Soft Error
Ed Spence
April 14th - May 14th, 2016
Questioning our relationship to technology as well as romantic notions of the ideal state of the natural world, Spence continues his experimentation into presumptions around the photographic image. Applying process to the image of a human subject renders a precise analogy to our position within the digital rubric both elevated by the inviting mosaic rendered but trapped in a process by which a part of ourselves is lost.
Ed Spence grew up in Salmon Arm, British Columbia, Canada. In 2005 he received his BFA from UBC Okanagan where he was awarded the President's Purchase Award for a multi-channel video installation. His work has been exhibited across Canada, The United States, Poland, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands. In the spring of 2012 he was awarded a two month research residency in Italy where he developed video accompaniment to a contemporary dance performance that was later shown in Berlin's Nah Dran performance series. His work spans many disciplines and utilizes text, sculpture, photography, and public installation. is work can be found in private and public collections internationally. He now resides in Vancouver, BC.
He and choreographer Julianne Chapple recently received Canada Council funding to collaboratively explore the theme of Transhumanist Futurism via the creation of wearable sculptural elements and choreographed movement.
Ed Spence grew up in Salmon Arm, British Columbia, Canada. In 2005 he received his BFA from UBC Okanagan where he was awarded the President's Purchase Award for a multi-channel video installation. His work has been exhibited across Canada, The United States, Poland, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands. In the spring of 2012 he was awarded a two month research residency in Italy where he developed video accompaniment to a contemporary dance performance that was later shown in Berlin's Nah Dran performance series. His work spans many disciplines and utilizes text, sculpture, photography, and public installation. is work can be found in private and public collections internationally. He now resides in Vancouver, BC.
He and choreographer Julianne Chapple recently received Canada Council funding to collaboratively explore the theme of Transhumanist Futurism via the creation of wearable sculptural elements and choreographed movement.