Cross Cut exhibition at Scarborough’s Cedar Ridge Creative Centre Gallery

Rob Niezen’s exhibition of linocuts reflecting on traditional songs from Ontario with a contemporary perspective will be showing at Cedar Ridge Creative Centre Gallery in Scarborough.

Traditional music came to Ontario with European settlers. Lyrics and tunes were adapted to local experiences and the personal preferences of the players, which offer a reflection of society at different moments in history.  The underlying themes are of a timeless nature, as they deal with human existence: love, deception, politics, war, immigration, work, leisure, murder, death, etc. Folk songs make global issues accessible to everyone, as they are created and sung by real people telling real human stories.

Cross Cut invites viewers to reflect on the lives of Canadians from the past and today; superficially things have changed, but the human conditions for people now are not that different from 100 or 200 years ago. Rob Niezen’s linocuts use both the traditional method of carving the material, and contemporary and experimental ways of mark making, including laser engraving and etching.

Cross Cut is a multi media project that also includes a songbook with linocut illustrations and a music album. The Cross Cut songbook covers a selection of song lyrics, their history and basic chord progressions. Historian and musician Dr. Allan Kirby and Rob Niezen are co-producers of the book. Traditional music group Backwoodsmen created contemporary arrangements for the songs, and recorded a double CD with twenty-three songs.

Cedar Ridge Creative Centre
225 Confederation Drive
Scarborough, ON M1G 1B2

OSA 147th Open Juried Exhibition

This juried exhibition of contemporary art is going virtual this year. Jurors John Bingham (Photographer), Ron Bolt (RCA, Painter) and Cathy Groulx (OSA, Painter), selected Rob’s nocturnal oil painting Metro Glow and 81 other works from over 372 submissions. See the online exhibition here.

24 Market part of The Views Are Different Here

The Views Are Different Here is an exhibition examining Toronto’s identity at the John B. Aird Gallery. This  collaborative exhibit was made possible by the University of Toronto Master of Museum Studies Graduate Capstone Project, the John B. Aird Gallery,  the City of Toronto and the Art Connections Program. It is  curated by Amanda McNeil and Nikita Lorenzo.
The exhibition runs March 6 – April 6, 2018, with an opening reception on March 8, from 6 – 8pm.
More information here

Rob Niezen Artist