The Centre for All Canadians
Dichroic, photograph from Vis-å-Vis, a performance by Canada Shadows (Hank Bull and others from the Western Front), 1978. Photo: Kate Craig

Hank Bull: Connexion

Dichroic, photograph from Vis-å-Vis, a performance by Canada Shadows (Hank Bull and others from the Western Front), 1978. Photo: Kate Craig
The Vancouver-based artist transforms his collection and archives into a sculptural installation and an overview of his practice. The exhibition explores the notions of distributed authorship and communication-as-art in the age of information technology.
“manipulating the self” with Bill Gaglione, Anna Banana and unknown, Vile Magazine, 1979

Hank Bull: Connexion considers the material traces of a life lived as art, exhibiting the varied collection of the artist as a sculptural installation.

Presented in varying states of order and chaos, this diverse array of things-performance props, photographs, videos, documents, technology-points to a network of relationships with artists and communities around the world. It embodies a collaborative practice that has consistently embraced juxtaposition and exchange across boundaries-whether geographic, temporal, cultural, political, disciplinary or psychic. Bull’s arrangement of objects, in which a decorative ceramic vase might sit comfortably next to a stack of political newspapers or a prop from a film, mirrors the experimentation with collective ways of working, living and being together, that is at the core of his approach. The connections between seemingly incongruous objects spark unexpected associations, while also extending outward to their wider social significance and histories. For Bull, art is a way of being in the world: of responding to, improvising with and sculpting the material of the social. Connexion proposes an expanded notion of the artist as a connector of people.

In developing global networks years before the Internet, and exploring the possibilities of communication-as-art through early telecommunication mediums, Bull’s work parallels a worldwide shift towards the collaborative, pluralistic and increasingly decentralized interactions of our networked present. In this context, the distributed authorship presented in Hank Bull: Connexion offer insights into a shifting notion of selfhood at a moment when new collectivities are urgently needed.

-Joni Low and Pan Wendt, Curators

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