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Pastel: The Art of Pastel #2, page 144, by Marilyn-Ann Ranco, 3 pages, 4 illustrations. Ranco looks at the re-emergence of pastel as a serious art medium.
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Artist Profile: Steven Lamb, page 175, by Nadia Nadege, 3 pages, 5 illustrations. Lamb mines the German school of grotesque painting except that he does it with a wry wit and a good deal of humour. |
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Yves du Poirier: page 148, by Richard Dube, 4 pages, 7 illustrations. Dube looks at the work of prize winning naïve artist Yves du Poirier. |
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Sylvie Cloutier , page 178, by Michel Beauchamp, 3 pages, 5 illustrations. Cloutier is an abstract artist who manipulates geometric forms, bringing them to life. |
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Marilyn Ann Ranco: page 152, by Nadia Nadege, 4 pages, 6 illustrations. Nadege takes a look at Ranco’s recent Italian work and comes away impressed. |
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Artist Profile: John Wiseman, page 181, by Robert Lafontaine, 4 pages, 7 illustrations. Wiseman is a superb draughtsman, which he reveals in his animal, landscape and architectural works. |
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New Seven: page 156, by Frederic Marc Gagne, 4 pages, 15 illustrations. Gagne takes a look at a group of Alberta landscape painters who have taken up an illustrious torch. |
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Artist Profile: Jean Pederson , page 185, by Noel Meyer, 4 pages, 5 illustrations. Pedersen works in what she calls water medium and achieves startling, intense effects in her portraits. |
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Haida: First Nations: Haida Part Two, page 161, by Noel Meyer, 4 pages, 5 illustrations. Meyer looks at the Haida renaissance in art and takes some guesses as to where it will lead. |
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Artist Profile: Robert Dupont, page 189, by Nadia Nadege, 3 pages, 4 illustrations. Dupont paints like an old master and celebrates the ordinary giving it a transcendent quality. |
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Daniel Vincent : page 165, by Lisanne LeTellier, 3 pages, 5 illustrations. Le Tellier examines the work of a man who has been seduced by the sweet and soft texture of cherries in all their glory. |
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Artist Profile: H.E. Kuckein, page 192, by Noel Meyer, 4 pages, 8 illustrations. Kuckein is one of those artists who will leave a footprint and this story explains why. |
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Johannus Boots, page 168, by John Meyer, 4 pages, 7 illustrations. John Meyer takes a step into a magical world that leads through many doors. |
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Canadian Masters: Homer Watson, page 196, by Tamara Pasztor, 4 pages, 6 illustrations. Pasztor looks at Canada’s first internationally famous painter, a man praised by Oscar Wilde and collected by Queen Victoria. |
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Nicola Prinsen: page 172, by Martin Murray, 3 pages, 5 illustrations. Prinsen works to capture the intimate moment when animal and human recognize each other. |
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