Beginning in 1972, Wan studied under such artists as
Glenn Lewis and
Fred Herzog as an undergraduate student in the fine arts program at the University of British Columbia. During this time, Wan went under the alter-ego "Mr. Normal," who dressed in formal attire such as bowler hats, suits and ties. Wan began his graduate studies in 1975 at the
Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (NSCAD) in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Wan's studio instructors included then-president
Garry Kennedy (See:
NSCAD conceptual art). In 1977, Wan applied for an official name change to the Registrar General of Nova Scotia from Theodore Fu Wan to Theodore Saskatche Wan, after the village of
Theodore, Saskatchewan as part of the work
Name Change (1977). Throughout his career, Wan developed an interest in the theories of
Marcel Duchamp and in particular the
readymade. At NSCAD, Wan developed an interest in medical and surgical illustrations and manuals and appropriated the tropes of such "official" imagery into his photographs. During this time, Wan became a photographer at the
Dalhousie University’s School of Dentistry. In such series as
Bridine Scrub For General Surgery (1977),
Panoramic Dental X-Ray (1977),
Draping Procedure For Shoulder Operation (1977), etc. the artist photographed himself as the "patient" in a series of medically accurate illustrations. At the Centre For Art Tapes in Halifax, founded by Brian MacNevin, Wan had a solo show entitled
The Inversion of The Readymade which marked the debut of two photographic series:
Bound By Everyday Necessities I (1979) and
Bound By Everyday Necessities II (1979). During the exhibition, Wan's photographs were shown in two distinct contexts: the "fine art" context of the gallery and also on the 13th floor of the Victoria General Hospital in Halifax. The photographs were viewed as conceptual interventions when displayed in the gallery while they were seen as instructional and "objective" at the hospital. Upon his graduation from NSCAD, Wan returned to Vancouver where he opened the artist-run centre Main Exit at 901 Main Street which operated for two years from October 1980 to November 1982. After Main Exit closed, Wan operated a commercial photography service in which his clientele included exotic dancers, sex workers, and members of the Chinese-Canadian community. Wan photographed exotic dancers and members of nudist colonies under the pseudonym of Theo. For the rest of his life, Wan lived alongside his brother, mother and step-father and helped operate the family's funerary business. Wan died of sinus cancer on May 21, 1987 at age 33. The artist's archives are held at the
Vancouver Art Gallery. Posthumously, his work was the subject of a major touring retrospective, curated by Christine Conley, from 2003 to 2005 and was included in the 2010–2013 travelling survey exhibition
Traffic: Conceptual Art In Canada 1965-1980. == Selected exhibitions ==