Document
Attachments
Metadata
Title
Wickininish Rain Figure
Artist
Biden, Doug
Biography
Doug Biden was born on October 29, 1956. He attended the Vancouver School of Art, earned a master's degree at Concordia University and taught at the Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design, the University of the Fraser Valley, Capilano College and UBC Okanagan. He was a member of the Malaspina Printmakers Society. His work is represented in numerous collections including Vancouver Art Gallery, Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, Burnaby Art Gallery, Surrey Art Gallery and Contemporary Art Gallery, Vancouver. An accomplished and respected printmaker, he exhibited his art nationally and internationally. Biden was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2005 and after a courageous 2 year battle with the disease, died peacefully at his home in Gibsons, BC on March 26, 2007.
Origin/Creation Date
January 1, 1983
Media
Intaglio
Dimensions (HxWxD)
Image 13.5" x 17.75" on 13.5" x 17.75" paper.
Description
This intaglio print with graphite shows what seems to be a white object falling to the beach, making impact and creating a forceful splash. What is the object? Oyster? Clamshell? A seagull's dinner? Or something else?
Intaglio with graphite. Edition 3/6
Essay
While visceral imagery was a mainstay for printmaker Doug Biden, he was also interested in contemporary issues, often referencing political, pop culture and mass media in his work. His earlier prints and mixed-media works show an interest in process and gestural abstraction. Later works combined appropriated photos and medical illustrations with spontaneous marks and blots of ink and pigment. At times, photo-based images dominated, expressively washed in both brilliant colour and shadowy darkness. Some prints featured images of war or critiqued the cult of celebrity, while others drew attention to the human body (skeletal, muscular and organ systems) and misogyny. He often combined different non-traditional techniques and enjoyed collaborating with other artists.
“I would describe my art making as primal imaging. In my art analogies between the conceptualization of landscape and the human body have emerged as important subjects with parallels in both materials and the way I make art. Primal imaging helps to reinforce the philosophy that all living components are co-dependent. At the same time, they belong to a sacred common ground that is part of a sensual, transitional, larger whole.”
“The Hand’s Mind” exh. folder, Simon Fraser Gallery, 1993, “Second Artist’s Statement” by D.B. The CC Art Bank Cat. 1972-92, CCAB, Ott., 1992.