, I was deliberately trying to use colours that are very difficult for myself. It’s funny because now they’re colours I can reach for quite easily. When I start painting with these colours, with a palette of odd greens, for example, then it’s really the paining itself that tells me what it needs, the painting chooses for me.

TB: You like to use spray paint, and unusual medium for a fine-art painter.

FA: Sometimes when I’m feeling restless with paintings, I’ll go to the art store and find materials that I haven’t used before to see if it’ll make a different mark or add a different element to a painting. Spray paint is a really powerful tool, but I have a limited colour selection. The colours cause you to work around them a little bit which is an interesting challenge.

TB: How do you choose titles for paintings (some of our favourites are “Washed Up On Soda Beach” and “A Philosophical Maybe”)?

FA: I’ll stumble upon a line in a book and think, oh that’ll make a pretty title and jot it down. Oftentimes it’s after a painting is finished and I have a show coming up and Untitled 1, 2, 3 is becoming far too confusing. It’s really the fun part; it’s like putting icing on a cake, naming a painting.

XO, Acrylic and spray paint on canvas 132" x 36", 2010

TB: You were once quoted as saying: “I’ll never be a landscape painter.” And yet, here you are painting beautiful – if abstract – landscapes.

FA: I should never have said that. That was the first line of a talk I gave at Dianne Farris and I go on to talk about how foolish that is and how I didn’t understand landscape painting – or even painting – at the time, when I was 19 and living in Montreal. I thought I didn’t want to just do more landscape paintings, but I didn’t understand that landscape painting means so many different things and it’s such a basic human thing to represent our environment. Now I’m absolutely a landscape painter, I adore it. My paintings are abstract but they are abstract landscapes, they are environments.

TB: Do you discover these landscapes in the world?

FA: They come from my imagination. I create imaginary worlds. I’ll find a new material or colour and the landscape builds itself up from there, often without me being conscious of it. When you open your mouth to speak, and a voice comes out, it’s not clear why you use that voice; it’s not always intentional

TB: What do you hope to convey with your artwork?

FA: Precision, playfulness, mood. I want to create something that never gets tired. Someone I know who owns a piece of mine tells me they see something different in it every year that they own it. That, to me, is a successful painting.

MY WAY OR THE HIGHWAY/ PORTRAIT OF RALPH ACKERMAN SR., Oil on canvas 72" x 36", 2010

TB: Are you painting something special for the Cheaper Show?

FA: I paint with the Cheaper Show in mind but not in a committed way. For a couple months leading up to it I think, this could be a possibility or this could, and then only in the last weeks do I really narrow it down.

TB: Can you give us a hint about what you might be planning?

FA: Over the years I’ve done a series of framed abstract works on paper. These have been a way for me to get to the root of new ideas, which I really enjoy doing. I decided to do a few bigger ones this year, and there’s a chance that those that will be strong enough for the show.

TB: What do you think the Cheaper Show means for Vancouver’s art scene?

FA: Publicity, obviously, for an artist is always so much appreciated, and buzz – people are so excited about so many things, and painting is often a media that is harder to get excited about because it’s such a personal experience. The event itself is fun in a way that artists don’t get to experience as often, but also I think all these artists are getting a closer look.

TB: An artist friend sometimes complains that the Cheaper Show means everyone waits for this one day to buy art at a discount. What’s your opinion?

FA: I’ve thought a lot about this too. I think buying one piece of artwork, if it’s someone’s first piece, is a real foot in the door. If a person thinks they could never own artwork and we can break that feeling down for them with such a great price, we’re really opening the door for a life of owning art.

Interview Darcy Smith

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Picture Book One


Vancouver, BC - The Storyboard Label is pleased to announce the launch of the Picture Book Art Series at the Interurban Gallery. Picture Book One is a group exhibition featuring painting, illustration and sculpture by emerging and established Canadian artists including: Fiona Ackerman, Karin Bubas, Jessica Delorme, Ryan Heshka, Steve Hubert, Jeffry Lee, Niall McClelland, Nadia Moss, Luc Paradis, Corrilynn Tetz, and Howie Tsui.

The exhibition is curated by Scott Lewis and is on view until May 5.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Lululemon Lab Art Instillation


I was invited to create this instillation piece in the display window of the Lululemon Lab in Vancouver. My piece is third in an artist series curated by Zoe Pawlak, and it will remain in the window until the end of April. This was such a pleasure!!