Passing Through Passing Through is a collection of small oil on linen paintings, grouped in series. This exhibit was at the David Kaye Gallery in April of 2017. The show explored
animal intelligence,
telepathic communication and
spirituality through a photo installation, a video work and an interactive computer program in Modern Fuel’s State of Flux gallery, which is a space designed for locally-based emerging or mid-career artists to show their work. This show contained an “experiment,” about the potential psychic connection between the dead pets chosen for the show and gallery goers. This experiment led participants to spiritually connect with one of the animals, which were deceased pets from the Kingston area, and then measure their connection objectively through the program’s database of information about each pet. The goal of the experiment was to observe whether participants truly did communicate with the spirits of the deceased animals by how much information they knew about the animal.
I Wish You Were Here I Wish You Were Here, shown in 2012, is Anweiler’s second exhibition at the David Kaye Gallery.
Manifestations of a Different Nature Manifestations of a Different Nature is one of three exhibitions Anweiler has had displayed in the David Kaye Gallery in Toronto. Debuting in 2008, this collection emphasizes many recurring themes in Anweiler’s artistic practice such as the connections between science and
mysticism, as well as the conflict between nature and modernity. In each of the 21 paintings the canvas is split between one
monochromatic image of an animal or occasionally a human figure and one image of scenery in colour. Anweiler writes that the series tries to “establish the paranormal as part of nature.”
Nature Lover The 2006 exhibition Nature Lover at the Katherine Mulherin Contemporary Art Projects was initially shown under the title Sexual/Nature at Maison de la Culture du Plateau-Mont-Royal in
Montréal,
Québec in 2005. Partially inspired by Paul Vasey, a professor of psychology at the University of Lethbridge whose field of research includes animal homosexuality, the exhibition depicts a range of found photography of animals in nature from
National Geographic magazines, lesbian pornography from
On Our Backs, the first woman run pornographic magazine, and film stills from notable Hollywood movies during the
Hays Code era. These images were cropped, combined, and reproduced as paintings in the series. One intention of the series is to call to attention how reductive scientific and societal understandings of sexual diversity are, as Anweiler says: “[On sexual diversity]...because it didn’t fit into the nice paradigm of evolutionary theory and heterosexual reproductive strategies they ignored it, or they called it unnatural.” Also prevalent in the exhibition is a sense of nostalgia through the imagery itself and for the imagery of the 50s invoked through the films. == Residencies ==