In recent years, the study of the body has developed rapidly across many disciplines, including visual art, art history, gender and cultural studies, queer theory and sociology among others. In regards to the body, definitions of the “human,” “sub-human,” “acceptable,” “unspeakable” and “non-human” vary widely depending on the societal context. In Western culture, artists have introduced new bodies and ideas to viewers. What may have been unspeakable a century ago, such as the queer body and self-asserting sexual female body, is now more commonplace, although there is still resistance. The introduction of new and unspeakable bodies is always met with controversy. Often the contested unspeakable body is not new but rather is brought i...
This PhD explores how the female body can parody histories of objectification, and conventions of ap...
My work is concerned with the correlation of society’s standards for women, their bodies, and the re...
This thesis deals with exhibition practices of Canadian cultural establishments regarding First Nati...
In recent years, the study of the body has developed rapidly across many disciplines, including v...
My working methods build upon an ongoing interest in examining how identities and understanding are ...
My sculpture and performance-based practice deploys humour and movement to engage with knotted quest...
Elevating the Queer Body is an art based exploration in removing objectification in the visual consu...
In the cultural upheaval of the 1920s, Canadians became particularly invested in looking at and deba...
This thesis addresses a long history of colonization and intergenerational traumas still existing to...
In combination with a Master of Fine Arts thesis exhibition, and where is the body?, this dossier of...
By engaging in art making and analytic activities I seek to answer the question: How can collage be ...
Bodies that Monetize is an exhibition and thesis document that investigates the harms caused to Indi...
Throughout the history of Western art, drawing the human figure from live nude models has been consi...
This thesis paper examines specific bodies of work by three Ontario-based emerging artists...
This practice-led research project investigates visual representations of female sexual identity wit...
This PhD explores how the female body can parody histories of objectification, and conventions of ap...
My work is concerned with the correlation of society’s standards for women, their bodies, and the re...
This thesis deals with exhibition practices of Canadian cultural establishments regarding First Nati...
In recent years, the study of the body has developed rapidly across many disciplines, including v...
My working methods build upon an ongoing interest in examining how identities and understanding are ...
My sculpture and performance-based practice deploys humour and movement to engage with knotted quest...
Elevating the Queer Body is an art based exploration in removing objectification in the visual consu...
In the cultural upheaval of the 1920s, Canadians became particularly invested in looking at and deba...
This thesis addresses a long history of colonization and intergenerational traumas still existing to...
In combination with a Master of Fine Arts thesis exhibition, and where is the body?, this dossier of...
By engaging in art making and analytic activities I seek to answer the question: How can collage be ...
Bodies that Monetize is an exhibition and thesis document that investigates the harms caused to Indi...
Throughout the history of Western art, drawing the human figure from live nude models has been consi...
This thesis paper examines specific bodies of work by three Ontario-based emerging artists...
This practice-led research project investigates visual representations of female sexual identity wit...
This PhD explores how the female body can parody histories of objectification, and conventions of ap...
My work is concerned with the correlation of society’s standards for women, their bodies, and the re...
This thesis deals with exhibition practices of Canadian cultural establishments regarding First Nati...